Are Americans really threatened by imported foods fearing `agricultural terrorism'? The theme could very well make a Hollywood thriller.
The recent visit of Michael O Leavitt, US Secretary of Health and Human Services and Dr Andrew von Eschenbach, Commissioner, Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to China and India was a pointer to the concern regarding safety of food imported into US from developing countries.
The recently concluded World Spice Congress in Goa had several international speakers deliberating on contamination of food imported from various countries. They also stressed how harmonisation of standards was required to ensure food safety and ease the travails faced by spices exporters from countries like India.
If that is not enough, a recent book by Brian Halweil, senior environmental research analyst and author of "Eat Here: Reclaiming home grown pleasures in a global supermarket" is even more revealing.
According to him, a few years ago the U S Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Agriculture ran a series of war games to see how the United States would fare against an act of agricultural terrorism.
For example, they asked what would happen if someone dropped some lethal E. coli into the mixer at a big food processing plant or someone walked onto a giant chicken farm with a sample of avian flu.
It was concluded that long-distance shipping and the centralisation of US food system made them into sitting ducks. Any spike in the price of oil, or large-scale food contamination -- whether accidental or malicious --