The fear that some other researchers might stumble across the real cause of ME and announce it to the world led to a somewhat ludicrous MI5 operation designed to harass researchers in the field and discourage others from joining them. One of their stunts led to the death of the eminent microbiologist, Professor Maurice Langley.
Finding a way to inactivate the attenuated polio virus was considered so urgent that the governments of the UK and the USA in collusion with certain elements of the Pakistani government agreed that experiments to test possible inactivators be carried out directly on human beings, to wit the population living in remote areas of the Afghan/Pakistan border.
It was inevitable that research establishments like Fort Detrick and Porton Down would also be interested in what might
Khan, believed by the UK and US to be working with them as a member of Pakistani Intelligence had been collaborating with the CIA in the setting up of fake aid teams in order to carry out experiments but he had an agenda of his own. He knew that the USA would be unlikely to share McAllister’s findings surrounding an activator so he set up an ambush in the mountains to steal the information. Khan’s true allegiance was to a Pakistani extremist faction dedicated to the overthrow of Indian interests in the long running dispute over territory in the north. Dr McAllister along with others died in the ambush and the disk containing the data along with a memory card designed to decrypt the disk was taken to a remote village and left for Khan to collect at a later date.
Before he could do so however, Dr Simone Ricard of
Khan followed Dr Ricard to Prague, hoping to recover the disk and card but, by that time, she no longer had them. Khan killed her to keep her quiet about his interest and later her colleague, Dr Aline Lagarde in Paris — a good woman and dedicated aid worker whose reputation you trashed with the aid of French Intelligence in order to stop any further investigation into the deaths of the two women, although by that time — the time you called us before you to warn us off — you must have known that something was gravely wrong.
Khan’s hunt for the information brought him to London where he murdered three more people, Dr Tom North, Dr Dan Hausman and a young PhD student, Liam Kelly. He obtained the disk but not the card which would make sense of it; however, he did discover that Dr Ricard had posted it to her friend and my colleague, Dr Steven Dunbar.
It was Dr Dunbar’s conviction that Simone Ricard and Aline Lagarde had been murdered that led him and Sci-Med to uncover this. Khan’s final gambit was to kidnap Dr Dunbar’s daughter in an attempt to make him hand over the card. Happily, he failed in this and paid with his life.
I leave it to you, ladies and gentlemen, to decide how proud you should feel of your actions. I am reminded of an old adage that says two can keep a secret if one of them is dead.
We at Sci-Med have no further comment to make although we do request that the restoration of Dr Lagarde’s reputation be carried out as a matter of some urgency. We currently hold both the McAllister disk and memory card. We presume that the US intended to share
‘Just a moment, Macmillan,’ demanded a loud voice. ‘What do you intend doing with this information?’