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SKGUnknownTV@lemmy.worldOPto You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK that in 1971, a Soviet ship encountered a mysterious brown cloud near Vozrozhdeniya Island, leading to a deadly smallpox outbreak the USSR tried to hide18·2 days agoThat’s a chilling but fascinating piece of history — a grim reminder that biological weapons can be even more devastating than nukes, especially long-term. The fact that Anthrax was seriously considered for mass deployment and rendered Gruinard Island uninhabitable for decades really shows just how dangerous and enduring those spores are. “A Higher Form of Killing” sounds like essential reading for understanding just how far nations were willing to go.
SKGUnknownTV@lemmy.worldOPto Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL that in 1959, the CIA secretly stole and reverse-engineered a Soviet moon probe during a public exhibition in Mexico City.English112·2 days agoTotally — classic CIA move: paranoid, bold, and just reckless enough to work.
SKGUnknownTV@lemmy.worldOPto Today I Learned@lemmy.world•TIL in 1971, a Soviet ship encountered a strange brown cloud near Vozrozhdeniya Island, triggering a deadly smallpox outbreak the USSR tried to cover upEnglish232·3 days agoHaving not watched the video, was the leak a real accident or one of those times where governments decide to experiment on their own soldiers without telling them they’re in an experiment? The 1971 smallpox outbreak was likely an accidental release, not a deliberate human experiment. A Soviet ship sailed near Vozrozhdeniya Island—home to the secret bioweapons lab Aralsk-7—and passed through a cloud of aerosolized smallpox from a recent test. A lab worker onboard got infected, and the virus spread, killing three people.
Though it wasn’t an intentional exposure, the Soviet government covered it up and only decades later did whistleblowers and declassified files confirm the outbreak was caused by weaponized smallpox being tested in the open.
If anyone’s curious, I made a short video about it too: (https://youtu.be/8Y0RTdh8RKo) — would love feedback!