US Army lost track of its Sarin weapons | Armytimes.com

https://www.armytimes.com/articles/report-army-improperly-tracked-sarin-other-chemical-agents

Report: Army improperly tracked sarin, other chemical agents

Army Times

Officials at an Army chemical and biological storage and testing facility did not follow protocols while tracking inventories of sarin, a dangerous nerve agent, according to a recent inspector general report.

The U.S. Army Dugway Proving Ground also at times failed to provide disqualifying information about employees such as drug use and an incident involving alcohol, the report found.

Dugway Proving Ground was the same Utah location cited in 2015 for protocol failures that allowed live anthrax spores to be shipped to 194 laboratories in 50 states and nine foreign countries.

Some of the packages were shipped by commercial carriers such as FedEx.

In the June 7 Defense Department IG report, titled, “The Army Needs to Improve Controls Over Chemical Surety Materials,” leaders from the deputy assistant secretary of defense for chemical and biological defense down to the commander of Dugway Proving Ground simultaneously agreed with some of the IG’s  findings while also disagreeing with some of the report’s recommendations.

Inspectors reviewed accountability controls at Dugway, U.S. Army Pueblo Chemical Depot in Colorado and U.S. Army Deseret Chemical Depot in Utah.

Following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, chemical and biological testing facilities were reviewed for security and storage measures.

Dugway and contractors “did not conduct chemical agent inventories by primary container” when those containers were stored within a secondary container.

Meaning that the container that contained the actual agent, such as sarin, was not physically inspected.

“…therefore, custodians cannot identify and account for leaks, evaporation or theft that may have occurred,” according to the report.

Additionally, Dugway officials did not “immediately notify the chemical materials accountability officer” of a 1.5 milliliter shortage of sarin discovered during an April 19, 2016, inventory. That amount is enough to cause death within minutes, according to the CDC.

 

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