Chemical Weapons 
United States:  Tooele Flaws Might Have Been Measurement Errors, Not Chemical ReleasesFull Story
United States:  Anniston Incinerator Destroys More Than 30 Rockets in First WeekFull Story
United States I:  Tooele Chemical Weapons Incinerator Falls Short in TestFull Story
United States II:  Army Delays VX Destruction at Newport DepotFull Story
United States III:  Anniston Depot Has Shut Down Incinerator Twice This WeekFull Story
North Korea:  Seized Chemical Could Be Used to Produce Nerve AgentFull Story
United States:  Incinerator Scheduled to Run Slowly for First Two MonthsFull Story


Recent Stories: Chemical Weapons

From August 19, 2003 issue.

United States:  Tooele Flaws Might Have Been Measurement Errors, Not Chemical Releases

By David McGlinchey
Global Security Newswire

WASHINGTON — Army officials believe that a recent test failure at the Tooele chemical weapons incinerator in Utah may in fact have been an analytical problem, a spokesman said today (see GSN, Aug. 14).

“We had similar readings when we ran blank feeds,” said Greg Mahall, a spokesman at the Army’s Chemical Materials Agency.

Last week, the Army stopped burning some chemical weapons after it was discovered that test burns of rockets containing VX nerve gas had not destroyed a sufficient amount of the chemical agent.  Officials at the Tooele facility suspected the test reading may have been faulty and they ran the incinerator without any chemical weapons to see if testing equipment still showed that dangerous chemicals were being released.

“You feed nothing [into the incinerator], knowing that you have a zero, to see if you receive a zero,” Mahall said.

Mahall said officials are not yet certain if the problem lies only with the testing equipment, but he said the Army “believes that it is an analytical problem.”


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From August 18, 2003 issue.

United States:  Anniston Incinerator Destroys More Than 30 Rockets in First Week

In its first week of operation, the chemical weapons incinerator at the Anniston Army Depot in Alabama destroyed more than 30 sarin-filled rockets, the Birmingham News reported Saturday (see GSN, Aug. 14).

So far, the Anniston incinerator has destroyed 32 rockets out of more than 661,000 chemical weapons stored at the depot, according to the News.  The incinerator last week was operational for three days, with maintenance problems resulting in the incinerator being shut down four times.

“Once again, this is indicative that we are starting very, very slow — being very, very cautious,” U.S. Army spokesman Mike Abrams said (Katherine Bouma, Birmingham News, Aug. 16).


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From August 14, 2003 issue.

United States I:  Tooele Chemical Weapons Incinerator Falls Short in Test

By David McGlinchey
Global Security Newswire

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Army has stopped burning some chemical weapons at its Tooele, Utah, incinerator while it investigates an incomplete burn of M-55 rockets filled with VX nerve gas during test last week (see GSN, Aug. 13).

“The numbers that came out of the test burn were not within the parameters of the permit,” said Greg Mahall, a spokesman at the Army’s Chemical Materials Agency.

The incinerator apparently did not burn as much of the chemical as regulations require, possibly releasing some into the atmosphere, but the shortfall was negligible, according to Mahall.

Environmental regulations mandate that 99.9999 percent of the chemical be destroyed.  Tests indicated that the incinerator last week destroyed 99.99985 percent of the gas.

The problem might lie with the testing process and not the incinerator, Mahall added.

“It is cause for concern from the point that it doesn’t meet the permit, it behooves one to stop and look at this,” he said.  Army officials have suspended the incineration of fiberglass shipping and firing tubes for M-55 rockets, which contain the chemicals that might have been released.

Army officials, Mahall said, are “being as protective as [they] can.”

An environmental activist group said yesterday, however, that they might use the Tooele test as legal ammunition to stop chemical weapons incineration at the Anniston Army Depot in Alabama (see related GSN story, today).  The group sought a temporary restraining order against the Anniston incinerator last week, but it was rejected Friday.

In arguing against the restraining order, Army lawyers cited the success of the Tooele incinerator.

“Part of the argument they made was the performance and maturity and efficacy of the facility in Utah,” said Craig Williams, who heads the Chemical Weapons Working Group.  Citing the troubled Umatilla incinerator in Oregon — which has failed several test burns — Williams said the overall outlook is not good for the Army’s incineration program.

“Start connecting the dots, look at the big picture,” he said, the incinerators are “not all that they are advertised to be.”

Tooele county officials said they do not believe the Army’s incineration program should be suspended because of last week’s test results at their local incinerator.

The regulatory levels for burning chemical weapons “are set so conservatively … that even the failed level is no harm,” said Wade Mathews, a spokesman for Tooele County.

Tooele County Commissioner Gene White said that last week’s test “doesn’t create an unsafe situation.”

“It doesn’t completely concern me right at this particular point,” he added.

The Tooele officials said that some of their worry is alleviated because their facility is not located in the midst of a residential area, unlike the Anniston plant, where about 30,000 residents live within nine miles of the incinerator.


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From August 14, 2003 issue.

United States II:  Army Delays VX Destruction at Newport Depot

The U.S. Army announced yesterday that it has decided to delay the destruction of VX nerve agent housed at the Newport Chemical Depot in Indiana, according to the Associated Press (see GSN, July 16).

The Army had originally planned to begin disposing of the VX stored at the depot in October.  The facility being built to neutralize the nerve agent, however, is not expected to be ready until at least January, Army project manager Jeff Brubaker said (Associated Press, Aug. 14).


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From August 14, 2003 issue.

United States III:  Anniston Depot Has Shut Down Incinerator Twice This Week

The chemical weapons incinerator at the Anniston Army Depot in Alabama has been shut down twice this week because of maintenance problems after beginning operations Saturday, according to the Anniston Star (see GSN, Aug. 13).

On Monday night, workers identified a problem with the motor on the cooling system for the facility’s pollution abatement system.  Earlier that day, workers had also found a small leak of hydraulic fluid, according to the Star.  A spokesman for the depot said both problems have been fixed.

The two incidents were not emergencies and did not involve the release of chemical agents, depot spokesman Mike Abrams said.  The incinerator was expected to resume operation yesterday, he said (Sara Clemence, Anniston Star, Aug. 13).


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From August 13, 2003 issue.

North Korea:  Seized Chemical Could Be Used to Produce Nerve Agent

By Mike Nartker
Global Security Newswire

WASHINGTON — Chemicals seized earlier this week from a North Korean freighter docked in the Taiwanese port of Kaohsiung could be used to produce nerve agents, experts told Global Security Newswire yesterday (see GSN, Aug. 12).

On Monday, Taiwanese officials seized more than 150 barrels of phosphorus pentasulfide from the freighter Be Gaehung, according to reports.  The chemical can be used as a precursor in the development of nerve agents, proliferation expert Mark Smith of the University of Southampton told GSN yesterday.  He added that Iraq was known to have used the chemical in its VX program.  The Wall Street Journal reported today that phosphorus pentasulfide could also be used to produce peaceful materials, such as insecticide or motor oil additives. 

Phosphorus pentasulfide is also included on the export control list used by the Australia Group, an informal network of 33 countries that coordinates export controls for dual-use biological and chemical items, Smith said.

While most of the international concern surrounding North Korea’s WMD efforts has focused on Pyongyang’s relaunched nuclear weapons program, the country is also believed to have pursued biological and chemical weapons.  In an April report, the CIA said that North Korea had acquired dual-use chemicals last year for possible use in its “long-standing” chemical weapons program.  The CIA also said that North Korea had produced “a sizeable stockpile” of chemical weapons, such as nerve, blister, choking and blood agents.

The Journal reported today that the Be Gaehung has been allowed to leave Kaohsiung after its captain agreed to leave the chemical barrels behind.  While some reports have indicated that Taiwanese officials searched the ship on the basis of U.S.-provided information, a U.S. State Department official yesterday refused to tell GSN what, if any, role the United States played in the operation.  The official said Monday’s action should not be seen as being country-specific, adding that the United States has long worked to encourage countries to be more aware of suspicious materials passing through their territory.


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From August 13, 2003 issue.

United States:  Incinerator Scheduled to Run Slowly for First Two Months

Army officials plan to operate the chemical weapons incinerator in Anniston, Ala., on a probationary basis until late October, the Birmingham Post-Herald reported yesterday (see GSN, Aug. 11).

When the 30-day “shake-down” period is over, state officials will “examine everything we are doing down to microscopic details,” said Mike Abrams, a spokesman for the Anniston Army Depot.

“After we have proven to all the regulators that in fact things are working as designed and our data is accepted by the state, then we can start in earnest and work at a level that is safe and more efficient,” he added.

The facility was expected to destroy about 15 rockets yesterday, Abrams said, but it could do more.

“We might do as many as 40,” he said yesterday, adding, “There’s a strong possibility but there’s no pressure.

More than 660,000 chemical artillery shells, rockets and mines are stored at the depot, 10 percent of the total current U.S. stockpile, and the Army plans to destroy all of them over the next seven years (Erin Sullivan, Birmingham Post-Herald, Aug. 12).


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