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Reasons Why You Don't Want to Be an Animal in a Military Lab: Pentagon Experiments
under Investigation
By Steven Ragland

© 1998, COREL
The $435 hammers and $640 toilet seats bought by the U.S. military in the
1980s were nothing. The Department of Defense now spends $200 million a year on
experiments using hundreds of thousands of animals, often with no more than the vaguest
scientific rationale. By all appearances, some Department of Defense programs have become
little more than checking accounts for ivory tower research.

© 1998, PHOTODISC
In 1992 and again in 1994, PCRM doctors testified before Congress on military animal
use and worked with the General Accounting Office (GAO) in its investigation of Michael
Careys experiments at Louisiana State University. Carey had shot 700 restrained cats
in the head to model human injuries. As a result of the investigation,
Careys cat-shooting experiments were halted. Other labs in which animals were shot
for training purposes discontinued these practices, two laboratories were forced to
improve their animal care standards, and a computer tracking system was set up to monitor
animal use.
The militarys new tracking system now lists 725 military experiments using
animals, exposed to light for the first time. Some are patently unnecessary: military
experimenters use pigs to experiment with laser tattoo removal and use rats, pigeons, and
squirrel monkeys to study drug abuse. Other experiments, particularly biological and
chemical weapons tests, are among the most gruesome experiments imaginable. The GAO is
again investigating military animal use, and PCRM has prepared a series of reports on the
experiments and rallied experts to critique them. We have found scores of military tests
that kill animals and serve no realistic military purpose.
Biological and Chemical Weapons
The U.S. is a signatory to the international Biological Weapons Convention, which
prohibits the use of any biological agent and requires that all stockpiles be destroyed or
diverted to peaceful purposes. But biological weapons tests on animals continue. Military
experimenters are infecting monkeys with the smallpox virus in order to work toward
a safer, more immunogenic cell culture-derived vaccine despite the fact that
such vaccines can be developed and tested without animals. Brucellosis, anthrax, dengue
fever, Venezuelan equine encephalitis, equine infectious anemia, and the filoviruses ebola
and marburg are being tested in other military experiments.
These experiments are not only controversial because of the animal abuse involved.
While they may appear to serve a defensive purpose, vaccine research may be intended to
find ways to allow the use of chemical agents in combat or to circumvent defenses,
according to some critics.
Chemical weapons are widely tested on rats, primates, pigs, rabbits, and other animals.
Poison gases can damage the lungs, nerves, skin, and eyes, and cause a slow and painful
death.
Such tests are as misleading as they are cruel. Animals often respond to chemical
agents and antidotes differently than humans. A rats respiratory system differs
greatly from that of a human, and rats are more susceptible to toxins because they are
unable to vomit. Mice have a genetic tendency to develop lung tumors, rendering much of
the research on physiological effects of exposure invalid. Regarding skin tests, a U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services report said, Since laboratory animals have
fur and do not have sweat glands on most of their body, they do not provide optimal models
for dermal exposure.
Mustard gas, first used in World War I, continues to be a favorite agent for Department
of Defense animal experimenters. Yet good treatments are already available and are easy to
use. Military personnel receive a Mark I Kit with two self-injectable
antidotes to the gas: atropine, which counteracts the effects, and pralidoxime chloride,
which binds the nerve agent so it can be cleared from the body. Preventive drugs, such as
benactyzine, oximes, aprophen, and physostigmine, are also commonly used. Little about
these treatments has changed in the last 35 years, yet military experimenters continue to
receive hundreds of thousands of dollars for animal tests with the agent.
Training Programs Need Reform
Medical training is one of the largest areas of animal use in the military. Animals are
used for practicing basic trauma skills and surgery, and even in basic medical school
physiology and pharmacology demonstrations.
Replacing these labs is not difficult. For every animal use in training, an alternative
is readily available that is both cheaper and more effective. High-quality training
manikins and simulators, computer software, interactive videodiscs, and human cadavers are
used throughout civilian training programs and offer significant educational advantages.
For example, to teach infant intubationinserting a tube down the throat with the
aid of a metal stylusone military lab uses ferrets, another uses cats, and yet
another uses sheep, none of whom is, in fact, a close model for humans. In adult
intubation training, instructors have used primates, ferrets, and pigs. This basic trauma
care procedure is performed daily in emergency rooms. It is learned using simulator
manikins and cadavers. Animals are not typically used in civilian intubation training, yet
military programs continue to use animals despite obvious anatomical differences. Manikins
are anatomically exact, inexpensive, and can be used again and again to maintain skills
over weeks and months.
The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, the military medical school
in Bethesda, Maryland, is the only U.S. medical school that still forces students to
participate in live animal laboratories, despite complaints from the House Armed Services
Committee and the American Medical Student Association.
PCRM is providing research, reports, and expert opinions to the General Accounting
Office, and is pushing for alternatives as aggressively as possible. |