Opinion 
 Blogs 
 Between the Lines 
 Air of danger lacks substance 

Air of danger lacks substance

Western intelligence agencies have been warning for years about the terrible consequences that would ensue if Iran were to get nuclear weapons. Better bomb the place before they do.

But North Korea already has nuclear weapons, and now they are falling into the hands of a young man whose main qualification for office is that he is less weird than his half-brother, who was caught trying to sneak into Japan on a false passport to visit Disneyland Tokyo.

The North Korean story has got a lot of play in the media in the past few days, partly because Kim Jong-Un is such an obvious misfit for the job of “Great Successor”.

What gives the story legs, however, is North Korea’s nuclear weapons (both of them), its huge army (fifth-biggest in the world), and its belligerent rhetoric.

A mere two nuclear weapons, so primitive and clumsy that they are probably only deliverable by truck, are not useable for attack.

Their only sensible purpose is to deter an attack, and North Korea’s aren’t very credible even in that role. All very well, the intelligence analysts say, but what if those who control the weapons are crazy?

So we have, on the one hand, these not very convincing official claims, loyally repeated by Western media, that the latest dynastic succession in North Korea might “destabilise” north-eastern Asia, even leading to a nuclear war.

And on the other hand, we have a lab in the Netherlands that has fabricated an ultra-lethal variant of the “bird flu” virus and plans to publish its results.

The Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam is a long way from the secret underground lairs where James Bond-style villains hatched their evil plans, and Dr Ron Fouchier, the lead researcher in the H5N1 experiment, does not look a bit like Dr No.

In fact, Dr Fouchier is a decent man who means well. Yet what he has made is far more dangerous than North Korea’s bombs.

When the H5N1 virus first appeared in 1996, there was a global panic, for it killed about 60 per cent of the people it infected.

The panic subsided when it turned out the virus could only be spread by very close physical contact between people; you were most unlikely to catch it sitting next to someone on a bus.

It would have been very different if the virus had been as infectious as the common cold. Since H5N1 was not a “airborne” virus, it killed only a few hundred people, not a few hundred million – but viruses can mutate. How easy would it be for H5N1 to mutate into an “airborne” global killer?

That’s the question Dr Fouchier set out to answer. He caused deliberate mutations in the virus and then repeatedly passed it manually from one lab animal to another – and quite soon, he had what he was looking for.

“In the laboratory, it was possible to change H5N1 into an aerosol-transmissible virus that can easily be ... spread through the air,” Dr Fouchier said. “This process can also take place in a natural setting. We know which mutation to look for in the case of an outbreak, and we can then stop the outbreak before it is too late.”

Dr Fouchier’s scientific paper has already been submitted for publication, but the US Government still has the power to order key parts of the paper to be omitted, so that terrorists cannot use the information to create their own global quick-killer virus.

But there are probably several terrorist organisations, and dozens of governments, that can duplicate Dr Fouchier’s research. There are more frightening things in the world than wonky North Korean dictators.

Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

Print
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size
Page:
1

comments


No comments were posted for this article.
Between the Lines
Offering you a new spin on the news of the day and the topics that often get us hot under the collar. Sometimes serious, sometimes humorous but always worth a look.
Photo: REUTERS/ISSEI KATO
Photo: REUTERS/ISSEI KATO

Most popular articles




Illawarra Mercury







Weather brought to you by:

Weatherzone

Classifieds

Front Page

Current Issue
Privacy Policy | Conditions of Use | Advertising Terms | Copyright © 2012. Fairfax Media.
 SEND...
 SAVE...
 SHARE...