Litcius/Paper detail

Twenty-first century perspectives on the Biological Weapon Convention: Continued relevance or toothless paper tiger

Glenn A. Cross, Lynn Klotz

2020Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists23 citationsDOI

Abstract

While the secretary-general of the United Nations has questioned whether the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed a gap in global defenses against bioterrorism that a nefarious group may seek to exploit, the reality is that the pandemic has only underscored the folly of biological warfare, a strategy which relies on weapons – viruses, bacteria, and other pathogens – that would indiscriminately wreak havoc on the attacked and the attacker alike. Indeed, most countries in the world are part of the Biological Weapons Convention, the international treaty that – while lacking an enforcement mechanism – has successfully bolstered the near universal norms against the use of biological weapons.

Topics & Concepts

Biological warfareTreatyPolitical scienceConventionRelevance (law)EnforcementNuclear weaponExploitPandemicLawGeneral assemblyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Law and economicsComputer securitySociologyMedicineComputer scienceInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseasePathologyBacillus and Francisella bacterial researchZoonotic diseases and public healthViral Infections and Outbreaks Research