
Robert Malone
An extensive investigation based on declassified government documents and previously suppressed scientific research has uncovered compelling evidence that U.S. biological weapons programs contributed to the emergence of Lyme disease, which now affects hundreds of thousands of Americans annually.
The investigation reveals a pattern of concealment spanning six decades, including the systematic suppression of critical medical research and the release of nearly 300,000 radioactive ticks across Virginia to study how the disease-carrying insects would spread.
Declassified documents and testimony from a CIA operative describe the 1962 deployment of infected ticks against Cuban sugarcane workers as part of Operation Mongoose, the Kennedy administration’s effort to destabilize Fidel Castro’s regime.
The operative, now in his seventies, told researchers that the “strangest thing he ever did was drop infected ticks on Cuban sugarcane workers” using C-123 transport aircraft flying nighttime missions “almost skimming the surface of the Caribbean to avoid Cuban radar.”
After returning from Cuba, the operative’s four-month-old son developed life-threatening fever requiring emergency surgery. His CIA commander advised him to “burn all the clothes you took to Cuba. Burn everything,” indicating contamination concerns.
The deployment was canceled when “Cuba’s shifting winds made accurate payload delivery difficult,” according to the operative’s account.
Between 1966 and 1969, the U.S. military released 282,800 lone star ticks made radioactive with Carbon-14 across Virginia sites along bird migration routes. The radioactive marking allowed researchers to track the ticks’ spread using Geiger counters over several years.
Before these experiments, lone star ticks were not found above the Mason-Dixon Line. Within years of the Virginia releases, they had established populations on Long Island for the first time. Two tick experts consulted about these releases said they “were aghast” and “you’d never be able to do that now.”
In 2014, researchers discovered extensive unpublished materials in the garage of deceased scientist Willy Burgdorfer, who identified the bacterium that causes Lyme disease. The materials revealed that Burgdorfer had found a second pathogen called “Swiss Agent” in Lyme patient blood samples from Connecticut and Long Island in the late 1970s.
Blood from Lyme patients showed “very strong reactions” to Swiss Agent testing, but this finding was completely omitted from Burgdorfer’s landmark 1982 study that identified the Lyme disease bacterium. The suppression of this research for over 40 years may have contributed to treatment failures in chronic Lyme patients.
Dr. Jorge Benach and Dr. Allen Steere, co-authors of the 1982 study, now acknowledge that Swiss Agent research “should be done” because “public health concerns warrant a closer look.”
Defense Secretary Robert McNamara authorized Project 112 in 1962, creating what researchers describe as a bioweapons program “almost as large and secretive as the Manhattan Project.” The program involved 134 scheduled tests from 1962-1974 with production facilities capable of breeding 100 million infected mosquitoes monthly and 50 million fleas weekly.
The program’s existence was “categorically denied by the military” until 2000, when a CBS News investigation forced acknowledgment. Documents show the program involved “every branch of the U.S. armed services and intelligence agencies” with testing sites spanning multiple countries.
Operation Big Itch in 1954 successfully deployed 670,000 fleas from cluster bombs, proving arthropods could survive aerial deployment and “soon attached themselves to hosts.” The test validated bioweapons capable of covering “a battalion-sized target area and disrupt operations for up to one day.”
Plum Island Animal Disease Center sits just 13 miles from Lyme, Connecticut, where the disease was first identified. From 1952-1969, the facility was managed by the Army Chemical Corps for biological warfare research before transfer to the Department of Agriculture.
The facility “frequently conducted its experiments out of doors” with acknowledged containment failures where “test animals mingled with wild deer, test birds with wild birds.” Richard Endris maintained “over 200,000 soft and hard ticks of varying species in tick nurseries on Plum Island, personally collected from locations as far away as Cameroon, Africa.”
Wildlife regularly moved between Plum Island and the mainland. “Deer from Lyme regularly swam to Plum Island, and local birds flew there to feed on insects,” creating direct pathways for laboratory pathogens to reach wild populations.
The Long Island Sound region experienced an unprecedented outbreak of tick-borne diseases beginning in 1968:
- 1968: First Eastern U.S. human babesiosis cases appear on Nantucket
- 1968: Rocky Mountain spotted fever appears in Cape Cod region
- 1970: Hundreds of Rocky Mountain spotted fever cases documented on Long Island
- 1972: First 51 documented Lyme arthritis cases in Old Lyme, Connecticut
“By the 1990s, the eastern end of Long Island had by far the greatest concentration of Lyme disease,” according to one analysis. “If you drew a circle around the area of the world heavily impacted by Lyme disease, the center of that circle was Plum Island.”
Willy Burgdorfer, who discovered the Lyme disease bacterium in 1982, spent most of his career developing tick-borne biological weapons before transitioning to civilian research. In 2013 video testimony, he confirmed participation in bioweapons research and “insinuated there had been an accidental release of some sort.”
After cameras stopped rolling, “Willy told us with a smile, ‘I didn’t tell you everything.’ But try as we might, we couldn’t get him to say more.” Before his death in 2014, he left a note stating “I wondered why somebody didn’t do something.”
In 2007, when documentary filmmakers attempted to interview Burgdorfer, a government scientist “pounded on the door” demanding to “sit in on this interview,” indicating ongoing official concern about his potential disclosures.
In 2019, the House passed an amendment requiring the Pentagon to investigate whether the military “experimented with ticks and other insects regarding use as a biological weapon between the years of 1950 and 1975” and whether any were “released outside of any laboratory by accident or experiment design.”
The amendment was inspired by “a number of books and articles suggesting that significant research had been done at U.S. government facilities including Fort Detrick, Maryland, and Plum Island, New York, to turn ticks and other insects into bioweapons.”
This comprehensive integrated analysis applies the six-layer AI-enhanced verification framework to examine the historical connections between Plum Island Animal Disease Center, USAMRIID (Fort Detrick), and Lyme disease origins. The investigation incorporates extensive evidence from declassified government documents, operational testimony, previously suppressed scientific research, and newly uncovered operational details to provide the most thorough assessment to date of potential laboratory contributions to the Lyme disease epidemic.
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Critical Integrated Assessment: This investigation reveals that while ancient pathogen presence supports natural emergence theories, the extensive and previously undisclosed scale of U.S. bioweapons programs involving tick-borne agents, combined with documented operational deployments (Operation Mongoose), systematic outdoor testing (Project 112), confirmed environmental releases (282,800 radioactive ticks), and deliberate suppression of relevant scientific research (Swiss Agent), fundamentally alters the evidentiary landscape. The convergent evidence across multiple domains creates reasonable doubt about purely natural origins while the systematic classification and research suppression represent critical obstacles to definitive scientific resolution.
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1943-1969: U.S. offensive biological weapons program operational at Fort Detrick with estimated $3-4 billion investment, described as “almost as large and secretive as the Manhattan Project” 1945: Operation Paperclip brings Nazi bioweapons scientists to U.S. facilities, including Erich Traub (head of Nazi biological warfare program under Heinrich Himmler) 1951: Willy Burgdorfer recruited from Switzerland specifically for tick-borne pathogen weaponization research at Rocky Mountain Laboratory 1952: Plum Island Animal Disease Center transferred from USDA to Army Chemical Corps for biological warfare research targeting livestock 1954: Operation Big Itch validates flea-borne bioweapons delivery systems using E14 cluster bombs to deploy 670,000 tropical rat fleas, proving weapons “able to cover a battalion-sized target area” 1954: Plum Island Animal Disease Center officially established with dual civilian-military research missions 1962: Project 112 authorization by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara creates massive expansion of bioweapons testing with 134 scheduled tests and “hundreds of similar classified tests” 1962: Operation Mongoose deploys infected ticks against Cuban sugarcane workers (Subproject 33b) using CIA “sheep dipped” personnel and Air America aircraft 1962: Project SHAD begins shipboard bioweapons vulnerability testing involving thousands of military personnel 1966-1969: 282,800 radioactive lone star ticks released in Virginia along Atlantic Flyway to study migration patterns using Carbon-14 tracking 1968: First simultaneous outbreak of three tick-borne diseases around Long Island Sound: babesiosis (Nantucket), Rocky Mountain spotted fever (Cape Cod region), and early Lyme arthritis cases 1969: Nixon terminates offensive bioweapons program but defensive research continues under different classifications 1970: Lone star ticks appear north of Mason-Dixon Line for first time, becoming established on Long Island following Virginia releases 1975: First official medical recognition of “Lyme arthritis” in Old Lyme, Connecticut, 13 miles from Plum Island 1980: Burgdorfer identifies “Swiss Agent” (Rickettsia helvetica) in Lyme patient blood samples but deliberately omits from published research 1982: Burgdorfer publishes identification of Borrelia burgdorferi as Lyme disease causative agent while suppressing Swiss Agent findings 2000: Project 112 existence finally acknowledged after being “categorically denied by the military” for decades 2013: Burgdorfer provides cryptic confession about bioweapons involvement and potential accidental releases 2014: Swiss Agent research materials discovered in Burgdorfer’s garage, revealing 40+ years of systematic suppression
Plum Island Animal Disease Center (1954-2025): Located 13 miles from Lyme, Connecticut, on Plum Island off Long Island’s eastern tip. From 1952-1969, managed by U.S. Army Chemical Corps for biological warfare research. Conducted “outdoor experiments with diseased ticks in the 1950s” and maintained extensive tick breeding operations. Facility “frequently conducted its experiments out of doors” with acknowledged containment failures where “test animals mingled with wild deer, test birds with wild birds.” Richard Endris “nurtured over 200,000 soft and hard ticks of varying species” collected globally.
USAMRIID at Fort Detrick (1956-present): Primary U.S. bioweapons research facility with capabilities to produce “100 million yellow fever-infected mosquitoes per month” and “50 million fleas per week.” Housed specialized equipment including the “Eight Ball” (massive aerosol testing chamber) and facilities nicknamed the “Anthrax Hotel.” Center of U.S. biological weapons program from 1943-1969 with continued defensive research.
Willy Burgdorfer (1925-2014): Swiss-American scientist recruited in 1951 specifically for tick-borne pathogen weaponization research. Collaborated extensively with Operation Paperclip Nazi scientists and developed methods for creating multi-pathogen tick infections. Systematically suppressed discovery of “Swiss Agent” co-pathogen for over 40 years while publicly credited with discovering Lyme disease causative agent.
Erich Traub (1906-1985): Head of Nazi biological warfare program brought to U.S. through Operation Paperclip. Collaborated extensively with U.S. bioweapons programs, visiting Plum Island “on at least three different occasions” and being “offered the directorship there several times.”
Confirmed Historical Presence: Extensive research confirms B. burgdorferi presence in North American ecosystems for millennia. Museum specimens demonstrate infected ticks from Long Island in 1945 and mice from Cape Cod in 1896. The 5,000-year-old “Ice Man” provides prehistoric evidence of Borrelia infection, and recent studies show presence in pre-colonial times.
Critical Swiss Agent Discovery: Documents discovered in Burgdorfer’s garage in 2014 reveal identification of Rickettsia helvetica (”Swiss Agent”) in Lyme patient blood samples from Connecticut and Long Island in the late 1970s. Letters to collaborators reported “very strong reactions” to Swiss Agent testing, but this pathogen was completely omitted from the published 1982 Science paper. Burgdorfer’s notes indicate he was “told to omit the presence of at least one potential bioweapon” during the Lyme investigation.
Multi-Pathogen Weaponization Strategy: Burgdorfer’s research documents reveal deliberate development of multi-pathogen tick infections, creating “microbial mixing chambers” capable of transmitting multiple diseases simultaneously. This approach aligns with bioweapons objectives of creating “controlled temporary incapacitation” through complex, difficult-to-diagnose illness patterns. The simultaneous emergence of three distinct tick-borne diseases (Lyme, babesiosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever) in the same geographic region represents a statistical anomaly requiring explanation.
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Via https://www.malone.news/p/declassified-documents-link-us-bioweapons