The discovery that Iraq had an offensive biological weapons programme prior to the 1991 Gulf War, and that the Soviet Union had continued its work on such weapons throughout the 1980s has provoked widespread public concern over these weapons of mass destruction. Official concern amongst Western states, for example, over the anthrax outbreak at Sverdlovsk, has been of long standing, and recent US statements have indicated that at least five and perhaps eight states have such weapons. It is also now known that during and after World War II, Britain, the US and Japan had major offensive biological weapons programmes. The problem of controlling the further proliferation of bioligical weapons is compounded by the weakness of the Biological Weapons Convention, and the revolution curently underway in biotechnology. This book attempts to provide the basis for an assessment of whether biological weapons, and the possibility of biological warfare, will be of increasing importance. The book reviews past biological weapons programmes and the implications of the growth of biotechnology.
It outlines the origins and development of the Biological Weapons Convention, including the current attempts to determine if a verification system is possible. Finally, the problem of the control of biological weapons is set in the general context of the control of proliferation of advanced weaponry in the post-Cold War era. Malcolm Dando is the co-author (with Paul Rogers) of "A Violent Peace: Global Security after the Cold War".
- ISBN13 9781857530643
- Publish Date 31 December 1994
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 5 March 2005
- Publish Country GB
- Publisher Pavilion Books
- Imprint Brassey's (UK) Ltd
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 226
- Language English