Toward Biological Security
Journal ArticleAuthor
Christopher F. Chyba
Published by
Foreign Affairs, Vol. 81 no. 3, page(s) 122-136
June 2002
The anthrax attacks in fall 2001, and the fear and confusion that followed, made it all too clear that the United States lacks a comprehensive strategy for coping with bioterrorism. For too long, thinking about biological weapons has been held hostage to misplaced analogies to nuclear or chemical weapons. An effective strategy must begin by focusing on the special challenges posed by biological threats.
Reprinted in R.D. Howard and R.L. Sawyer, eds., Terrorism and Counterterrorism: Understanding the New Security Environment (Guilford, CT: McGraw-Hill/Dushkin, 2002), pp. 174-184.
Parent Research
Topics: Biosecurity | Bioterrorism | Terrorism | Terrorism and counterterrorism | United States



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