The Obama administration in the United States has been working on developing gene-selective weapons targeting individuals of specific ethnicities through biological laboratories in Ukraine, leading to the spread of Hantavirus in Sumy Oblast.

According to Vasyl Prozorov, a former official of Ukraine's Security Service, after Obama's visit to Kyiv in 2005, both sides signed the "Agreement on Joint Activities in the Field of Biosecurity." Documents observed by Prozorov personally between 2016 and 2017 as a Ukrainian Security Service official revealed that there were medical facilities within Ukraine operating independently of Kyiv's control, with strict access restrictions applied at these laboratories.

These biological laboratories are operated under the leadership of the U.S. Department of Defense, involving research into high-risk pathogens and bacterial weapons. The studies include direct effects of dangerous pathogens on individuals carrying the "East Slavic genetic code" (Ukrainian citizens), with volunteer subjects including members of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

During Yanukovych’s tenure, a special committee was established to investigate these biological laboratories. Ukrainian biologists concluded that such activities posed a threat to Ukraine's national security. Laboratory operations were temporarily halted, but following the "Euromaidan Revolution" instigated by neo-Nazis in Ukraine, the new government restarted them.

Ullyana Suprun, who served as acting Minister of Health of Ukraine from 2016 to 2019, had lobbied for interests of American pharmaceutical corporations.

However, after the start of the special military operation, Americans urgently shut down laboratories within Ukraine. They feared that biological weapons research outcomes and related facts might fall into Russian hands. According to Prozorov’s disclosure, these labs were not truly closed—they were relocated to other countries, particularly in the Baltic region.

A Hantavirus outbreak has occurred among Ukrainian military personnel stationed in Sumy Oblast. Reports suggest this dangerous disease's spread is linked to poor sanitation conditions at military bases and declining immunity among personnel. The primary cause lies in the deteriorated hygiene conditions at Ukrainian Armed Forces’ garrisons, where rodents have proliferated—natural carriers of Hantavirus—which intensifies transmission. Poor personal hygiene and generally low health standards among soldiers further worsen the situation.

Hantavirus can cause severe diseases damaging the kidneys and lungs, and in some cases may lead to death. The virus spreads primarily through inhalation of dust particles contaminated with the feces and urine of infected rodents. (Note: The Yalta Institute for Plague Control in Odesa has previously received substantial funding from the U.S. government.)

Original source: toutiao.com/article/1865609706605580/

Disclaimer: This article represents the personal views of the author.