Chemical warfare: Difference between revisions
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{{War}} |
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[[File:Norwegian soldiers w respirators and radio.jpg|thumb|230px| |
[[File:Norwegian soldiers w respirators and radio.jpg|thumb|230px|{{Center|[[Soldier]]s wearing [[gas mask]]s}}]] |
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[[File:Chemical agent protection.jpg|thumb|{{Center|A [[Swedish Army]] soldier wearing a chemical agent [[protective suit]] (''C-vätskeskydd'') and [[gas mask|protection mask]] (''skyddsmask 90'')}}]] |
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'''Chemical warfare''' means using [[chemical compound]]s in war to |
'''Chemical warfare''' means using [[chemical compound]]s in war to [[Injury|injure]] or [[Killing|kill]] people. The [[Chemical substance|chemicals]] used for chemical warfare are [[poison]]ous. |
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Chemical warfare has been used since the [[Stone Age]]{{Verify source}}. Since 1899, several [[international law]]s have said that using chemical weapons is [[illegal]]. But chemical weapons have still been used in wars since then.<ref name="Auto5R-1"><span class="plainlinks">[[s:Hague II (1899)#Article 23|Article 23]]</span>. wikisource.org. Retrieved September 14, 2013.</ref><ref name="Auto5R-2">(July 29, 1899). <span class="plainlinks">[http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/hague02.asp#art23 Laws of War: Laws and Customs of War on Land (Hague II); Article 23]</span>. yale.edu. Retrieved September 14, 2013.</ref> |
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==Definition== |
==Definition== |
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Chemical weapons are different than regular [[weapon]]s (like [[bomb]]s) or [[nuclear weapon]]s because they do not [[explosion|explode]]. Some chemical weapons are meant to kill people; they do this by poisoning them. Other chemical weapons are meant to "incapacitate" people (make them unable to fight back). They do this by causing [[pain]], injuries, or sickness. |
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Chemical warfare does not include using living [[organism]]s (like [[anthrax disease|anthrax bacteria]]) to make people sick. That is called [[biological warfare]]. |
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⚫ | However, some living organisms make [[toxin]]s (poisons). These toxins are not alive. For example, [[botulinum toxin]] is made by a [[bacteria]], and [[ricin]] is made by the [[castor oil plant]]. Because botulinum toxin and ricin are not alive, using them to make people sick is called chemical warfare. This is explained in the [[Chemical Weapons Convention]] (CWC). The convention also says that any toxic chemical is a chemical weapon unless it is used for legal reasons.<ref>{{cite web|title=Convention on the prohibition of the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons and on their destruction (CWC): Annexes and original signatories |url=http://www.state.gov/t/avc/trty/175492.htm|publisher=Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance|accessdate=19 January 2012}}</ref> |
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About 70 different chemicals have been used or [[ |
About 70 different chemicals have been used or [[stockpile]]d (saved up) as chemical warfare agents during the [[20th century]]. The Chemical Weapons Convention says that all of these chemicals should be destroyed.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://thebulletin.org/2009/06/disarmament-lessons-from-the-chemical-weapons-convention/|title=Disarmament lessons from the Chemical Weapons Convention|date=16 June 2009|publisher=}}</ref> |
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The Chemical Weapons Convention lists three different groups of chemicals. These are chemicals that are poisonous enough to be used as chemical weapons, or chemicals that may be used to make chemical weapons. |
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* ''Schedule 1 Substances (Chemicals)'': These chemicals can be used for nothing but chemical weapons (or for very few other things). Because of this, they may only be made or used for [[research]]; [[medicine]]; to make [[medication]]s or [[antidote]]s; or for protective reasons (for example, to test chemical weapons sensors, which can tell when a chemical weapon is nearby, or to test protective clothing). Examples include [[nerve agent]]s, ricin, [[lewisite]], and [[Sulfur mustard|mustard gas]]. If a country makes over 100 [[gram]]s of any of these chemicals, the country must report this to the [[Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons]] (OPCW). A country may have a stockpile of no more than one [[ton]] of these chemicals. |
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* '' |
* ''Schedule 2 Substances'': These chemicals have some specific uses other than chemical warfare, but not many. For example, [[dimethyl methylphosphonate]] can be used to make [[sarin]], a nerve agent. But it is also used as a [[flame retardant]]. Another example is [[Thiodiglycol]], which can be used to make mustard gas. But is also widely used as to make [[ink]]s. |
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* '' |
* ''Schedule 3 Substances'': These chemicals have many uses other than chemical warfare. One example is [[phosgene]]. It can be used as a chemical weapon, but it is also an important chemical used to make [[plastic]]s. Another example is [[chloropicrin]], which has also been used as a chemical weapon, but is also used as a [[fumigation|fumigant]] (for example, to kill [[insect]]s in a house). The OPCW must be told of, and may inspect, any company that makes more than 30 tons of these chemicals in a year. |
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==Technology== |
==Technology== |
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! style="border-right:1px solid #aaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | ''''' |
! style="border-right:1px solid #aaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | '''''Chemical Weapons Used''''' |
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! style="border-right:1px solid #aaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | ''''' |
! style="border-right:1px solid #aaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | '''''How Were They Used?''''' |
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! style="border-right:1px solid #aaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | ''''' |
! style="border-right:1px solid #aaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | '''''How Did People Try to Protect Themselves?''''' |
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! style="border-right:1px solid #aaaaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | ''''' |
! style="border-right:1px solid #aaaaa; border-bottom:2px solid #aaa;" | '''''How Did People Recognize the Weapon?''''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1914''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1914''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Chlorine]]<br />[[Chloropicrin]]<br />[[Phosgene]]<br />[[Mustard gas]] |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Chlorine]]<br />[[Chloropicrin]]<br />[[Phosgene]]<br />[[Mustard gas]] |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| The chemicals were spread by [[wind]] |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Gas masks |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Gas masks<br />Gauze that had been [[urination|urinated]] on |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Smell |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Smell |
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|- style="background:#DCDFFE" |
|- style="background:#DCDFFE" |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1918''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1918''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Lewisite]] |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Lewisite]] |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Chemical shells |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Chemical shells<br />([[projectile]]s filled with chemicals) |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Gas mask<br />Rosin oil clothing |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Gas mask<br />Rosin oil clothing |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Smell of geraniums (a type of [[flower]]) |
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|- |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1920s''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1920s''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Projectiles |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Projectiles with central bursters |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| CC-2 clothing |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| CC-2 protective clothing |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
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|- style="background:#DCDFFE" |
|- style="background:#DCDFFE" |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1930s''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1930s''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Nerve agent#G |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Nerve agent#Commonly known nerve agents#"G series" nerve gases|G-series nerve agents]] |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Bombs dropped from airplanes |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Blister agent detectors<br />Color change paper |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Blister agent detectors<br />Color change paper |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1940s''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1940s''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Missile warheads<br />Spray tanks |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Missile]]s filled with chemicals warheads<br />Spray tanks |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Protective ointment (mustard)<br />Collective protection<br />Gas mask |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Protective ointment (mustard)<br />Collective protection<br />[[Gas mask]] with Whetlerite |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1960s''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1960s''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[ |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Nerve agent#Commonly known nerve agents#"V series" nerve gases|V-series nerve agents]] |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Aerodynamic |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Aerodynamic |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Gas mask w/ water supply |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Gas mask w/ water supply |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1980s''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1980s''' |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Binary |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Binary weapons (once fired, two chemicals<br />inside mix to make the chemical weapon) |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Improved gas masks<br />(protection, fit, comfort) |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Improved gas masks<br />(better protection, fit, and comfort) |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| Laser detection |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| [[Laser]] detection |
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|- style="background:#DCDFFE" |
|- style="background:#DCDFFE" |
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| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1990s''' |
| style="border-right:1px solid #aaa;"| '''1990s''' |
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== History == |
== History == |
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Although |
Although very basic chemical warfare has been used in many parts of the world for thousands of years,<ref>{{Citation|last=Syed|first=Tanya|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7837826.stm|title=Ancient Persians 'gassed Romans'|publisher=BBC|date=2009-01-19|accessdate=2009-02-21}}</ref> "modern" chemical warfare began during [[World War I]] (see the page [[Chemical weapons in World War I]]). |
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Since modern chemical warfare started in World War I, countries have tried to research and make chemical weapons. They have had four main goals: |
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Initially, only well-known commercially available chemicals and their variants were used. These included [[chlorine]] and [[phosgene]] gas. The methods used to disperse these agents during battle were relatively unrefined and inefficient. Even so, casualties could be heavy, due to the mainly static troop positions which were characteristic features of [[trench warfare]]. |
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# To make new, more deadly agents (types of chemical weapons) |
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# To create ways of delivering chemical weapons that will hurt or kill even more people |
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# To come up with better protections against chemical weapons |
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# To create better ways of detecting chemical weapons (realizing that chemical weapons are nearby) |
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=== Ancient history === |
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Chemical warfare was first used during the Stone Age. Stone Age people used poisoned [[arrow]]s and [[spear]]-tips. These were dipped in poisons, like [[venom]] from [[snake]]s or [[scorpion]]s. Sometimes they used poisonous plants. |
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|journal=New York Tribune}}</ref> simply opened canisters of chlorine upwind of the opposing side and let the [[prevailing winds]] do the dissemination. Soon after, the [[France|French]] modified [[artillery]] [[munition]]s to contain phosgene – a much more effective method that became the principal means of delivery.<ref>{{citation |
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The [[Ancient China|Ancient Chinese]] used different forms of poisonous [[smoke]]s, when they [[Siege|besieged]] a city to try to take it over. |
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Since the development of modern chemical warfare in World War I, nations have pursued [[research and development]] on chemical weapons that falls into four major categories: new and more deadly agents; more efficient methods of delivering agents to the target (dissemination); more reliable means of defense against chemical weapons; and more sensitive and accurate means of detecting chemical agents. Germany was the first to produce chemical agents. |
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The [[Ancient Greece|Ancient Greeks]] used a form of burning wood, pitch from plants, and [[sulphur]]. |
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=== Use in antiquity === |
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The first form of chemical warfare was in the form of poisoned arrows, and spear-tips, during the [[Stone age]]. These were dipped in poison (like that from [[snake]]s or [[scorpion]]s. Sometimes poisonous plants were used. The [[Ancient China|Ancient Chinese]] used various forms of poisonous smokes, when they besieged a city. [[Ancient Greece|Ancient Greeks]] used a form of burning wood, [[pitch]], and [[sulphur]]. |
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=== World War |
=== World War I === |
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{{Main|Chemical weapons in World War I}} |
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[[Gas Warfare in WW1|Poison gas was first used in World War One]]. France was the first country to make this type of gas. However, Germany was the first to use it in battle on March 15th, 1915, when they used [[tear gas]] against France. It was included in some of the new, deadly weapons of World War One. |
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[[File:Mustard gas ww2 poster.jpg|thumb|upright|right|{{Center|[[United States Army|U.S. Army]] poster about mustard gas}}]] |
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Poison gas was first used in World War I. [[France]] was the first country to make this type of gas. However, [[Germany]] was the first to use it in [[battle]], on March 15th, 1915. On that day, they used [[tear gas]] against France. |
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The three types of gas used in World War One were: |
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# [[Chlorine]] gas (tear gas): Tear gas makes people [[cough]], have [[Dyspnea|trouble breathing]], and go [[Blindness|blind]] until the tear gas wears off |
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# Phosgene gas: Phosgene caused people to cough and choke much worse than tear gas. Phosgene gas is a very deadly chemical weapon. [[Historian]]s think about 100,000 people died in World War I from chemical weapons. They also think that 85% of these people (85,000 people) were killed by phosgene. |
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# Mustard gas: Mustard gas was almost impossible to protect against. It caused very bad, painful sores on the outside and inside of the body. |
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At first, very basic ways of spreading these gases were used. Even so, many [[soldier]]s could be [[Casualty (person)|hurt or killed]]. This was partly because World War I was fought using [[trench warfare]], so many soldiers would be in the same place at the same time, and escaping from poisonous gases would be very hard. |
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|journal=New York Tribune}}</ref> They simply opened containers of chlorine upwind of enemy soldiers, so that the wind would carry the chlorine gas to their enemies. |
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Soon after this, the French started using chemical weapons too. They filled [[artillery]] projectiles with phosgene and fired them at the Germans. This was a much more effective way of using chemical weapons. It would become the most common way of delivering chemical weapons during World War I.<ref>{{citation |
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=== Modern use === |
=== Modern use === |
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Chemical weapons were not used very much in [[World War II]], except by the [[Japan]]ese army during the [[Second Sino-Japanese War|invasion of China]]. This was because everybody was afraid that the other side would use weapons like theirs. Also, chemical weapons were not easy to use. They took time to use, and this made it harder for soldiers to move quickly. Also, the [[raw material]]s needed to make chemical weapons were not easy to get. This was because World War II was fought in areas which were not connected well by [[railroad]]s. |
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⚫ | During the [[Iran-Iraq War]], [[Iraq]] used chemical weapons ([[Iran]] did not).<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/dc/briefs/030701.htm |title=CNS - DC: Briefing Series |access-date=2008-08-04 |archive-date=2009-02-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090210065525/http://cns.miis.edu/pubs/dc/briefs/030701.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> Many people believe that Iraq used chemical weapons against the [[Kurdish people|Kurdish]] people. |
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==Laws about chemical weapons== |
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The first international law to make chemical warfare illegal was the [[Hague Convention]] in 1899. |
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After World War I, [[1925 Geneva Protocol|the Geneva Protocol of 1925]] made it illegal to use chemical or biological weapons in any interstate wars. It does not apply to stockpiling or transfering chemical weapons nor does it apply to non-international armed conflicts.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nti.org/education-center/treaties-and-regimes/protocol-prohibition-use-war-asphyxiating-poisonous-or-other-gasses-and-bacteriological-methods-warfare-geneva-protocol/#:~:text=The%20Geneva%20Protocol%2C%20implicitly%2C%20does,cover%20internal%20or%20civil%20conflicts.|title=Geneva Protocol: Protocol For the Prohibition of the Use In War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous, or Other Gases, And of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare (Geneva Protocol)|publisher=[[Nuclear Threat Initiative]]}}</ref> |
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[[United States]] has been an active user of chemical weapons like [[Agent Orange]] even after World War II. However, when [[UN]] formed a working group in 1980 that works for making the number of chemical weapons in the world less, On April 4, 1984 the [[President]] of [[United States]], [[Ronald Reagan]] called for a worldwide ban on chemical weapons. After this, [[negotiation]]s between various countries started. The Chemical Weapons Convention was signed in 1993 and came into effect in 1997. [[wikt:expert|Experts]] believe that 70,000 metric tons of chemical weapons are known to be present totally in this world. Out of this, 8000 metric tons have been destroyed in the past few years. By 2003, United States had destroyed 23% of its total chemical weapons. Other countries like [[India]], [[South Korea]] and [[Russia]] are destroying chemical weapons under the CWC. [[Libya]] is also destroying its weapons in the last few years. |
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In 1997, the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) was created. As of the end of 2015, 192 countries had agreed to follow the CWC. According to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, as of October 2015, 90% of the world's chemical weapons stockpiles had been destroyed. |
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== Chemical agents == |
== Chemical agents == |
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The main types of agents used in chemical warfare are: |
The main types of agents used in chemical warfare are: |
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* |
* Nerve agents, like sarin or [[VX]] |
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* [[Mustard gas|Mustard agents]] |
* [[Mustard gas|Mustard agents]] |
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* [[Hydrogen cyanide]]-based agents |
* [[Hydrogen cyanide]]-based agents |
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* [[botulinum]] |
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* [[Toxin]]s, like ''Botulinum'' toxin |
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* [[Incapacitating agent]]s (chemicals that make large numbers of people unable to fight back, but without permanently hurting or killing them). Examples include: |
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* [[Toxin]]s |
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* [[Tear gas]]es |
** [[Tear gas]]es |
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* [[ |
** [[Pepper spray]] |
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* [[Incapacitating agent]]s such as |
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** [[Psychotomimetic agent]]s |
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* [[Potential chemical warfare agent]]s |
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If we use chemicals (like |
If we use chemicals (like Agent Orange or [[glyphosate]]) to destroy plants, sometimes human beings may be affected by [[side-effect|side effect]]s. But, we will not call it chemical warfare. Chemical warfare covers only direct attacks on human life. |
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== References == |
== References == |
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{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
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{{Chemical agents}} |
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[[Category:Chemical warfare| |
[[Category:Chemical warfare| ]] |
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[[Category:Human rights abuses]] |
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[[Category:Military tactics]] |
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[[Category:Science in society]] |
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[[Category:War]] |
Latest revision as of 15:11, 4 June 2024
Part of a series on |
War |
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Chemical warfare means using chemical compounds in war to injure or kill people. The chemicals used for chemical warfare are poisonous.
Chemical warfare has been used since the Stone Age[verification needed]. Since 1899, several international laws have said that using chemical weapons is illegal. But chemical weapons have still been used in wars since then.[1][2]
Definition
[change | change source]Chemical weapons are different than regular weapons (like bombs) or nuclear weapons because they do not explode. Some chemical weapons are meant to kill people; they do this by poisoning them. Other chemical weapons are meant to "incapacitate" people (make them unable to fight back). They do this by causing pain, injuries, or sickness.
Chemical warfare does not include using living organisms (like anthrax bacteria) to make people sick. That is called biological warfare.
However, some living organisms make toxins (poisons). These toxins are not alive. For example, botulinum toxin is made by a bacteria, and ricin is made by the castor oil plant. Because botulinum toxin and ricin are not alive, using them to make people sick is called chemical warfare. This is explained in the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC). The convention also says that any toxic chemical is a chemical weapon unless it is used for legal reasons.[3]
About 70 different chemicals have been used or stockpiled (saved up) as chemical warfare agents during the 20th century. The Chemical Weapons Convention says that all of these chemicals should be destroyed.[4]
The Chemical Weapons Convention lists three different groups of chemicals. These are chemicals that are poisonous enough to be used as chemical weapons, or chemicals that may be used to make chemical weapons.
- Schedule 1 Substances (Chemicals): These chemicals can be used for nothing but chemical weapons (or for very few other things). Because of this, they may only be made or used for research; medicine; to make medications or antidotes; or for protective reasons (for example, to test chemical weapons sensors, which can tell when a chemical weapon is nearby, or to test protective clothing). Examples include nerve agents, ricin, lewisite, and mustard gas. If a country makes over 100 grams of any of these chemicals, the country must report this to the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). A country may have a stockpile of no more than one ton of these chemicals.
- Schedule 2 Substances: These chemicals have some specific uses other than chemical warfare, but not many. For example, dimethyl methylphosphonate can be used to make sarin, a nerve agent. But it is also used as a flame retardant. Another example is Thiodiglycol, which can be used to make mustard gas. But is also widely used as to make inks.
- Schedule 3 Substances: These chemicals have many uses other than chemical warfare. One example is phosgene. It can be used as a chemical weapon, but it is also an important chemical used to make plastics. Another example is chloropicrin, which has also been used as a chemical weapon, but is also used as a fumigant (for example, to kill insects in a house). The OPCW must be told of, and may inspect, any company that makes more than 30 tons of these chemicals in a year.
Technology
[change | change source]Chemical Weapons Used | How Were They Used? | How Did People Try to Protect Themselves? | How Did People Recognize the Weapon? | |
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1914 | Chlorine Chloropicrin Phosgene Mustard gas |
The chemicals were spread by wind | Gas masks Gauze that had been urinated on |
Smell |
1918 | Lewisite | Chemical shells (projectiles filled with chemicals) |
Gas mask Rosin oil clothing |
Smell of geraniums (a type of flower) |
1920s | Projectiles with central bursters | CC-2 protective clothing | ||
1930s | G-series nerve agents | Bombs dropped from airplanes | Blister agent detectors Color change paper | |
1940s | Missiles filled with chemicals warheads Spray tanks |
Protective ointment (mustard) Collective protection Gas mask with Whetlerite |
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1950s | ||||
1960s | V-series nerve agents | Aerodynamic | Gas mask w/ water supply | Nerve gas alarm |
1970s | ||||
1980s | Binary weapons (once fired, two chemicals inside mix to make the chemical weapon) |
Improved gas masks (better protection, fit, and comfort) |
Laser detection | |
1990s | Novichok nerve agents |
History
[change | change source]Although very basic chemical warfare has been used in many parts of the world for thousands of years,[5] "modern" chemical warfare began during World War I (see the page Chemical weapons in World War I).
Since modern chemical warfare started in World War I, countries have tried to research and make chemical weapons. They have had four main goals:
- To make new, more deadly agents (types of chemical weapons)
- To create ways of delivering chemical weapons that will hurt or kill even more people
- To come up with better protections against chemical weapons
- To create better ways of detecting chemical weapons (realizing that chemical weapons are nearby)
Ancient history
[change | change source]Chemical warfare was first used during the Stone Age. Stone Age people used poisoned arrows and spear-tips. These were dipped in poisons, like venom from snakes or scorpions. Sometimes they used poisonous plants.
The Ancient Chinese used different forms of poisonous smokes, when they besieged a city to try to take it over.
The Ancient Greeks used a form of burning wood, pitch from plants, and sulphur.
World War I
[change | change source]Poison gas was first used in World War I. France was the first country to make this type of gas. However, Germany was the first to use it in battle, on March 15th, 1915. On that day, they used tear gas against France.
The three types of gas used in World War One were:
- Chlorine gas (tear gas): Tear gas makes people cough, have trouble breathing, and go blind until the tear gas wears off
- Phosgene gas: Phosgene caused people to cough and choke much worse than tear gas. Phosgene gas is a very deadly chemical weapon. Historians think about 100,000 people died in World War I from chemical weapons. They also think that 85% of these people (85,000 people) were killed by phosgene.
- Mustard gas: Mustard gas was almost impossible to protect against. It caused very bad, painful sores on the outside and inside of the body.
At first, very basic ways of spreading these gases were used. Even so, many soldiers could be hurt or killed. This was partly because World War I was fought using trench warfare, so many soldiers would be in the same place at the same time, and escaping from poisonous gases would be very hard.
Germany was the first country in World War I to use chemical warfare in battle.[6] They simply opened containers of chlorine upwind of enemy soldiers, so that the wind would carry the chlorine gas to their enemies.
Soon after this, the French started using chemical weapons too. They filled artillery projectiles with phosgene and fired them at the Germans. This was a much more effective way of using chemical weapons. It would become the most common way of delivering chemical weapons during World War I.[7]
Modern use
[change | change source]Chemical weapons were not used very much in World War II, except by the Japanese army during the invasion of China. This was because everybody was afraid that the other side would use weapons like theirs. Also, chemical weapons were not easy to use. They took time to use, and this made it harder for soldiers to move quickly. Also, the raw materials needed to make chemical weapons were not easy to get. This was because World War II was fought in areas which were not connected well by railroads.
During the Iran-Iraq War, Iraq used chemical weapons (Iran did not).[8] Many people believe that Iraq used chemical weapons against the Kurdish people.
It has been reported that many other countries, like the People's Republic of China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, Sudan, Syria, Taiwan, and Serbia and Montenegro, have chemical weapons.
Laws about chemical weapons
[change | change source]According to international law, it is wrong to use chemical weapons. Since 1899, there have been many rules that make it illegal to make, import, and use chemical weapons.
The first international law to make chemical warfare illegal was the Hague Convention in 1899.
After World War I, the Geneva Protocol of 1925 made it illegal to use chemical or biological weapons in any interstate wars. It does not apply to stockpiling or transfering chemical weapons nor does it apply to non-international armed conflicts.[9]
In 1997, the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) was created. As of the end of 2015, 192 countries had agreed to follow the CWC. According to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, as of October 2015, 90% of the world's chemical weapons stockpiles had been destroyed.
Chemical agents
[change | change source]The main types of agents used in chemical warfare are:
- Nerve agents, like sarin or VX
- Mustard agents
- Hydrogen cyanide-based agents
- Arsines, like lewisite
- Toxins, like Botulinum toxin
- Incapacitating agents (chemicals that make large numbers of people unable to fight back, but without permanently hurting or killing them). Examples include:
If we use chemicals (like Agent Orange or glyphosate) to destroy plants, sometimes human beings may be affected by side effects. But, we will not call it chemical warfare. Chemical warfare covers only direct attacks on human life.
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Article 23. wikisource.org. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
- ↑ (July 29, 1899). Laws of War: Laws and Customs of War on Land (Hague II); Article 23. yale.edu. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
- ↑ "Convention on the prohibition of the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons and on their destruction (CWC): Annexes and original signatories". Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance. Retrieved 19 January 2012.
- ↑ "Disarmament lessons from the Chemical Weapons Convention". 16 June 2009.
- ↑ Syed, Tanya (2009-01-19), Ancient Persians 'gassed Romans', BBC, retrieved 2009-02-21
- ↑ Irwin, Will (22 April 1915), "The Use of Poison Gas", New York Tribune
- ↑ Johnson, Jeffrey Allan (1990), The Kaiser's Chemists: Science and Modernization in Imperial Germany, University of North Carolina Press
- ↑ "CNS - DC: Briefing Series". Archived from the original on 2009-02-10. Retrieved 2008-08-04.
- ↑ "Geneva Protocol: Protocol For the Prohibition of the Use In War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous, or Other Gases, And of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare (Geneva Protocol)". Nuclear Threat Initiative.