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Homeland Security's BioWatch still flawed
by Staff Writers
Denver (UPI) Jul 7, 2012

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

The United States' high-tech system for detecting biological attacks has flaws, and it remains to be seen whether upgrades will solve them, experts say.

The Department of Homeland Security's BioWatch system of air samplers has experienced numerous false alarms since first being deployed in 2003, the Los Angeles Times reported Saturday. The newspaper said its investigation found the system not only has produced dozens of false alarms in Los Angeles, Detroit, St. Louis, Phoenix, San Diego and the San Francisco area, but that confidential government results and computer modeling determined BioWatch can't be depended upon to detect a real attack.

The Times said state and local health officials have exhibited no confidence in BioWatch, having never ordered evacuations or distributed emergency medications when a positive reading has occurred.

While the cause of the false alarms has not been pinpointed by federal officials, the Times said scientists familiar with the system say the problem appears to be the equipment's inability to tell the difference between dangerous pathogens unleashed by terrorists and similar, naturally occurring germs that do not pose a threat.

"I can't find anyone in my peer group who believes in BioWatch," said Dr. Ned Calonge, chief medical officer for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment from 2002 to 2010.

"The only times it goes off, it's wrong. I just think it's a colossal waste of money. It's a stupid program."

Several people who attended a November meeting said officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told White House aides they would not send medicine to the site of a supposed attack based solely on a BioWatch warning. Independent confirmation would be necessary, they said.

Homeland Security officials say the system is working because it is detecting organisms, even if of a benign nature, and the experience is being used to develop a better product. They have told Congress updated technology, dubbed Generation 3, will make BioWatch better and less expensive to operate. BioWatch has cost a billion dollars so far, and Generation 3 is expected to run about $3.1 billion for the next five years. The Obama administration has yet to award a multiyear contract for the program Dr. Alexander Garza, Homeland Security's chief medical officer, calls "imperative to saving thousands of lives."

Questions remain about just how effective the new technology will be, with the Times reporting a confidential Homeland Security analysis prepared in January found "failures were so significant" the department had proposed that Northrop Grumman Corp., which is in the running for the Generation 3 contract, make "major engineering modifications."

Department spokesman Peter Boogaard told the Times "all precautions necessary" would be taken "to minimize the occurrence of both false positive and false negative results."

Northrop Grumman officials told the newspaper some test results had led to improvements.

"We had an issue that affected the consistency of the performance of the system," said Dave Tilles, the company's project director. "We resolved it. We fixed it. … We feel like we're ready for the next phase of the program."

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US military plans fiber optic link to Guantanamo
Washington (AFP) July 5, 2012 - The Pentagon plans to install a $40 million fiber optic cable between the US military jail at Guantanamo Bay and the US mainland, a spokesman said Thursday -- an indication the facility will not close anytime soon.

According to a "feasibility study" conducted by the US Defense Information Systems Agency, the project will cost an estimated $40 million, Pentagon spokesman Todd Breasseale told AFP.

The project -- part of the budget for the fiscal year 2013 -- must be approved by Congress, he said, confirming a Miami Herald report.

The construction of a fiber optic link would greatly improve telecoms access for those living at the US military base in Cuba. Detention camps at the naval base currently house 169 inmates.

President Barack Obama had promised the detention center would be closed, but Congress has so far blocked any substantive measures.

News of the fiber optic cable project comes after the recent construction of a football field for Guantanamo inmates, at a cost of $744,000.

"It would be a mistake to assume that some potential use of fiber optic communication lines" at Guantanamo Bay "is any indication of how long the detention center will be around," said Breasseale.

"Our goal remains to close the detention facility. We have no plans to close the naval station there."

The Guantanamo Bay naval base is built on Cuban land leased to the United States in 1903. Terror suspects have been detained at the prison there since 2001.



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Yemen: U.S. backing masks Saudi covert ops
Sanaa, Yemen (UPI) Jul 5, 2012
As Yemen's military, backed by U.S. Special Forces and the CIA, drive al-Qaida forces out of their southern strongholds, Saudi Arabia's intelligence agents, old hands at operating in Yemen, are playing a vital clandestine role. Few outside Yemen appreciate the extent to which oil-rich Saudi Arabia has been able over the years to influence, even dominate, events in its troublesome and im ... read more


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