U.S. Drops Fleas With Bubonic Plague on North
Korea
By David Swanson
September 08, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
This happened some 63 years ago, but as the U.S. government has
never stopped lying about it, and it's generally known only outside
the United States, I'm going to treat it as news.
Here in our little U.S. bubble we've heard of a
couple versions of a film called The Manchurian Candidate.
We've heard of the general concept of "brainwashing" and may even
associate it with something evil that the Chinese supposedly did to
U.S. prisoners during the Korean War. And I'd be willing to bet that
the majority of people who've heard of these things have at least a
vague sense that they're bullshit.
If you didn't know, I'll break it to you right
now: people cannot actually be programed like the Manchurian
candidate, which was a work of fiction. There was never the
slightest evidence that China or North Korea had done any such
thing. And the CIA spent decades trying to do such a thing, and
finally gave up.
I'd also be willing to bet that very few people
know what it was that the U.S. government promoted the myth of
"brainwashing" to cover up. During the Korean War, the United States
bombed virtually all of North Korea and a good bit of the South,
killing millions of people. It dropped massive quantities of Napalm.
It bombed dams, bridges, villages, houses. This was all-out
mass-slaughter. But there was something the U.S. government didn't
want known, something deemed unethical in this genocidal madness.
It is
well documented that the United States dropped on China and
North Korea insects and feathers carrying anthrax, cholera,
encephalitis, and bubonic plague. This was supposed to be a secret
at the time, and the Chinese response of mass vaccinations and
insect eradication probably contributed to the project's general
failure (hundreds were killed, but not millions). But members of the
U.S. military taken prisoner by the Chinese confessed to what they
had been a part of, and confessed publicly when they got back to the
United States.
Some of them had felt guilty to begin with. Some
had been shocked at China's decent treatment of prisoners after U.S.
depictions of the Chinese as savages. For whatever reasons, they
confessed, and their confessions were highly credible, were borne
out by independent scientific reviews, and have stood the test of
time.
How to counter reports of the confessions? The
answer for the CIA and the U.S. military and their allies in the
corporate media was "brainwashing," which conveniently explained
away whatever former prisoners said as false narratives implanted in
their brains by brainwashers.
And 300 million of so Americans more or less sort
of believe that craziest-ever dog-ate-my-homework concoction to this
day!
The propaganda struggle was intense. The support
of the Guatemalan government for the reports of U.S. germ warfare in
China were part of the U.S. motivation for overthrowing the
Guatemalan government; and the same cover-up was likely part of the
motivation for the CIA's murder of
Frank Olson.
There isn't any debate that the United States had
been working on bio-weapons for years, at Fort Detrick -- then Camp
Detrick -- and numerous other locations. Nor is there any question
that the United States employed the top bio-weapons killers from
among both the Japanese and the Nazis from the end of World War II
onward. Nor is there any question that the U.S. tested such weapons
on the city of San Francisco and numerous other locations around the
United States, and on U.S. soldiers. There's a museum in Havana
featuring evidence of years of U.S. bio-warfare against
Cuba. We know that
Plum Island, off the
tip of Long Island, was used to test the weaponization of insects,
including the ticks that created the ongoing outbreak of Lyme
Disease.
Dave Chaddock's book
This Must Be the Place, which I found via Jeff Kaye's
review, collects the evidence that the United States indeed
tried to wipe out millions of Chinese and North Koreans with deadly
diseases.
"What does it matter now?" I can imagine people
from only one corner of the earth asking.
I reply that it matters that we know the evils of
war and try to stop the new ones. U.S. cluster bombs in Yemen, U.S.
drone strikes in Pakistan, U.S. guns in Syria, U.S. white phosphorus
and Napalm and depleted uranium used in recent years, U.S. torture
in prison camps, U.S. nuclear arsenals being expanded, U.S. coups
empowering monsters in Ukraine and Honduras, U.S. lies about Iranian
nukes, and indeed U.S. antagonization of North Korea as part of that
never-yet-ended war -- all of these things can be best confronted by
people aware of a centuries-long pattern of lying.
And I reply, also, that it is not yet too late to
apologize.
David Swanson is an American activist, blogger
and author. -
http://davidswanson.org/