CHEMICAL WARFARE

employment in war of incendiaries, poison gases, and other chemical substances. Ancient armies attacking or defending fortified cities threw burning oil and fireballs. A primitive type of flamethrower was employed as early as the 5th cent. b.c.; modern types are still in use. In the Middle Ages, before the introduction of gunpowder, a flammable composition known as Greek fire was used. Smoke from burning straw or other material was employed in early times, but its effectiveness is uncertain.

Poison gas was first used during World War I, when the Germans released (Apr., 1915) chlorine gas against the Allies. The Germans also introduced mustard gas later in the war. Afterward, the major powers continued to stockpile gases for possible future use and several actually used it: the British in Afghanistan, the French and Spanish in Africa, and the Japanese in China. Lethal gases were not employed in combat during World War II, but the Germans did use gases for mass murder during the Holocaust. The Germans also invented and stockpiled the first nerve gas. It is odorless and colorless and attacks the body muscles, including the involuntary muscles. It is the most lethal and insidious weapon of chemical warfare. Besides lethal gases, which attack the skin, blood, nervous, or respiratory system and require hospitalization of the victim, there are also nonlethal incapacitating agents, which, like tear gas, cause temporary physical disability. Such agents have often been employed in riot control, espionage, and warfare. Various forms of herbicides and defoliants are also used to destroy crops or vegetation, as Agent Orange was used by the United States during the Vietnam War.

The potential effectiveness of chemical warfare is increasing with improved methods of dissemination, such as artillery shells, grenades, missiles, and aircraft and submarine spray guns. Some protection against chemical weapons is possible using suits, sealed vehicles, and shelters. Such countermeasures usually protect against nuclear fallout and biological warfare as well. Lethal chemical weapons are held by many nations and they continue to be used. Iraq, for example, used mustard gas during its war with Iran and also against Kurdish rebels. The danger of the proliferation of chemical and biological weapons is growing despite arms control because they are relatively easy to manufacture and deploy.

Efforts to control chemical and biological weapons began in the late 19th cent. The Geneva Protocol of 1925, which went into force in 1928, condemned the use of chemical weapons but did not ban the development and stockpiling of chemical weapons. The United States did not ratify the protocol until 1974. In 1990, with the end of the cold war, the United States and the Soviet Union agreed to cut their arsenals by 80% in an effort to create a climate of change that would discourage smaller nations from stockpiling and using such lethal weapons. In 1993 a international treaty banning the production, stockpiling (both by 2007), and use of chemical weapons and calling for the establishment of an independent organization to verify compliance was adopted. The agreement, which became effective in 1997, has been signed and ratified by 160 nations. The treaty is enforced by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which is based in The Hague. The alleged Iraqi retention, after the Persian Gulf War cease-fire, of chemical weapons and other weapons of mass destruction was the main pretext for the 2003 U.S.-British invasion of Iraq.

See the ongoing Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), The Problems of Chemical and Biological Warfare (1971–); R. Harris and J. Paxman, A Higher Form of Killing (1982); E. M. Spiers, Chemical Warfare (1986).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Chemical Warfare  - 2389 results

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...Brankowitz William R. Chemical Munitions Movement History...Steven. U.S. Chemical Warfare Preparedness Program...Accounting Office. Chemical Warfare: DoDs Reporting...Chemical Warfare: Progress and Problems...Chemical Warfare: Soldiers Inadequately...
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...failure. The contemplation of chemical warfare tends to produce within individuals...and perhaps even shame. All warfare and weapons are by definition morally...along with nuclear and biological warfare, occupies a special niche that...
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...Secret Weapon: Lord Dundonald and the Origins of Chemical Warfare. by Albert Palazzo The Admirals Secret Weapon...obscure yet interesting aspect of the development of chemical warfare. Albert Palazzo Land Warfare Studies Centre
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...Western Front: The British Army and Chemical Warfare in World War I. by Frederick W...The British Army and Chemical Warfare in World War I. By Albert Palazzo...an essential part in subsequent warfare, gas was morally discredited...
...Ypres the Painful Lessons of Chemical Warfare by Thomas S. Bundt It burned...The logistical needs of gas warfare fit well into the paradigm of...place in 1907.12 The reality of chemical warfare seen at Ypres challenges the...
Chemical Warfare Agents: Toxicology and Treatment by...Maynard, Frederick R Sidell, Chemical warfare agents: toxicology and treatment...organic arsenicals developed for use as chemical warfare agents, the most important is lewisite...
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magazine articles on: Chemical Warfare  - 1524 results

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The troubled history of chemical and biological warfare. by Keith Suter THE controversy...chemical and biological warfare. This article examines...conclude, the history of chemical and biological warfare contains stories of people...
...litres of key precursor chemicals for the production of...197 barrels of other chemical precursors. A small amount of other precursor chemicals remained to be destroyed...for the production of chemical warfare agents. Thereafter...
...Stephenson Introduces a Plan for Chemical Warfare in the Napoleonic Navy, Devised...1855. But the German usage of chemical warfare did not depend on the long...Dundonald and the Origins of Chemical Warfare, by Charles Stephenson is published...
Chemical warfare in the 1920s 30s by Sebastian...Spain and Italy launched chemical offensives against their...of the deadliest of these chemicals, mustard gas. It had caused...Yet this was the preferred chemical warhead used by European...about the effects of these chemicals. `If it is fair for an...too silly. Of all these chemical wars, only the Italian...
...Experts differ over whether chemical and biological warfare pose a mass threat--but they...Jonathan Tucker, director of the Chemical and Biological Weapons Nonproliferation...more than 1,ooo. Before that chemical assault, the group had 10 times...
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Romancing chemical warfare by Richard Grenier Ah...1925 banning chemical warfare - as well as the Kellogg...strong support during the Chemical Weapons hearings by other...treaty will share Chemical Warfare technologies with all...
...supplied with new chemical warfare suits. They will also...Saddam has chemical warfare weaponry and is preparing...that he still possesses chemical weapons as Iraq has...designed to carry deadly chemicals were found by UN weapons...tabun gases. Iraq used chemical weapons during its war...production of chemical warfare agents and probably...
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Chemical Warfare Is the Perfect Solution; Ask Donny...leave a mark. The best solution is a chemical cleaner like tributyltin oxide which...phone. The work will probably involve chemical injection into the walls of the property...
Police Trained in Chemical Warfare. POLICE in London have received specialist training to combat...London Police unit has been trained in the last year to respond to chemical attacks by terrorists and two senior officers have been trained...
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CHEMICAL WARFARE employment in war of incendiaries...for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, which is based...Chemical and Biological Warfare (1971 ); R. Harris and...M. Spiers, Chemical Warfare (1986); J. B. Tucker...
...available. Thus, throughout history the methods of warfare have changed. See air forces ; amphibious warfare ; chemical warfare ; biological warfare ; fortification ; mechanized warfare ; trench warfare ; guerrilla warfare ; siege...
...1992) the abandonment of germ warfare, some expressed suspicion about...Persian Gulf War , five hidden germ-warfare laboratories and stockpiles of...anthrax attacks of 2001. See also chemical warfare . See study by J. Miller et al...
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...raised the total in the immediate postwar years. Warfare itself had been revolutionized by the conflict (see air forces ; chemical warfare ; mechanized warfare ; tank ). Bibliography There is a tremendous...
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