. Velikanov is described as a highly talented scientist and was appointed at a young age as Professor and Head of department at the Department of Microbiology at Moscow State University. In 1928 he was appointed director of a new facility belonging to the Red Army, the Military Vaccine-Sera Laboratory, in Vlasikha, close to the Perkhushkovo railway station, approximately 30 miles to the west of Moscow. At this time Velikanov held the rank of Divisional Doctor which corresponds to the rank of Major General in the modern
Russian armed forces. Velikanov served concomitantly as the Head of the secret Ninth Department of the Institute of Chemical Defence (
IKhO). This Department was engaged in secret offensive biological warfare research involving anthrax, tularaemia, and plague bacteria. The use of
Clostridium botulinum for sabotage purposes was also being considered.
IKhO was itself subordinate to the Red Army's Military-Chemical Directorate (
Voenno—khimicheskoe upravlenie, abbreviated to
VOKhIMU) headed by Yakov Fishman. During the period from 1929 through to 1936, Velikanov established an extensive programme of prophylaxis and therapy of
botulism poisoning. His most significant scientific research relates to his work on modifying the botulinum toxin to the nontoxic form of a toxoid. In 1934 and 1936, Velikanov reported the first experimental immunization of human subjects with botulinum toxoids. The serum which he developed against botulism is reported to have saved the lives of many thousands of people. In 1935 Velikanov published
The Microbiology of Tinned Goods (Mikrobiologiya konservov). His work was still being cited by Soviet authors in the 1960s. There was almost certainly a military dimension to Velikanov's programme of research on botulism. In 1961, a CIA report on the Soviet BW programme noted that “
Political refugees from the Soviet Union contend that botulinum toxin was one of the earliest candidates for agent development, chosen primarily because of its potential effectiveness by ground, air or water dispersion. Unconfirmed reports state that a purification process and suitable disseminating media were two major problems encountered in the preliminary investigations; by 1940-1941, studies on agent properties were allegedly in progress and the toxin was purportedly being stockpiled………” The CIA report notes that one scientist in particular - possibly Velikanov himself, although the name has been redacted in the released document - “
is said to have seen 227 cases of botulinum intoxication in humans, and his computations on comparative fatality rates among treated cases and untreated controls are one of the few hints of suspected human experimentation related to BW in the USSR“. ---- == Pivotal meeting on biological warfare programme with Stalin ==