The threat of poison gas, and other related biological warfare
agents, holds our society hostage to the possible actions of
terrorist groups or rogue states. This study hopes to convince
policymakers and the general public that the bad reputation that
surrounds the use of gas is largely the result of propaganda,
misinformation, and oft-repeated half-truths. With proper
precautions and discipline, neither the military nor society need
fear gas as a weapon of mass destruction, wielded by dictators and
cowards who utilize the loopholes in international agreements and
flaunt world opinion. While not advocating the use of toxic gas in
warfare, the author argues that education and common sense are the
most effective tools to combat the gases that remain in arsenals
around the world.
After a discussion of the earliest uses of gas and other similar
tactics in warfare, this book explains how our image of gas has
been shaped by early pronouncements that branded it a treacherous
and barbarous weapon. The fear of retribution, as well as political
motivations, prevented the use of gas warfare in the Second World
War, but its use resurfaced in later decades both in warfare and in
combatting internal strife. The author details various types of gas
and discusses the most effective measures to counter each one. He
also chronicles the long history of attempts to outlaw gas, why
these attempts have failed, and why such efforts are not likely to
succeed in the future.
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