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A contradiction sits at the core of U.S. biological threat
prevention policy. Despite the U.S. government accepting the
scientific and industrial costs of a domestic biosecurity system,
it has not committed the diplomatic and financial resources needed
to successfully promote the global adoption of similar systems.
While the safety and security of biological pathogens within the
United States are important national goals, their pursuit has the
potential to impede another crucial goal: a robust research and
commercial enterprise. To make matters worse, domestic policies are
insufficient to fully protect U.S. citizens, since they provide
limited protection from attacks launched with pathogens brought
into the United States from abroad. Biosecurity has become a global
problem. With the rapid spread of technology and know-how, attacks
that originate from less-regulated locales outside the United
States are becoming increasingly serious risks to U.S. national
security. This means that the United States is bearing the full
costs of domestic bio threat prevention without attaining the
benefits of a thorough global prevention system.
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