In Syria the
rebels have been accusing the government of using nerve gas shells and
bombs. Israel is convinced that this is so, and the U.S. is inclined to
agree with them. The known incidents occurred in the northern city of
Aleppo where government forces are taking a beating. Syria insists that
no nerve gas was used, but the nerve gas may have been ordered as a
desperate measure to halt the advancing rebels, with instructions that
“this never happened.” Israel insists it has definitive proof and
apparently that is convincing many NATO members, including the United
States. Moreover, a Syrian general defected in late April and said he
was ordered to use chemical weapons against rebels in the southwest
recently but fired shells with harmless chemicals instead. The general
offered to reveal where he had buried the actual chemical shells.
Syrian nerve gas is stored at some fifty locations all over
the country. A large number of troops are devoted to defending these
stockpiles and some chemical weapons have been moved to avoid capture by
the rebels. Officially Syria has no nerve gas, but the Assad government
has recently made statements indicating that it is abandoning that
fiction. Syria has maintained stocks of chemical weapons for decades as a
last ditch weapon for any future war with Israel (which few Syrians
believe could be won). Israel has prepared accordingly. Recently, Syria
announced that it never had any intention of using nerve gas against
Israel. This all gets even stranger as Israel has recently advised the
United States to stay out of Syria, even if nerve gas is being used.
That’s apparently because Israel wants to take care of this problem
itself, as its Israeli civilians who are likely to die if Syrian nerve
gas is captured by Islamic terrorists (who still want to use nerve gas
against Israel).
Photos of dead civilians the rebels claim were nerve gas
victims do show signs of nerve gas in use (foaming at the mouth and
contracted pupils). The only way to obtain conclusive evidence is for
someone to bring out the bodies of victims (or blood samples) and soil
samples from the area where the nerve gas was used. If the rebels want
to prove their accusations of nerve gas use they just have to collect
these samples and get them out of the country. Apparently that has been
done, at least to the satisfaction of Israeli intelligence. The U.S.
said it would intervene militarily if Syria used chemical weapons but
demands conclusive proof (blood and soil samples) before deciding and
acting. Now the U.S. has apparently been shown evidence of Syrian use of
chemical and is debating what to do about it.
If chemical weapons were used in Syria they would not be a
show stopper. There is a lot of experience with mustard and nerve gas
against troops, some of them as unprepared as civilians. What little is
known in this area indicates that non-lethal doses of nerve gas make
victims dizzy and disoriented, along with double vision and severe
headaches. Nerve gas has its immediate effects and then either kills you
or wears off, although some long term damage is suspected. Nerve gas
shuts down the body's nervous system causing suffocation, etc. Sunlight
causes verve gas to degrade quickly, with effectiveness quickly
diminished by more than 60 percent. In practice nerve gas is not the
most effective way to kill people, but it is among the scariest.
The Germans developed nerve gas during the 1930s. The Germans
believed they had a true weapon of mass destruction, at least against
dense, unprotected, populations. Nerve gases killed within minutes and
could enter the body through the skin or inhalation. Minute quantities
of nerve gas were needed to be effective, much less than previous poison
gases. Although only the Germans had large quantities of nerve gas
during World War II, they never used it because they feared the Allies
had these easily manufactured nerve agents also. German nerve gas was
developed from research done in the United States and Russia on
insecticide. In effect, nerve gas is insecticide tweaked to work on
mammals. This was one of the earliest "balance of terror" situations.
Nerve gas would cause such massive casualties in urban areas that the
Germans refrained from using it for fear that the Allies would do the
same, especially after the Allied bombing of German cities got into high
gear. They assumed that the Allies were following the same logic about
non-use. This was a situation remarkably similar to current attitudes
towards nuclear weapons.
Nerve gas was first used a lot in the 1980s, during the
Iran-Iraq War. Some of the casualties were treated in Western hospitals,
which provided much of the first-hand on the impact of these weapons
against humans. Iraq used nerve gas against its rebellious Kurds in the
late 1980s, killing some 5,000 civilians. The Japanese Aum Shinri Kyo
cult used nerve gas in several terror attacks during the 1990s. Most of
these attacks caused only a handful of injuries. But one Sarin attack,
with gas released in five subway cars, killed twelve people and sent
over 5,000 to the hospital (but only a fifth of these had noticeable
nerve gas injuries). A few Iraqi nerve gas shells were used against
American troops in 2004, but there were no fatalities.
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