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West Nile Virus:
An Inside View
Carlos Wotzkow with the collaboration of Jaums Sutton
"We believe the fundamental risk is the more than 100 varieties
of birds migrating each year from the North and they can transmit
the virus to Cuba." Granma Digital, Official Cuban Newspaper.
Everyone should know that the newspaper Granma would take up this
topic in order to make us think what they want us to think.
As I told U.S. intelligence officials in August of 2001, "you
see things from the perspective of an elephant that is being bit by
an ant. You don’t realize that a mound of ants can eat an elephant."(1)
Despite the risk of opening myself up for ridicule once again, I will
state the facts as I know them about Cuba’s biological attack
on the U.S.
The facts begin in 1980 at the Institute of Zoology in Havana where
I worked as a Research Assistant from 1980 to 1982. Statements of
those in charge insinuated (you can understand why they couldn’t
just make straightforward statements) that the institute was a front
for a platform for covert bacteriological warfare.(2)
Credibility, specifically mine, immediately comes into question after
making a statement like the one I just made. When I revealed this
information to U.S. authorities in 1992(3), they suggested I could
have made it all up to impress them and gain sympathies for asylum
in the U.S. But I have now been living in Switzerland for 10 years,
quite established with a wife and five children. So can we move on
to the much more important issue of morals? No country deserves the
heinous things directed at the U.S. by Cuba. Especially a country
that has been as supportive as the U.S. has been for the Cuban people.
But on to the terrestrial side of the story. Fidel Castro made weekly
visits to the Zoology Institute. Not visits accompanied, reality TV-style,
by video cameras, Granma and international reporters – staple
tools of his ever-present efforts to promote his public image. These
were secret weekly visits with no public record.
Or is this whole theory of using migratory birds to deliver disease
to the U.S. just my personal paranoia? But Granma just confirmed it
in its digital edition of August 23, 2002, by presenting the same
paranoia.
Here is the process - simple and scientific - which I first described
in my book published in 1998:
Catch birds that are in the process of migrating. When one has a U.S.
band on it, carefully remove the band and mail it to the organization
that installed it with an explanation of where the bird was found
and you will receive a history of that bird including when and where
it was banded. This is standard practice in the field of ornithology.
If other members of the flock are captured at the same time, it is
scientifically safe to assume that they all came from the same place.
That’s what birds do. They start out together, fly together,
stop to rest together and can be caught together.
Continue catching birds until you catch some that prove, by the band
information received from the U.S., that they are from the area of
the U.S. you are interested in. This step is important as you will
see in step 7.
Keep the birds safe and healthy until it is the season for them to
migrate north.
Inject them with the West Nile Virus. Release them.
This step isn’t really a step because the birds do the work.
They fly to their place of birth. Not to the closest land to the north.
Not willy-nilly. Back to the precise area they are from, unless something
physically prevents them from going where they are programmed to go.
That is a scientific fact known since the beginning of banding. So,
they are like a missile guided by nature.
Another non-step, because the birds and mosquitoes do the rest. But
you already know this step.
It really is simple if you do the research first and choose the right
disease transmitted by the right mosquitoes, the right type of birds
that are migratory and like mosquito-infested areas.
You have to consider things like the incubation period and symptom
level of the disease (if it makes the birds too sick to fly before
they can get home, it’s the wrong disease). You have to consider
how long it takes the birds to fly the distance to the area they were
banded (if it’s too far based on the incubation period and symptom
level, it’s no good).
It takes time to plan out and test and try all the things necessary
to know what birds to choose and what disease to use. Use birds from
an area of the U.S. that no-one would associate with Cuba, like New
York. It could easily take, say 20 years to do the research and have
the first guided missiles make their arrival known. Like from 1980
to 1999. I saw them working on it in 1980 and 1999 is when the first
cases were detected in New York.
Cuba has the time, and the motivation
A later step is the one where the birds migrate back to Cuba and infect
mosquitoes and people, but, no plan is perfect. And anyway, if you
are cleaver, you can blame this step on the U.S. Blame the U.S. for
the West Nile Virus’ boomerang arrival to the population of
Cuba: If only the U.S. had done the right thing by properly taking
care of it, etc., etc.
Granma and the other official sources work so well for those in Cuba
and those on the outside who don’t seek more information. Reading
Granma presents a perfect keyhole that reveals only the portion of
the room that Castro has carefully placed in view.
The keyhole blocks the view of the victims of encephalitis in Cuba
that began with a teen-ager in 1991. Perhaps 20% of the injected birds
released to migrate to the U.S. were unable to make the strenuous
trip because of their inactivity in captivity, thus exposing Cuban
mosquitoes to the infected birds.
Despite thousands of cases of encephalitis in Cuba, the precise diagnosis
has never been made clear by the Cuban government. There has been
no official connection made to the mortal viral pathogen of Baghdad,
known as the West Nile Virus, nor its connection to the Cuba-Iraq
connection made so public with Castro’s visit to the Middle
East prior to September 11, 2001.
An interesting little irony of all this is that, I believe, the mosquitoes
may very well be out of circulation due to the change of seasons,
sufficiently long enough before the migration return to Cuba begins.
The infected birds will be dead or too weak for the migration. Meaning,
only healthy birds will be migrating back to Cuba.
Notes:
(1) August 5, 2001, Miami Florida meeting with special agents John
A. Bellamy and J. Brooks Broadus, of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
(2) Those in charge of the Institute of Zoology included Fernando
Gonzalez, Noel Gonzalez Gotera, Hiram Gonzalez, Agustin Egurrola,
Inez Garcia and Marbelia Rosabal.
(3) I assume that a gentlemen introduced to me as "Mr. Williams"
in the U.S. Embassy in Switzerland, August 1992, while introducing
himself as a special agent of American Intelligence, was actually
of the Central Intelligence Agency or the National Security Agency.
© Carlos Wotzkow, 2002
Carlos Wotzkow is an ornithologist and a writer, author of the books
"Natumaleza Cubana", 1998 and "Covering and Discovering",
2001 with Agustin Blazquez, and of dozens of articles in favor of
nature and human rights in Cuba. His articles are distributed monthly
in magazines and via the Internet. He has lived in exile in Switzerland
since 1992, in Bienne since 1994.
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