Does anyone has more details about the Stalingrad incident (tularemia infection)?
I guess that this might be helpful… Were Biological Weapons Used Against Germans at Stalingrad? Secrets of the Soviet Disease Warfare Program Mark Weber Of humanity’s many noteworthy achievements and inventions, few are as evil and as horrifying as biological warfare: deliberate, government-ordered mass killing of people with lethal diseases. During the Second World War, the Japanese army maintained a secret biological warfare testing program, as did the United States during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1969 President Nixon renounced the use of such weapons, and the US dismantled its extensive biological warfare operation, thereafter restricting research to defensive measures such as immunization. But as a remarkable new book lays out in grim detail, no regime made greater “progress” in biological warfare than did the Soviet Union. >From a unique insider’s perspective, a former high-level scientist in the Soviet biological warfare program tells the story in Biohazard: The Chilling Story o