Project Clear Vision: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Conspiracies]]
 
[[Category:Government]]
[[Category:Biological Warfare]]
[[Category:Military Medicine]]
[[Category:Black Projects]]


Project Clear Vision was a covert investigation of Soviet-built biological bomblets conducted by the Battelle Memorial Institute under contract with the CIA. The legality of this project under the Biological Weapons Convention is highly disputed.  
Project Clear Vision was a covert investigation of Soviet-built biological bomblets conducted by the Battelle Memorial Institute under contract with the CIA. The legality of this project under the Biological Weapons Convention is highly disputed.  
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* Original NY Times story  
* Original NY Times story  
* Analysis by Arms Control Association of biodefense research
* Analysis by Arms Control Association of biodefense research
{{article summary
| title = {{TITLE}}
| summary = Project Clear Vision was a covert investigation of Soviet-built biological bomblets conducted by the Battelle Memorial Institute under contract with the CIA. The legality of this project under the Biological Weapons Convention is highly disputed.
}}
[[Category:Conspiracies]]
[[Category:Government]]
[[Category:Biological Warfare]]
[[Category:Military Medicine]]
[[Category:Black Projects]]

Revision as of 03:09, 24 January 2025


Project Clear Vision was a covert investigation of Soviet-built biological bomblets conducted by the Battelle Memorial Institute under contract with the CIA. The legality of this project under the Biological Weapons Convention is highly disputed.

The project was completed during the Clinton Administration, but its existence was revealed by the New York Times in August, 2001 during the Bush Administration [1]. The project's stated goal was to assess agent dissemination characteristics of the bomblets [2]. Despite this "defensive" aspect, the project's findings can probably be used in a covert bioweapons program.

As part of the Biological Weapons Convention, the United States committed not to develop bioweapons. Moreover, the United States had not reported the secret projects in its annual confidence-building measure (CBM) declarations [3].

Some have speculated this project played a part in the 2001 Anthrax Mailings.[citation needed]

References

  • Original NY Times story
  • Analysis by Arms Control Association of biodefense research