Six-legged Soldiers: Using Insects as Weapons of War

Six-Legged Soldiers: Using Insects as Weapons of War is a nonfiction scientific warfare book written by award-winning author and University of Wyoming professor, Jeffrey A. Lockwood. Published in 2008 by Oxford University Press, the book explores the history of bioterrorism, entomological warfare, biological warfare, and the prevention of agro-terrorism from the earliest times to modern threats. Lockwood, an entomologist, preceded this book with Ethical issues in biological control (1997) and Locust: The devastating rise and mysterious disappearance of the insect that shaped the American frontier (2004), among others.

Summary
Six-Legged Soldiers gives detailed examples of entomological warfare: using buckets of scorpions during a fortress siege, catapulting beehives ("bee bombs") across a castle wall, civilians as human guinea pigs in an effort to weaponize the plague, bombarding civilians from the air with infection-bearing insects, and assassin bugs placed on prisoners to eat away their flesh. Lockwood also describes a domestic ecoterrorism example with the 1989 threat to release the Medfly (Ceratitis capitata) within California's crop belt. The last chapter highlights western nations' vulnerability to terrorist attacks.

Interviewed about the book by BBC Radio 4's Today programme, the author describes how a terrorist with a suitcase could bring diseases into a country. "I think a small terrorist cell could very easily develop an insect-based weapon."

Criticism
In its January 2009 review, The Sunday Times criticised the book as being "scarcely scholarly" for its mixed collection of myth, legend and historical facts.

The Author Replies:

Reviewers have described themselves as skeptics and asserted that Six-Legged Soldiers is “devoid of rigour” or “scarcely scholarly.” What such folks seem to have missed is that I share their doubts (e.g., the US military weaponized yellow fever mosquitoes during the Cold War, I don’t believe that the Americans waged wholesale entomological warfare against North Korea or Cuba). As I noted in the preface of the book:

What I am less skeptical about is the reader, believing that readers of science and history are generally astute folks. As such, I chose to respect their intelligence rather than donning the paternalistic mantle of academic authority (can anybody really claim to be an expert on warfare from the Paleolithic to the present?). As a writer and professor, I am not in the business of sparing people from having to think. Instead, the preface makes clear that:

And so, those who suggest that I endorse various views and reports by virtue of having included them in the book have evidently failed to read the preface. Indeed, careless readers are prone to all sorts of misunderstandings, such as Mr. Hastings of the who suggested that Napoleon’s forces were devastated by “typhus borne by fleas” (the disease being carried by lice) and that Generals Grant and Lee were not “clever or fiendish enough” to employ biological warfare (there is no such claim in the book, although I do contend, along with Civil War historians, that General Johnston unwittingly allied with mosquitoes when he knowingly and effectively inflicted disease on his enemy by pinning down a superior Union force in the malaria-ridden marshes outside of Richmond).

So, for the reader (or reviewer) who wants to understand the perspective from which the book was written, please don’t skip the preface.