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Erich Traub

Erich Traub (27 June 1906 – 18 May 1985) was a German veterinarian, scientist and virologist who specialized in foot-and-mouth disease, Rinderpest and Newcastle disease. Traub was a member of the National Socialist Motor Corps (NSKK), a Nazi motorist corps, from 1938 to 1942. He worked directly for Heinrich Himmler, head of the Schutzstaffel (SS), as the lab chief of the Nazis' leading bio-weapons facility on Riems Island.[1]

Erich Traub
Born(1906-06-27)27 June 1906
Died18 May 1985(1985-05-18) (aged 78)
CitizenshipGerman, American
Alma materRockefeller Institute for Medical Research
Known forFoot-and-mouth disease
Scientific career
FieldsVirologist
InstitutionsUniversity of Giessen
Riems Island, German Reich

Traub was transported from the Soviet zone of Germany after World War II and taken to the United States in 1949 under the auspices of the United States government program Operation Paperclip, meant to exploit the post-war scientific knowledge in Germany, and deny it to the Soviet Union.[2]

Career edit

Early career and war edit

During the 1930s, he studied on a fellowship at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in Princeton, New Jersey mentored by Richard Shope, performing research on vaccines and viruses, including pseudorabies virus and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCM).[3][4][5] During his stay in the United States, Traub and his wife were listed as members of the German American Bund, a pro-Nazi German-American club thirty miles west of Plum Island in Yaphank, Long Island, from 1934 to 1935.[6]

Traub worked at the University of Giessen, Germany, from 1938 to 1942.[7] Traub was a member of the Nazi NSKK, a motorist corps, from 1938 to 1942. The NSKK was declared a condemned, not a criminal organization at the Nuremberg trials.[1]

From 1942 to 1948, Traub worked as lab-chief at the Reich Research Institute for Virus Diseases of Animals (German: Reichsforschungsanstalt für Viruskrankheiten der Tiere) on Riems Island (German: Insel Riems), a German animal virus research institute in the Baltic sea, now named the Friedrich Loeffler Institute. The institute was headed by Prof. Dr. Otto Waldmann from 1919 to 1948, while Traub was vice-president.[7]

The Institute at Riems Island was a dual use facility during the Second World War where at least some biological warfare experiments were conducted. It had been founded in 1909-10 to study foot-and-mouth disease in animals and by World War II employed about 20 scientists and a staff of 70-120. Hanns-Christoph Nagel, a veterinarian and biological warfare expert for the German Army, conducted experiments there, as did Traub.[7]

The institute was administered under the Innenministerium (Ministry of the Interior), which Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler took over in 1943. The chain of command was Himmler, Dr. Leonardo Conti (Reich Health Leader), Kurt Blome, Waldmann, and then Traub. Traub specialized in viral and bacterial diseases. He was assisted by Anna Bürger, who was later also brought to the United States after the war, to work with the Navy's biological warfare program.[8]

On orders from Himmler and Blome, the Deputy Reich Health Leader and head of the German biological warfare program, Traub worked on weaponizing foot-and-mouth disease virus, which has been reported to have been dispersed by aircraft onto cattle and reindeer in Russia.[9] In 1944, Blome sent Traub to pick up a strain of Rinderpest virus in Turkey; upon his return, this strain proved inactive (nonvirulent) and therefore plans for a Rinderpest product were shelved.[1]

Post-war edit

Immediately after the war Traub was trapped in the Soviet zone of Allied occupied Germany. He was forced to work for the Soviets from his lab on Riems Island.[10] In July 1948, the British evacuated Erich Traub from Riems Island as a "high priority Intelligence target" since it was now in the Soviet Zone and they feared that Traub was assisting in their biological warfare program. Traub denied this, however, claiming that his only interest was foot-and-mouth disease in animals.[11]

Traub was brought to the United States in 1949 under the auspices of the United States government program Operation Paperclip, meant to exploit scientific knowledge in Germany, and deny it to the Soviet Union.[2] From 1949 to 1953, he was associated with the Naval Medical Research Institute in Bethesda, Maryland.[7]

Months into his Operation Paperclip contract, Traub was asked to meet with US scientists from Fort Detrick, the Army’s biological warfare headquarters, in Frederick, Maryland. As a noted German authority on viruses he was asked to consult on their animal disease program from a Biological Warfare perspective. Traub discussed work done at the Reich Research Institute for Virus Diseases of Animals on Riems Island during World War II for the Nazis, and work done after the war there for the Russians. Traub gave a detailed explanation of the secret operation at the Institute, and his activities there. This information provided the ground work for Fort Detrick's offshore germ warfare animal disease lab on Plum Island.[6]

His publicly published research from his time in the United States reports disease research not directly related to weaponization. In 1951, he published a report for the Naval Medical Research Institute on Newcastle Disease virus in chicken and mammalian blood cells.[12] Two years later, he published a paper for the Navy on the mechanisms of immunity in chickens to Newcastle and the possible role of cellular factors.[13] Also in 1953, he published another paper for the Navy with Worth I. Capps on the foot-and-mouth disease virus and methods for rapid adaptation.[14]

Traub served as an expert on foot-and-mouth disease for the FAO of the UN in Bogota, Colombia, from 1951 to 1952, in Tehran, Iran, from 1963 to 1967, and in Ankara, Turkey, from 1969 to 1971.

Return to Germany edit

 
Tombstone

After working on biological research for the U.S. Navy from 1949 to 1953, Traub returned to Germany and founded a new branch of the Loeffler Institut in Tübingen, and headed it from 1953 to 1963.[15] In 1960, Traub resigned as Tübingen’s director due to the scandal related to accusations of financial embezzlement. He continued with limited lab research for three more years, but then ended his career at Tübingen.[10]

In 1964, Traub published a study for the Army Biological labs in Frederick, Maryland on Eastern Equine Encephalomyeltitis (EEE) immunity in white mice and its relationship to Lymphocytic choriomeningitis (LCM), which had long been a research interest of his.[16]

He retired from the West German civil service in 1971. In 1972, on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Traub received an honorary doctorate degree in Veterinary Medicine for his achievements in basic and applied Virology (basic research on LCM; definition and diagnosis of type strains of FMD and their variants; development of adsorbate vaccines against fowl plague, Teschen disease of swine, and erysipelas of swine).

On 18 May 1985, Traub died in his sleep in West Germany. He was seventy-eight years old.[10]

Bio-weapon research edit

In theory, insects of all types, particularly the biting species, can be used as disease vectors in a biological warfare program. Germany, Japan, Britain, Russia and the U.S. all conducted experiments along these lines during the Second World War, and the Japanese used such insect-borne diseases against both soldiers and civilians in China. This was one reason that President Franklin Roosevelt and Secretary of War Henry Stimson ordered the creation of an American biological warfare program in 1942, which was headquartered at Camp Detrick, Maryland. This eventually grew to a very large facility with 245 buildings and a $60 million budget, including an Entomological Weapons Department that mass-produced flies, lice and mosquitoes as disease vectors. Although the British bio-weapon facility at Porton Down concentrated on the production of anthrax bombs, it also conducted experiments on insects as vectors.

After the war, the Army's 406th Medical General Laboratory in Japan cooperated with former scientists from Unit 731 in experimenting with many different insect vectors, including lice, flies, mosquitoes, ticks, fleas, spiders and beetles to carry a wide variety of diseases, from cholera to meningitis. At Fort Detrick in the late 1940s, Theodore Rosebury also rated insect vectors very highly, and its entomological division had at least three insect-vectored weapons ready for use by 1950. Some of these were later tested at the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, and allegedly used during the Korean War as well.[17]

Traub visited the Plum Island Animal Disease Center (PIADC) in New York on at least three occasions in the 1950s. The Plum Island facility, operated by the Department of Agriculture, conducted research on foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) of cattle, one of Traub's areas of expertise.[1] Traub was offered a leading position at Plum Island in 1958 which he officially declined. It has been alleged that the United States performed bioweapons research on Plum Island.[1][18]

Fort Terry on Plum Island was part of the U.S. biological warfare program in 1944-46, working on veterinary testing in connection with the weaponization of brucellosis. After the war, research on biological weapons continued at Pine Bluff in Arkansas and Fort Detrick, Maryland, while officially at least Plum Island was transferred to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.[19] From 1949, Plum Island also conducted work on biological weapons against animals and livestock, such as foot-and-mouth disease, Rinderpest, Newcastle disease, African swine fever and plague and malaria in birds. Traub's research work from the Second World War onward involved at least the first three of these (all dangerous only to non-human animal species).[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Carroll, Michael (2004). Lab 257: The Disturbing Story of the Government's Secret Germ Laboratory. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-001141-6.
  2. ^ a b Hunt, Hunt (1991). Secret Agenda: The United States Government, Nazi Scientists, and Project Paperclip, 1945 to 1990. New York: St.Martin's Press. p. 340.
  3. ^ Traub, Erich (22 March 1935). A filterable virus recovered from white mice. Science, volume 81. pp. 298–99.
  4. ^ Traub E, Cultivation of Pseudorabies Virus, J Exp Med, 30 November 1933, 58(6), 663-81.
  5. ^ Barthold SW, Introduction: microbes and the evolution of scientific fancy mice, ILAR J, 2008, 49(3), 265-71.
  6. ^ a b Carroll, Michael (2004). Lab 257: The Disturbing Story of the Government's Secret Germ Laboratory. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 7–8. ISBN 0-06-001141-6.
  7. ^ a b c d Geissler, Erhard (1998). Conversion of BTW Warfare facilities: Lessons from German History. Springer; 1st edition. pp. 53–66. ISBN 978-0-7923-5250-1.
  8. ^ A Terrible Mistake: The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA’s Secret Cold War Experiments - H.P.Albarelli - 1 July 2009 - ISBN 0-9777953-7-3
  9. ^ Glen Yeadon; John Hawkins (August 2008). The Nazi Hydra in America: Suppressed History of a Century. Progressive Press. p. 381. ISBN 978-0-930852-43-6.
  10. ^ a b c Carroll, Michael (2004). Lab 257: The Disturbing Story of the Government's Secret Germ Laboratory. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. pp. 10–11. ISBN 0-06-001141-6.
  11. ^ Paul Maddrell, 'Operation “Matchbox” and the Scientific Containment of the USSR', in P. Jackson & J. Siegel (eds.), Intelligence and Statecraft: The Use and Limits of Intelligence in International Society ( Westport, CT : Praeger Publishers), (2005), pp. 173–206.
  12. ^ Erich Traub, "Studies on the In-Vitro Multiplication of Newcastle Disease Virus in Chicken Blood." Naval Medical Research Institute, National Naval Medical Center, 1951.
  13. ^ Erich Traub, "Studies in the Mechanism of Immunity of Chickens to Newcastle Disease Virus." Naval Medical Research Institute, National Naval Medical Center, 1953.
  14. ^ Erich Traub and Worth I. Capps, "Experiments with Chicken Embryo-Adapted Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus and a Method for the Rapid Adaptation." Naval Medical Research Institute, National Naval Medical Center, 1953.
  15. ^ Friedrich-Loeffler-Institute, Federal Research Institute for Animal Health 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine, History: Isle of Riems
  16. ^ Eric Traub, "Immunity of White Mice to EEE-VIrus." Report No. 8, Army Biological Labs, Frederick, MD, 1964.
  17. ^ Jeffrey Alan Lockwood, Six-Legged Soldiers: Using Insects as Weapons of War. Oxford, 2009, pp. 145-46; 160-61
  18. ^ Loftus, John (1982). The Belarus Secret. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-52292-3.
  19. ^ David C. Hoover and Richard H. Borschel, "Medical Protection against Brucellosis" in Luther E. Lindler, Frank J. Lebeda, and George Korch (eds), Biological Weapons Defense: Infectious Diseases and Counterterrorism. Humana Press, 2005, pp. 155-84.
  20. ^ John Ellis van Courtland Moon, "The U.S. Biological Weapons Program" in Mark Wheelis, Lajos Rozsa and Malcolm Dando (eds) Deadly Cultures: Biological Weapons since 1945. Harvard, 2006, pp. 9-46.

Further reading edit

  • Carroll, Michael Christopher. Lab 257: The Disturbing Story of the Government's Secret Germ Laboratory. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-06-001141-6.
  • Bernstein, Barton J.: "Birth of the U.S. biological warfare program." Scientific American 256: 116–121, 1987.
  • Geissler, Erhard: Biologische Waffen, nicht in Hitlers Arsenalen. Biologische und Toxin-Kampfmittel in Deutschland von 1915–1945. LIT-Verlag, Berlin-Hamburg-Münster, 2nd ed., 1999. ISBN 3-8258-2955-3.
  • Geissler, Erhard: "Biological warfare activities in Germany 1923–1945." In: Geissler, Erhard and Moon, John Ellis van Courtland, eds., Biological Warfare from the Middle Ages to 1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-19-829579-0.
  • Maddrell, Paul: Spying on Science: Western Intelligence in Divided Germany 1945–1961. Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 0-19-926750-2.
  • John Rather: New York Times, 15 February 2004: Heaping more dirt on Plum I.
  • Albarelli JR., H.P.: A Terrible Mistake:The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA’s Secret Cold War Experiments - Trine Day LLC, 1st ed., 2009, ISBN 0-9777953-7-3
  • Office of U.S. Chief of Counsel for the American Military Tribunals at Nuremberg, 1946, concerning Nazi experiments on concentration camp prisoners with hepatitis and nephritis viruses.
  • Erich Traub, "Immunity of White Mice to EEE Virus." Report No. 8, Army Biological Labs, Frederick, MD, 1964.

External links edit

erich, traub, june, 1906, 1985, german, veterinarian, scientist, virologist, specialized, foot, mouth, disease, rinderpest, newcastle, disease, traub, member, national, socialist, motor, corps, nskk, nazi, motorist, corps, from, 1938, 1942, worked, directly, h. Erich Traub 27 June 1906 18 May 1985 was a German veterinarian scientist and virologist who specialized in foot and mouth disease Rinderpest and Newcastle disease Traub was a member of the National Socialist Motor Corps NSKK a Nazi motorist corps from 1938 to 1942 He worked directly for Heinrich Himmler head of the Schutzstaffel SS as the lab chief of the Nazis leading bio weapons facility on Riems Island 1 Erich TraubBorn 1906 06 27 27 June 1906Asperglen German EmpireDied18 May 1985 1985 05 18 aged 78 Rosenheim West GermanyCitizenshipGerman AmericanAlma materRockefeller Institute for Medical ResearchKnown forFoot and mouth diseaseScientific careerFieldsVirologistInstitutionsUniversity of GiessenRiems Island German ReichTraub was transported from the Soviet zone of Germany after World War II and taken to the United States in 1949 under the auspices of the United States government program Operation Paperclip meant to exploit the post war scientific knowledge in Germany and deny it to the Soviet Union 2 Contents 1 Career 1 1 Early career and war 1 2 Post war 1 3 Return to Germany 2 Bio weapon research 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksCareer editEarly career and war edit During the 1930s he studied on a fellowship at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in Princeton New Jersey mentored by Richard Shope performing research on vaccines and viruses including pseudorabies virus and lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus LCM 3 4 5 During his stay in the United States Traub and his wife were listed as members of the German American Bund a pro Nazi German American club thirty miles west of Plum Island in Yaphank Long Island from 1934 to 1935 6 Traub worked at the University of Giessen Germany from 1938 to 1942 7 Traub was a member of the Nazi NSKK a motorist corps from 1938 to 1942 The NSKK was declared a condemned not a criminal organization at the Nuremberg trials 1 From 1942 to 1948 Traub worked as lab chief at the Reich Research Institute for Virus Diseases of Animals German Reichsforschungsanstalt fur Viruskrankheiten der Tiere on Riems Island German Insel Riems a German animal virus research institute in the Baltic sea now named the Friedrich Loeffler Institute The institute was headed by Prof Dr Otto Waldmann from 1919 to 1948 while Traub was vice president 7 The Institute at Riems Island was a dual use facility during the Second World War where at least some biological warfare experiments were conducted It had been founded in 1909 10 to study foot and mouth disease in animals and by World War II employed about 20 scientists and a staff of 70 120 Hanns Christoph Nagel a veterinarian and biological warfare expert for the German Army conducted experiments there as did Traub 7 The institute was administered under the Innenministerium Ministry of the Interior which Reichsfuhrer SS Heinrich Himmler took over in 1943 The chain of command was Himmler Dr Leonardo Conti Reich Health Leader Kurt Blome Waldmann and then Traub Traub specialized in viral and bacterial diseases He was assisted by Anna Burger who was later also brought to the United States after the war to work with the Navy s biological warfare program 8 On orders from Himmler and Blome the Deputy Reich Health Leader and head of the German biological warfare program Traub worked on weaponizing foot and mouth disease virus which has been reported to have been dispersed by aircraft onto cattle and reindeer in Russia 9 In 1944 Blome sent Traub to pick up a strain of Rinderpest virus in Turkey upon his return this strain proved inactive nonvirulent and therefore plans for a Rinderpest product were shelved 1 Post war edit Immediately after the war Traub was trapped in the Soviet zone of Allied occupied Germany He was forced to work for the Soviets from his lab on Riems Island 10 In July 1948 the British evacuated Erich Traub from Riems Island as a high priority Intelligence target since it was now in the Soviet Zone and they feared that Traub was assisting in their biological warfare program Traub denied this however claiming that his only interest was foot and mouth disease in animals 11 Traub was brought to the United States in 1949 under the auspices of the United States government program Operation Paperclip meant to exploit scientific knowledge in Germany and deny it to the Soviet Union 2 From 1949 to 1953 he was associated with the Naval Medical Research Institute in Bethesda Maryland 7 Months into his Operation Paperclip contract Traub was asked to meet with US scientists from Fort Detrick the Army s biological warfare headquarters in Frederick Maryland As a noted German authority on viruses he was asked to consult on their animal disease program from a Biological Warfare perspective Traub discussed work done at the Reich Research Institute for Virus Diseases of Animals on Riems Island during World War II for the Nazis and work done after the war there for the Russians Traub gave a detailed explanation of the secret operation at the Institute and his activities there This information provided the ground work for Fort Detrick s offshore germ warfare animal disease lab on Plum Island 6 His publicly published research from his time in the United States reports disease research not directly related to weaponization In 1951 he published a report for the Naval Medical Research Institute on Newcastle Disease virus in chicken and mammalian blood cells 12 Two years later he published a paper for the Navy on the mechanisms of immunity in chickens to Newcastle and the possible role of cellular factors 13 Also in 1953 he published another paper for the Navy with Worth I Capps on the foot and mouth disease virus and methods for rapid adaptation 14 Traub served as an expert on foot and mouth disease for the FAO of the UN in Bogota Colombia from 1951 to 1952 in Tehran Iran from 1963 to 1967 and in Ankara Turkey from 1969 to 1971 Return to Germany edit nbsp TombstoneAfter working on biological research for the U S Navy from 1949 to 1953 Traub returned to Germany and founded a new branch of the Loeffler Institut in Tubingen and headed it from 1953 to 1963 15 In 1960 Traub resigned as Tubingen s director due to the scandal related to accusations of financial embezzlement He continued with limited lab research for three more years but then ended his career at Tubingen 10 In 1964 Traub published a study for the Army Biological labs in Frederick Maryland on Eastern Equine Encephalomyeltitis EEE immunity in white mice and its relationship to Lymphocytic choriomeningitis LCM which had long been a research interest of his 16 He retired from the West German civil service in 1971 In 1972 on the occasion of the 500th anniversary of Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Traub received an honorary doctorate degree in Veterinary Medicine for his achievements in basic and applied Virology basic research on LCM definition and diagnosis of type strains of FMD and their variants development of adsorbate vaccines against fowl plague Teschen disease of swine and erysipelas of swine On 18 May 1985 Traub died in his sleep in West Germany He was seventy eight years old 10 Bio weapon research editThis section may contain material not related to the topic of the article Please help improve this section or discuss this issue on the talk page May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message In theory insects of all types particularly the biting species can be used as disease vectors in a biological warfare program Germany Japan Britain Russia and the U S all conducted experiments along these lines during the Second World War and the Japanese used such insect borne diseases against both soldiers and civilians in China This was one reason that President Franklin Roosevelt and Secretary of War Henry Stimson ordered the creation of an American biological warfare program in 1942 which was headquartered at Camp Detrick Maryland This eventually grew to a very large facility with 245 buildings and a 60 million budget including an Entomological Weapons Department that mass produced flies lice and mosquitoes as disease vectors Although the British bio weapon facility at Porton Down concentrated on the production of anthrax bombs it also conducted experiments on insects as vectors After the war the Army s 406th Medical General Laboratory in Japan cooperated with former scientists from Unit 731 in experimenting with many different insect vectors including lice flies mosquitoes ticks fleas spiders and beetles to carry a wide variety of diseases from cholera to meningitis At Fort Detrick in the late 1940s Theodore Rosebury also rated insect vectors very highly and its entomological division had at least three insect vectored weapons ready for use by 1950 Some of these were later tested at the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah and allegedly used during the Korean War as well 17 Traub visited the Plum Island Animal Disease Center PIADC in New York on at least three occasions in the 1950s The Plum Island facility operated by the Department of Agriculture conducted research on foot and mouth disease FMD of cattle one of Traub s areas of expertise 1 Traub was offered a leading position at Plum Island in 1958 which he officially declined It has been alleged that the United States performed bioweapons research on Plum Island 1 18 Fort Terry on Plum Island was part of the U S biological warfare program in 1944 46 working on veterinary testing in connection with the weaponization of brucellosis After the war research on biological weapons continued at Pine Bluff in Arkansas and Fort Detrick Maryland while officially at least Plum Island was transferred to the U S Department of Agriculture 19 From 1949 Plum Island also conducted work on biological weapons against animals and livestock such as foot and mouth disease Rinderpest Newcastle disease African swine fever and plague and malaria in birds Traub s research work from the Second World War onward involved at least the first three of these all dangerous only to non human animal species 20 See also editEdgewood Arsenal Project MKULTRA Project MKNAOMI Claus Schilling Sigmund Rascher Kurt Blome Fort DetrickReferences edit a b c d e Carroll Michael 2004 Lab 257 The Disturbing Story of the Government s Secret Germ Laboratory New York HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 0 06 001141 6 a b Hunt Hunt 1991 Secret Agenda The United States Government Nazi Scientists and Project Paperclip 1945 to 1990 New York St Martin s Press p 340 Traub Erich 22 March 1935 A filterable virus recovered from white mice Science volume 81 pp 298 99 Traub E Cultivation of Pseudorabies Virus J Exp Med 30 November 1933 58 6 663 81 Barthold SW Introduction microbes and the evolution of scientific fancy mice ILAR J 2008 49 3 265 71 a b Carroll Michael 2004 Lab 257 The Disturbing Story of the Government s Secret Germ Laboratory New York HarperCollins Publishers pp 7 8 ISBN 0 06 001141 6 a b c d Geissler Erhard 1998 Conversion of BTW Warfare facilities Lessons from German History Springer 1st edition pp 53 66 ISBN 978 0 7923 5250 1 A Terrible Mistake The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA s Secret Cold War Experiments H P Albarelli 1 July 2009 ISBN 0 9777953 7 3 Glen Yeadon John Hawkins August 2008 The Nazi Hydra in America Suppressed History of a Century Progressive Press p 381 ISBN 978 0 930852 43 6 a b c Carroll Michael 2004 Lab 257 The Disturbing Story of the Government s Secret Germ Laboratory New York HarperCollins Publishers pp 10 11 ISBN 0 06 001141 6 Paul Maddrell Operation Matchbox and the Scientific Containment of the USSR in P Jackson amp J Siegel eds Intelligence and Statecraft The Use and Limits of Intelligence in International Society Westport CT Praeger Publishers 2005 pp 173 206 Erich Traub Studies on the In Vitro Multiplication of Newcastle Disease Virus in Chicken Blood Naval Medical Research Institute National Naval Medical Center 1951 Erich Traub Studies in the Mechanism of Immunity of Chickens to Newcastle Disease Virus Naval Medical Research Institute National Naval Medical Center 1953 Erich Traub and Worth I Capps Experiments with Chicken Embryo Adapted Foot and Mouth Disease Virus and a Method for the Rapid Adaptation Naval Medical Research Institute National Naval Medical Center 1953 Friedrich Loeffler Institute Federal Research Institute for Animal Health Archived 5 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine History Isle of Riems Eric Traub Immunity of White Mice to EEE VIrus Report No 8 Army Biological Labs Frederick MD 1964 Jeffrey Alan Lockwood Six Legged Soldiers Using Insects as Weapons of War Oxford 2009 pp 145 46 160 61 Loftus John 1982 The Belarus Secret Knopf ISBN 0 394 52292 3 David C Hoover and Richard H Borschel Medical Protection against Brucellosis in Luther E Lindler Frank J Lebeda and George Korch eds Biological Weapons Defense Infectious Diseases and Counterterrorism Humana Press 2005 pp 155 84 John Ellis van Courtland Moon The U S Biological Weapons Program in Mark Wheelis Lajos Rozsa and Malcolm Dando eds Deadly Cultures Biological Weapons since 1945 Harvard 2006 pp 9 46 Further reading editCarroll Michael Christopher Lab 257 The Disturbing Story of the Government s Secret Germ Laboratory New York HarperCollins Publishers ISBN 0 06 001141 6 Bernstein Barton J Birth of the U S biological warfare program Scientific American 256 116 121 1987 Geissler Erhard Biologische Waffen nicht in Hitlers Arsenalen Biologische und Toxin Kampfmittel in Deutschland von 1915 1945 LIT Verlag Berlin Hamburg Munster 2nd ed 1999 ISBN 3 8258 2955 3 Geissler Erhard Biological warfare activities in Germany 1923 1945 In Geissler Erhard and Moon John Ellis van Courtland eds Biological Warfare from the Middle Ages to 1945 New York Oxford University Press 1999 ISBN 0 19 829579 0 Maddrell Paul Spying on Science Western Intelligence in Divided Germany 1945 1961 Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 0 19 926750 2 John Rather New York Times 15 February 2004 Heaping more dirt on Plum I Albarelli JR H P A Terrible Mistake The Murder of Frank Olson and the CIA s Secret Cold War Experiments Trine Day LLC 1st ed 2009 ISBN 0 9777953 7 3 Office of U S Chief of Counsel for the American Military Tribunals at Nuremberg 1946 concerning Nazi experiments on concentration camp prisoners with hepatitis and nephritis viruses Erich Traub Immunity of White Mice to EEE Virus Report No 8 Army Biological Labs Frederick MD 1964 External links edithttp www mazal org NO series NO 0124 000 htm Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erich Traub amp oldid 1179850464, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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