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      A brief history of biological weapons programmes and the use of animal pathogens as biological warfare agents.

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          Abstract

          Any one of thousands of different microorganisms that affect the health and safety of the world's populations of humans, animals and plants could potentially be weaponised; that is undergo research and development whose aim is to create species or strains that could serve as deadly payloads for spray systems, bombs, rockets or missiles. However, many historical studies of warfare have made it clear that only a few species of bacteria and viruses have been weaponised. As is made clear in this paper, of the pathogens weaponised in the 20th century by Japan, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), the United States and Iraq, most were zoonotic pathogens. If a nation or terrorist group were to acquire biological weapons in the future, it is most likely that their payload would be a zoonotic pathogen.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Rev Sci Tech
          Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)
          O.I.E (World Organisation for Animal Health)
          0253-1933
          0253-1933
          Aug 2017
          : 36
          : 2
          Article
          10.20506/rst.36.2.2662
          30152475
          f01ed902-9ef7-4bf2-a231-510eb23ca2ee
          History

          Agent pathogene,Arme biologique,Bacillus anthracis,Botulisme,Burkholderia mallei,Burkholderia pseudomallei,Clostridium botulinum,Fievre charbonneuse (anthrax),Francisella tularensis,Guerre biologique,Historique,Irak,Japon,Terrorisme biologique,Union sovietique*,Variole,Virus ebola,Virus marburg,Yersinia pestis,États-unis d'amérique

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