US developing chemical attack sensor for subways

מתוך medicontext.co.il

By Claire Soares

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States is preparing to test a revolutionary system for detecting chemical attacks in subways, a government official said on Wednesday.

The system would detect and identify toxic chemicals, map contaminated zones and predict directions in which the hazardous gases might spread so emergency crews could redirect trains and passengers.

The US government has been working on the early-warning sensor system, thought to be the first of its kind in the world, for the past 3 years. The tests are now considered urgent because of widespread fears of possible chemical attacks after the September 11th attacks on the United States, which prompted a declaration of war on international terrorism by President Bush.

"September 11 has galvanized our determination; we are in the process of looking to acquire additional resources, looking into ways of accelerating it," an official from the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) said in a telephone interview with Reuters on condition of anonymity.

The sensor system is "a bit like a smoke detector in your house that's wired to the fire station…so that the fire department knows there's a fire, which floor it's on and what kind of fire it is," the official said.

"This is a response system. It's the only one in the world I'm aware of," she added.

One of Washington's 83 subway stations will host the test before the end of this year and by 2003 officials hope to carry out a multi-station check. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, whose trains carry 600,000 people around the capital each day, is working with the Department of Transportation, the National Institute of Justice and the Department of Energy on the project.

The Department of Energy has invested $6.45 million since 1998 in the initiative, dubbed PROTECT–Program for Response Options and Technology Enhancements for Chemical/Biological Terrorism.

Analysts have seen metro systems as vulnerable targets for chemical attacks since 1995, when members of a Japanese doomsday cult released sarin gas on a crowded Tokyo subway. The nerve gas killed 12 people and nearly 6000 fell ill.

"I think Tokyo was a wake-up call. I would think it was the 1995 equivalent of the events of 2 weeks ago," the NNSA official said.

Experts believe the chemical agents most likely to be used by terrorists would be nerve gases like sarin, which short-circuit the nervous system, and mustard gas, used in World War I, which causes lethal internal and external blistering. The system could eventually be developed to detect biological agents such as anthrax and smallpox.

In the wake of the September 11th attacks, the United Nations World Health Organization (WHO) on Tuesday urged all countries to strengthen their defenses against biological and chemical weapons.

"Alarm bells are starting to ring. Under these circumstances it would be imprudent not to be thinking at least and planning as hard as possible," WHO executive David Nabarro said.

The NNSA was reluctant to discuss specific details of the system, fearing this could help anyone planning a chemical attack. Officials at the Washington transit authority declined to talk about the project.

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