“Operation Whitecoat” To Be Featured on PBS, Feb. 5
Wednesday January 31st 2007, 11:33 pm
Filed under: Main

Living Weapon

Plusline.org reports the following, written by George Johnson Jr., associate director of communication for the North American Division.


PBS will air a film entitled ‘The Living Weapon’ on the history of biological weapons on February 5.” Please check the PBS website to see what time the film will be aired in your area, or click here.

A Brief History of Operation Whitecoat

During the 1950’s, hundreds of Seventh-day Adventist men aged 18-26 were being drafted into military service. They wanted to serve their country and cooperate with compulsory military service but still be obedient to the Scriptures which as a Seventh-day Adventist Christian included Sabbath keeping and noncombatancy. In late 1954, the US Army Medical Unit (USAMU) and the office of the surgeon general of the US Army met with officials of the Seventh-day Adventist Church with a highly unusual request. The two entities wanted to see if the Seventh-day Adventist Church was willing to support an Army proposal to use Adventist draftees as volunteers for human trials of defensive vaccines and antibacterial medicines.

A subcommittee was formed and within weeks a favorable endorsement was given and entitled “Statement of Attitude Regarding Volunteering for Medical Research” and was forwarded to the USAMU. The four-paragraph statement concluded that “any service rendered voluntarily by whomever in the useful necessary research into the cause and treatment of disabling disease is a legitimate and laudable contribution to the success of our nation and to the health and comfort of our fellowmen.” Thus Operation Whitecoat was born.

Soon after USAMU personnel began interviewing draftees for Operation Whitecoat during the basic training at Fort Sam Houston, meetings were held that gave an overview of the research program along with a description of its benefits and risks. Seventh-day Adventist Church representatives were also on hand to describe its relationship with the Whitecoat program. USAMU based selections of the draftees on overall general health and skills acquired in civilian life. Most who were chosen to participate had also completed one or more years of college and 27 percent having completed a bachelor’s degree. Whitecoat members were then assigned to Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland, to the Walter Reed Army Medical Center, or to the Center Annex in Forest Glen, Maryland, as medical research volunteers. Their duties included medical technicians, medical corpsmen, clinical aides, or animal caretakers.

During its 19-year-long existence, Operation Whitecoat members were tested with some of the world’s most dangerous biological agents such as Queenland (Q) Fever, Tularemia, Sandfly Fever, Typhus Fever, Typhoid Fever, Rift Valley Fever, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Yellow Fever, Plaque and Eastern, Western and Venezuelan Equine Encephalitis. The “Eight Ball,” a huge, spherical chamber at Fort Detrick, was a chamber in which scientists would discharge bacteria or viruses. Whitecoat volunteers wore breathing apparatus that allowed them to inhale the affected air. USAMU records maintain that although the volunteers were made seriously ill, none died during the studies nor were there documented permanent health damage.


For further discussion on Project Whitecoast, read the 1970 article by Martin D. Turner in Spectrum.





Does anyone know if the GC or NAD offcially apologized to the young men who participated in this?

Comment by Alex 02.01.07 @ 9:17 am

Official GC response is found in GC chaplain service website.
GC still claims that Whitecoat Project was noble, defensive, and humane.
It is sad that we Adventist Church get sold so easily to Goverment’s propaganda.

Comment by Dennis 02.01.07 @ 5:03 pm

Dennis - I can’t find the statement that you’re referring to. Can you provide the link for me? Thanks.

Comment by Alex 02.01.07 @ 6:43 pm

Hi Alex,
It is here: http://www.adventistchaplains.org/whitecoat.htm

Comment by Dennis 02.02.07 @ 9:08 pm

Ivan Belko, of the Turlock SDA Church, volunteered as a test subject for that project. I asked him about it, and he said he was proud to have done his duty. He appears to be in good health.

There was a news article about it in the local paper. I just can’t locate it right now.

Comment by Jimmy 02.05.07 @ 10:26 pm

Some facts you learn from the PBS program on Whitecoat Project:
1. The U.S. did biological weapon program for 30 years (1943-73)
2. It was for mass destruction, targeting mostly civilians
3. It was started in 1943 by the request of Britain
4. “Defensive” purpose ? Bogus excuse.
5. Hitler banned biologicar/chemical weapons.
6. Notorious Japanese biological war criminals, including Ishi, got immunity by McArthur (with Washington’s yes) in exchange of human experiment data.
7. Adventist young men were used as gunea pigs. (If you saw the film, you can never forget the scene adventists young men lined up with monkeys in Utah desert when Q-fever bomb was being tested)

It is shame on our church that we participated in the experiment on weapons of mass destruction.
It is shame on our church that we exposed our young people to the grave danger.

I hope this kind of blunder does not happen again.

Comment by Dennis 02.06.07 @ 2:32 am