In an article in the Summer-Autumn 1990 issue
of "Top Secret", Prof. J. Segal and Dr. L. Segal illustrate their
theory that AIDS is a man-made disease, originating at Pentagon bacteriological
warfare labs at Fort Detrick, Maryland.
"Top Secret" is the international edition of the German
magazine Geheim and is a sister publication to the American Covert Action
Information Bulletin (CAIB). Top Secret
carries the Naming Names column, which CAIB is prevented from doing by the American
government, and which names CIA agents in different locations in the
world. The article, named "AIDS:
US-Made Monster," is lengthy and has a lot of professional jargon.
"The fatal weakening of the immune system
which has given AIDS its name (Acquired Immune-Deficiency Syndrome),"
write the Segals, "has been traced back to a destruction or a functional
failure of the T4-lymphocytes, also called 'helper cells`, which play a
regulatory role in the production of antibodies in the immune
system." In the course of the
illness, the number of functional T4-cells is reduced to such an extent that
new anti-bodies cannot be produced and the defenseless patient remains exposed
to a range of infections that under other circumstances would have been harmless. Most AIDS patients die from opportunistic
infections rather than from the AIDS virus itself. The initial infection is characterized by
diarrhea, erysipelas and intermittent fever.
An apparent recovery follows after 2-3 weeks, and in many cases the patient
remains without symptoms and functions normally for years.
After several years, the pre-AIDS stage, known
as ARC (Aids- Related Complex)
sets in. This stage includes disorders in the
digestive tract, kidneys and lungs. In
most cases it develops into full-blown AIDS in about a year, at which point
opportunistic illnesses occur. Disorders
in various organ systems also occur, the most severe in the brain, the symptoms
of which range from motor disorders to severe dementia and death. The Segals note that despite the fact that
AIDS is transmitted only through sexual intercourse, blood transfusions and
non- sterile hypodermic needles, the infection has spread dramatically. During the first few years after its
discovery, the number of AIDS patients doubled every six months, and is still
doubling every 12 months now though numerous measures have been taken against
it. Based on these figures, it is
estimated that in the US, which had 900,000 cases of AIDS in 1991, over
2,000,000 people will be afflicted with the virus by the year 2,000. It is also estimated that the number of
people infected is at least ten times the number of those suffering from an
acute case of AIDS. Even when a
vaccination becomes available, it will not help those already infected. These and the following figures have been
reached by several different sources, such as the US Surgeon General and the
Chief of the
medical services of the US Army.
"AIDS does not merely bring certain dangers with it; it is clearly
a programmed catastrophe for the human race, whose magnitude is comparable only
with that of a nuclear war", say the Segals. They later explain what they mean by
"programmed," showing that the virus was produced by humans, namely
Dr. Robert Gallo of the Bethesda Cancer Research Center in Maryland.
The first KNOWN cases of AIDS occurred in New
York in 1979. The first DESCRIBED cases
were in California in 1979. The virus
was isolated in Paris in May 1983, taken from a French homosexual who had
returned home ill from a trip to the East Coast of the US. One year later, Robert Gallo and his
co-workers at the Bethesda Cancer Research Center published their discovery of
the same virus, which is cytotoxic. (poisonous to cells)
The Segals discuss the findings of Gonda et al,
who compared the HIV, visna and other closely-related viruses and found that
the visna virus is the most similar to HIV.
The two were, in fact, 60% identical in 1986. According to findings of the Hahn group, the
mutation rate of the HIV virus was about a million times higher than that of
similar viruses, and that on the average a 10% alteration took place every two
years. That would mean that in 1984, the
difference between HIV and visna would have been only 30%, in 1982- 20%, 10% in
1980 and zero in 1978. "This
means," say the Segals, "that at this time visna viruses changed into
HIV, receiving at the same time the ability to become parasites in human
T4-cells and the high genetic instability that is not known in other
retroviruses. This is also consistent with the fact that the first cases of
AIDS appeared about one year later, in the spring of 1979. In his comparison of the genomes of visna and
HIV," add the Segals, "Coffin hit upon a remarkable feature. The
envelope area of the HIV genome, which
encodes the
envelope proteins which help the virus to attach itself to the host cell, is
about 300 nucleotides longer than the same area in visna." This behavior suggests that an additional
piece has been inserted into the genomes of the visna virus, a piece that
alters the envelope proteins and enables them to bind themselves to the
T4-receptors, a piece which does not match the rest of the system
biochemically.
The above mentioned work by Gonda et al shows
that the HIV virus has a section
of about 300
nucleotides, which does not exist in the visna virus. That length corresponds with what Coffin
described. That section is particularly
unstable, which indicates that it is an alien object.
The addition of HTLV-1 to visna made the HIV
virus. In addition, the high mutation
rate of the HIV genome has been explained by another scientific team, Chandra
et al, by the fact that it is "a combination of two genome parts which are
alien to each other by artificial
means rather than by a natural process of evolution, because this process would
have immediately eliminated, through natural selection, systems that are so
replete with
disorders."
"These are the facts of the case,"
say the Segals. "HIV is essentially
a visna virus which carries an additional protein monomer of HTLV-1....For this
reason we can come to only one conclusion: that this gene combination arose by
artificial means, through gene manipulation."
"The construction of a recombinant virus
by means of gene manipulation is extraordinarily expensive, and it requires a
large number of highly qualified personnel, complicated equipment and expensive
high security laboratories. Moreover, the product would have no commercial
value. Who, then," ask the Segals, "would have provided the resources
for a type of research that was aimed solely at the production of a new disease
that would be deadly to human beings?"
The English sociologist Allistair Hay,
published a document whose authenticity has been confirmed by the US Congress,
showing that a representative of the Pentagon requested in 1969 additional
funding for biological warfare research.
The intention was to create, within the next ten years, a new virus that
would not be susceptible to the immune system, so that the afflicted patient
would not be able to develop any defense against it. Ten years later, in the spring of 1979, the
first cases of AIDS appeared in New York.
In the fall of 1977, a P4 (highest security
category of laboratory, in which
human pathogens
are genetically manipulated) laboratory was officially opened in building 550
of Fort Detrick, MD, the Pentagon's main biological warfare research
center. "In an article in 'Der
Spiegel`, Prof. Mollings point out that this type of gene manipulation was
still extremely difficult in 1977. One
would have had to have a genius as great as Robert Gallo
for this
purpose," note the Segals.
In a supposed compliance with the international
accord banning the research, production and storage of biological weapons, part of Fort Detrick was
"demilitarized" and the virus section renamed the "Frederick
Cancer Research Facility". It was
put under the direction of the Cancer Research Institute in neighboring Bethesda,
whose director was no other than Robert Gallo.
This happened in 1975, the year Gallo discovered HTLV. Explaining how the virus escaped, the Segals
note that in the US, biological agents
are traditionally tested on prisoners who are incarcerated for long periods,
and who are promised freedom if they survive the test. However, the initial HIV
infection symptoms are mild and followed by a seemingly healthy patient.
"Those who conducted the research must
have concluded that the new virus was...not so virulent that it could be
considered for military use, and the test patients, who had seemingly
recovered, were given their freedom.
Most of the patients were professional criminals and considering New
York City's proximity to the prison many freed patients moved there. The patients were exclusively men, many of them
having a history of homosexuality and
drug abuse, as is often the case in American prisons. It is understandable why AIDS broke out
precisely in 1979, precisely among men and among drug users, and precisely in
New York City," assert the Segals. They go on to explain that whereas in
cases of infection by means of sexual contact, incubation periods are two years
or more, while in cases of massive infection via blood transfusions, as must
have been the case with prisoners, incubation periods are shorter than a
year. "Thus, if the new virus was
ready at the beginning of 1978 and if the experiments began without too much
delay, then
the first cases
of full-blown AIDS in 1979 were exactly the result that could have been
expected."
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