Title: Chemical Weapons
1Chemical Weapons
- How are they unconventional?
2I. History of CW See Readings
- Note the process of agent escalation tear gas
? chlorine ? phosgene ? mustard ? lewisite, etc.
- Note also the efforts to control CW
- Finally, compare military effects of CW to
conventional explosives
3II. Effects of CW
- Distinction between protected / unprotected
targets CW seldom kills protected troops.
- Specific Agents Have Different Effects
41. Poison Gas Blood Gases and Pulmonary Agents
- Casualties High within small areas
- Uses on the battlefield Quickly dispersed by
wind and diluted by air
- Recent uses Used for executions in enclosed
areas, used by Iraqi insurgents
5d. Sources of Condemnation
- Use for executions and mass murder (Holocaust)
- Secondary effect on medical personnel during
surgery (release of toxic gases)
- Agent Escalation and Mass casualties in WW I
62. Vesicants
- Casualties
- Mustard Few in short-term but many over long
period. High proportion of wounded to killed.
- Lewisite Many casualties quickly death can
occur within minutes.
- Uses on the battlefield Mass casualties to
overload medical systems, force use of bulky CW
equipment, secondary area contamination
- Recent uses Most common agents used in modern
wars (Yemen, Iran-Iraq)
7d. Sources of Condemnation
- Invisibility of threat Soldiers can acquire
lethal doses without realizing it, then die
painfully days later
- Nature of injuries Blistering and burns.
Example (Iranian casualty from Iraqi mustard
attack)
83. Nerve Agents
- Casualties Very high within area of exposure.
Decline with distance and time
- Uses on the battlefield Mass fatalities, Area
contamination, force use of bulky CW equipment
- Recent uses Iraqi use against Kurds, Aum
Shinrikyo
- Sources of condemnation Invisibility,
pre-existing norms against CW
94. Incapacitants (CS, BZ, Fentanyl)
- Casualties Designed to temporarily disable
without killing. Overdoses can be lethal.
- Uses on the Battlefield Flush enemies from
bunkers, disable command/control, avoiding
civilian deaths in riots and hostage rescue
situations - Recent Uses US in Vietnam, Iraq against Iran and
Kurds, Waco and Moscow theater sieges
- Sources of condemnation Agent escalation in WW I
and subsequent conflicts
10III. The Law of CW Use (Proliferation will come
later)
- Declaration of St. Petersburg (1868) Renounces
use of small (inflammable projectiles in war (explosive
bullets) between signatories - Hague Convention (1899) Renounces use of
projectiles that diffuse asphyxiating or
deleterious gases (Germany claims chlorine
cylinder attack doesnt violate later claims
Mustard isnt a gas)
11C. Geneva Protocol (1925)
- Prohibited the use of "asphyxiating gas, or any
other kind of gas, liquids, substances or similar
materials
- Only applied to interstate wars (states reserved
the right to use CW against their own people or
colonies)
- Many nations reserve right to retaliate against
violators
- Ambiguous use of other is interpreted to allow
nonlethal CW
12D. The Chemical Weapons Convention
- Outlaws all use of CW agents except
- 1. Industrial, agricultural, research, medical,
pharmaceutical or other peaceful purposes
- 2. Protective purposes, namely those purposes
directly related to protection against toxic
chemicals and to protection against chemical
weapons - 3. Military purposes not connected with the use
of chemical weapons and not dependent on the use
of the toxic properties of chemicals as a method
of warfare - 4. Law enforcement including domestic riot
control purposes.
- Note that riot control agents are now prohibited
in warfare
- Also note that toxic chemicals are OK if their
other properties (flammability, explosiveness,
etc) are the key to their military effectiveness
13E. Which countries can legally use CW?
- Not bound by Geneva Protocol or CWC
- Bahamas (signed CWC but has not ratified)
- Comoros (signed CWC but has not ratified)
- Congo (signed CWC but has not ratified)
- Myanmar (signed CWC but has not ratified)
- Somalia
- Bound by Geneva Protocol but not CWC
- Central African Republic (signed CWC but has not
ratified)
- Dominican Republic (signed CWC but has not
ratified)
- Guinea-Bissau (signed CWC but has not ratified)
- Israel (signed CWC but has not ratified)
- Angola
- Barbados
- North Korea
- Egypt
- Iraq (bound by UN cease-fire agreement of 1991)
- Lebanon
- Syrian Arab Republic
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15III. Are CW WMD?
- Problem Accurate modeling difficult. Examples
- 1. Single release may generate multiple plumes
162. Buildings affect dispersion
17B. DHS Scenarios
- Mustard/Lewisite released by aircraft over
stadium of 100,000 people
- 150 fatalities 70,000 hospitalized
- Sarin injected into three large office buildings
using six injectors
- 6,000 fatalities (95 of building occupants) 350
injuries
18C. Rough Estimation
- Model plume as if no terrain exists. Plume is
teardrop-shaped (if wind 10 km/hr) or circular
(if little wind) from point of release
- Plume is more elongated as wind increases, but
also less concentrated
- Divide plume into zones
- Assign each zone a lethality level ( killed)
based on likely dose
- Estimate of people in each zone and apply
lethality levels to determine deaths
19Sample Lethality Table
20D. Persistence Difficult to estimate economic
damages or area-denial importance
- Since attacks have little effect on protected
targets, real intent is often to degrade
efficiency through contamination (requires bulky
protective gear)
21E. Chemicals compared to bioweapons and nuclear
weapons
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23F. Example Attack on NYC(Kings County Census
Tracts)
Map Approx. 7 miles across
0 1 2 3
4 5 6
7
Wind 15 MPH
24Attack Parameters
- Nerve Gas (Sarin) sprayed at ground level from
trucks over 2-block area
- About 2000 Gallons used
25Point of attack
0 1 2 3
4 5 6
7
Wind 15 MPH
26Plume by Time
3 minutes
6 minutes
12 minutes
0 1 2 3
4 5
Wind 15 MPH
27Plume by Time
3 minutes
6 minutes
12 minutes
0 1 2 3
4 5
Wind 15 MPH
28Next Step Figure out how many are in each plume
area
- Zooming in on affected area.
29Next Step Figure out how many are in each plume
area
- Averaging Population per Census Tract
Average People 845 2363 3717 5649 10934
30Next Step Figure out how many are in each plume
area
- Count Census Tracts in each zone
AvePop 0-3 m 3-6 m 6-12 m 845 1 0 5 2363 2 7
13
3717 0 4 4 5649 0 .75 1.5 10934 .67 0 1
31How many were exposed?
- Simple model assumes no protection as if
everyone was standing outside
AvePop 0-3 m 3-6 m 6-12 m
845 1 0 5 2363 2 7 13 3717 0 4 4 5649
0 .75 1.5
10934 .67 0 1
32How many were exposed?
- Multiply number of tracts by average tract
population..
AvePop 0-3 m 3-6 m 6-12 m
845 845 0 4225 2363 5726 16541 30719 3717
0 14868 14868 5649 0 4237 8474 10934 7326 0
10934
33How many were exposed?
- Multiply number of tracts by average tract
population..
AvePop 0-3 m 3-6 m 6-12 m
845 845 0 4225 2363 5726 16541 30719 3717
0 14868 14868 5649 0 4237 8474 10934 7326 0
10934 TOTALS 13897 35646 69220
34Compare to average lethality for each zone
- Problem requires data on aerosol dispersion
given wind speed and quantities used.
Pre-calculated tables best.
- Sample data for Sarin
- 3 min zone 30 dead
- 3-6 min zone 15 dead
- 6-12 min zone 5 dead
35Adding up deaths