Soon after the attacks in New York and Washington occurred on September 11, PSI TECH established
a Remote Viewing Counterterrorism Task Force. This team of trained Technical Remote Viewers was
then tasked with collecting information related
to future acts of terrorism in the United States.
Sketches and calculations to make a helium-powered balloon bomb filled with
anthrax have been found from the Kabul office of an NGO headed by Bashiruddin
Mehmood, one of the two Pakistani nuclear scientists detained in October in
Islamabad for alleged links with Osama bin Laden.
Such a balloon bomb was capable of showering anthrax over areas as vast as New
York or Washington DC. The "most chilling" items found included small bags of
white powder and drawings of weather balloons.
Pakistan said on Wednesday that it had detained Mehmood and another retired
nuclear scientist Chaudhry Abdul Majeed.
After he retired, Mehmood founded a private relief organisation Ummah
Tameer-e-Nau (UTN). Documents from UTN's offices seem to show a possible
method for slowly dispersing some type of biological or chemical agent from
balloons. Words scribbled in the diagram appear to say 'cyanide'.
Also found were a box of gas masks, a diagram showing a plane shooting down a
weather balloon and promotional material from militant Islamic groups. One
diagram found in the Kabul offices show four balloons flying together in tandem
with a box around them. The box appears to show how the agent would be
dispersed across a wide area.
Why the Taliban considered the concept is unknown, but terror experts said it was
far from an ideal method.
Said Dr Ashok Gadgil, a biological terror expert and senior staff scientist at
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, biological agents released outdoors would
be so widely dispersed as to be useless. Pinpoint release of the bio-agents over,
say, a city, would be difficult with a balloon. Dr Gadgil said: "It doesn't sound like a
very good game plan."
Another diagram suggested anti-aircraft missiles could be fired at the balloon to
get it to release its contents
Such a balloon bomb is capable of showering anthrax over areas as vast as New
York
Wednesday November 28 08:59 AM EST
2 Pakistanis Linked to Papers on Anthrax
Weapons
By DOUGLAS FRANTZ with DAVID ROHDE The New York Times
Pakistan said that it had detained two retired nuclear scientists
after the recent discovery of documents in their offices describing
ways to use anthrax as a weapon.
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan, Nov. 27
Pakistan said today that it had detained
two retired nuclear scientists after the
recent discovery in offices they had used in
Afghanistan of documents describing ways
to use anthrax as a weapon and other
suspicious material.
The scientists, Sultan Bashiruddin
Mahmood and Chaudry Abdul Majeed,
were first questioned in October after
American intelligence officers expressed
concern about trips the two had made to
the Afghan capital, Kabul. They were
interrogated about their ties to the Taliban.
After he retired from Pakistan's Atomic
Energy Agency in 1998, Mr. Mahmood
founded a private relief organization,
Ummah Tameer-e-Nau, that operated in
Afghanistan.
Documents from the organization's Kabul offices examined by The
New York Times have been found over the past several days
describing the history of anthrax and a Pentagon program to immunize
all members of the United States military against anthrax attacks.
Also found were a box of gas masks, a diagram showing a plane
shooting down a weather balloon and promotional material from militant
Islamic groups. These findings were first reported last week in the
British daily The Evening Standard.
Plans for building a balloon and what appeared to be a rocket were
found on a piece of paper along with empty steel tubes and parts of a
rocket-propelled grenade. A container of helium sat on a work bench.
The diagrams of the balloons seem to show a possible method for
slowly dispersing some type of biological or chemical agent from the
air. Words scribbled in the diagram appear to say "cyanide."
One diagram found in the Kabul offices show four balloons flying
together in tandem with a box around them. The box appears to show
how the agent would be dispersed across a wide area.
The house, like others in the Afghan capital apparently used by Osama
bin Laden's terrorist network, Al Qaeda, seems to have been hastily
abandoned when the Taliban fled Kabul two weeks ago. It is not clear
who may have been in the house since then.
Referring to the scientists, Maj. Gen. Rashid Qureshi, the top Pakistani
military spokesman, said today in Islamabad: "Both of them are under
detention." He declined to elaborate, but officials said the new
detentions related to the discoveries in Kabul.
The first arrest of the scientists last month was linked to American
suspicions that Pakistan's nuclear weapons technology could have
found its way into the hands of Osama bin Laden, Al Qaeda or the
Taliban.
An American intelligence official said today that the first interrogation of
the two Pakistani scientists has resulted in an assessment that Mr.
Mahmood and Mr. Majeed did not know enough to help build a
nuclear weapon. "These two guys were nuclear scientists who didn't
know how to build one themselves," the American official said. "If you
had to have guys go bad these are the guys you'd want they didn't
know much."
Neither of the Pakistani scientists has been charged with any
wrongdoing. Their families have said they are innocent and that their
interest in Afghanistan was humanitarian. The families have written to
government officials protesting their interrogation and earlier detention.
They had been released after the initial questioning in October, but
remained under loose house arrest. The new detentions indicate that
concern about their activities in Afghanistan have intensified.
Mr. Mahmood and Mr. Majeed worked for the relief organization,
whose official purpose was to upgrade roads, build flour mills and carry
out other projects to assist Afghanistan. Both spent a considerable
amount of time in Afghanistan.
Maj. Gen. Qureshi, the military spokesman, said of their new detention:
"When we have completed the investigation, I'm sure the details will be
coming out."
The diagrams in the Kabul offices of the relief organization were
detailed. One had an arrow pointing to a balloon and the word
"wireless" written next to it, suggesting that some type of
communications device might be used as a trigger. Other diagrams had the word "SAM-7" and
"Stinger" written near the balloon, suggesting that the two types of anti-aircraft missiles could be fired
at the balloon to get it to release it contents.
Nearly all of the information found about anthrax in the house came from the United States military.
The copies of the military paper describing the anthrax immunization program and expansion of
anthrax vaccine production in Michigan were all from original documents, not documents downloaded
from the Internet.
Someone had written a half dozen stars across the top of the Michigan study, suggesting that they
found it valuable.
Whoever was conducting the research also effectively mined United States military Web sites for
information. Copies of a printout of the first page of a military Web site devoted to better informing
Persian Gulf war veterans with related illnesses were found in the house.
The site offers highly detailed descriptions of how Anthrax can be used as a weapon and spread
through artillery shells, airplanes and trucks. It lists what size of anthrax dose kills people who have
been immunized, and refers readers to more detailed academic studies on anthrax.
The house used by Mr. Mahmood's organization, one of three adjacent structures occupied by
Pakistani scientists in the Wasi Akbar Khan section of Kabul, the city's wealthy diplomatic corner, it is
an unremarkable two-story cinderblock home.
Books and toys suggest that children recently lived in the house. A young girl's second-grade English
literature workbook lay on the living room floor surrounded by mounds of abandoned clothing. There
was no hint of the effort underway in the workroom upstairs. Mr. Mahmood was a director-general of
nuclear power plants for the Atomic Energy Agency and Mr. Majeed was once director of
uranium-enrichment laboratories.
Pakistani officials said earlier that neither man was affiliated with its nuclear weapons program.
President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan repeated the denial in a television interview on Monday.
But Pakistani newspapers have reported that Mr. Mahmood was involved in developing the atomic
bombs Pakistan tested in its western desert in May 1998. Western intelligence agencies estimate that
Pakistan has a stockpile of about 20 nuclear weapons.
Shortly after the Sept. 11 attacks on the United States, a team of American law enforcement and
intelligence officials raised the safety of Pakistan's nuclear weapons in discussions in Islamabad with
Pakistani officials.
The papers and blackboard drawings found in a Kabul house appear to describe the Taliban's notions
for dispersing biological and possibly chemical agents by balloons and other methods. Those concepts
are backed up by rudimentary calculations and information from Department of Defense Web sites
and at least one report prepared for the United States military on anthrax vaccines.
The report, prepared by Science Applications International Corporation, a private research firm with
contracts with the Pentagon, was not classified, said Zuraidah Hashim, a spokeswoman for the firm, in
Frederick, Md. It was titled "Renovation of Facilities and Increased Anthrax Vaccine Production at
the Michigan Biologic Products Institute."
"This report was not a how-to manual of any kind," Ms. Hashim said. "It was not a report that gave
instruction of how to produce anthrax or anthrax vaccine." Instead, Ms. Hashim called it "an evaluation
report" on the institute's vaccine program.
The papers also contained copies of Web pages with information on anthrax. An internet search on
phrases on the pages quickly led to Department of Defense and other sites with relatively detailed
information on anthrax and biological weaponry.
One page correctly explains the difference between cutaneous, gastrointestinal and inhalation anthrax
and shows a photograph of former Defense Secretary William S. Cohen at a press conference holding
a five-pound bag of sugar, which the caption indicates is the amount of anthrax needed to destroy half
the population of Washington, D.C.
The drawings on a wallboard are more difficult to interpret, but they appear, in part, to illustrate the
dispersal of an agent by balloons. Why the Taliban considered that concept is unknown, but terror
experts said it was far from an ideal method.
For one thing, said Dr. Ashok Gadgil, a biological terror expert and senior staff scientist at Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, agents released outdoors would be so widely dispersed as to be
useless in many circumstances. Pinpoint release of the agents over, say, a city, would be difficult with a
balloon.
"It's a very poor way to release something that you hope to release at a particular urban site," Dr.
Gadgil said. "It doesn't sound like a very good game plan."
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10/06/01 - PSI TECH's 911 Preliminary Project Report
11-30-01 - Recent Press Releases Verifying More of PSI TECH's Counterterrorism Report
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Possible Terrorist Weapon
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