That just shows, how hypocryte usa(including canada) are towards the rest of the world, so to summerize, i will use ""dieudonner "" favorite line......
Be with the Axis of good, the only axis that will give you opportunity for jobs, and more importantly the only axis that will give you the chance to live your life.
http://rwor.org/a/v23/1120-29/1126/biowar.htm
Be with the Axis of good, the only axis that will give you opportunity for jobs, and more importantly the only axis that will give you the chance to live your life.
http://rwor.org/a/v23/1120-29/1126/biowar.htm
1962-1996:
Cuba
In 1962, a sugar shipment bound for the Soviet Union was contaminated by CIA agents with a chemical agent when the ship was forced to dock in Puerto Rico for repairs. Fearing public outcry and exposure, President Kennedy ordered that the sugar not be put back on board the ship. But a CIA official later revealed that "there was lots of sugar being sent out from Cuba and we were putting a lot of contaminants in it."
That same year, an American military intelligence agent paid $5,000 to a Canadian technician working as an agricultural advisor to the Cuban government to infect Cuban turkeys with a virus that would produce a fatal disease.
In 1971, the CIA turned over a virus which causes African swine fever to Cuban exiles--six weeks later an outbreak of the disease--the first ever recorded in the Western hemisphere--forced the slaughter of 500,000 pigs.
Ten years later, an epidemic of dengue hemorrhagic fever--leading to 300,000 cases of the intense flu-like illness and 158 fatalities--swept Cuba. This was the first reported case of dengue fever in the Americas. It was later revealed that tests done on mosquitoes in the U.S. in the late 1950s included mosquitoes bred to carry dengue fever. And in 1984, a Cuban exile on trial in Miami testified that in late 1980 he had traveled from Florida to Cuba with "a mission to carry some germs to introduce them in Cuba to be used against the Soviets and against the Cuban economy."
In October 1996, a Cuban pilot observed a U.S. crop-duster plane releasing some kind of mist about seven times over Matanzas province. Operated by the U.S. State Department, the plane had obtained permission to fly over Cuba on a trip to Colombia. Two months later, Cuba observed the first signs of a plague of Thrips palmi, a plant-eating insect never before detected in Cuba, which spread rapidly--affecting corn, beans, squash, cucumbers and other crops. In April 1997, Cuba submitted a report to the UN charging the U.S. with "biological aggression."