Title: Chemical warfare
1Chemical warfare
Castulo Olivas Alex Avila
2Outline
- What is a chemical weapon?
- The first chemical weapons
- Modern chemical weapons
- Effects of chemical weapons on humans
- Effects of chemical weapons on the environment
- Modern methods of chemical weapon destruction
- Should we continue to use chemical weapons?
- Summary
- The solution
3What is a chemical weapon?
- chemical substances that can be delivered using
munitions and dispersal devices to cause death or
severe harm to people and animals and plants - Chemical weapons are classified as weapons of
mass destruction
4First chemical weapons
- The first chemical weapons were poison tipped
arrows used in southern Africa during the stone
ages. - In the 17th century during sieges, armies
attempted to start fires by launching incendiary
shells filled with sulphur, tallow, rosin,
turpentine, saltpeter, and/or antimony - On April 22, 1915, Germans used chlorine gas to
kill French troops - Germany also used mustard gas in WWI
- During the Rif War combined Spanish and French
forces dropped mustard gas bombs in an attempt to
put down the Berber rebellion. - During the Ethiopian invasion, Italy dropped
mustard gas from bombs, sprayed it from
airplanes, and spread it in powdered form on the
ground.
Mustard Gas Bomb
5Modern Chemical Weapons
Mustard gas
An oily, volatile liquid that is corrosive to the
skin and mucous membranes and causes severe,
sometimes fatal respiratory damage. It was
introduced in World War I as a chemical warfare
agent.
Yellow Rain
A powdery, poisonous, yellow substance reported
as dropping from the air in southeast Asia and
found to be the excrement of wild honeybees
contaminated by a fungal toxin.
Anthrax
Bacillus anthracis is the scientific name for
anthrax. Anthrax powder was used in bioterrorism
attacks when it was put into letters and caused
the death of several postage workers.
6Effects of Chemical Weapons on humans
Effects of lewisite
- Chemicals that Blister
- Sulphur mustard
- Lewisite
- Nitrogen mustard
- Mustard-lewisite
- Phosgene-oxime
- Chemicals that affect the nerves
- VX
- Sarin
- Soman
- Tabun
- Novichole agents
- Chemicals that cause choking
- chlorine
- Phosgene
Agent VX Type Nerve agent Symptoms Breathing
problems, muscle spasm, unconsciousness.
Outcome Possibly death. Status May have been
used against Iran in 1988. Iraq claims it
produced 3.9 tons. Source International
Institute for Strategic Studies
7Effects of chemical weapons on the environment
- persistent agents tend to remain in the
environment for as long as a week, complicating
decontamination - Non-volatile liquid agents, such as blister
agents and the oily VX nerve agent, do not easily
evaporate into a gas, and therefore present
primarily a contact hazard - Buried munitions pose problems environmentally.
Once the munitions begin to corrode and leak, the
agents can contaminate the surrounding soil and
even get into water sources. - Sea dumping of chemical munitions is another
method of disposal that has caused a number of
problems. Some of these dumping operations have
occurred in shallow water in the Baltic Sea and
off the coast of Japan. In both of these places,
dumped chemical weapons caused serious problems
for the fishing industry.
8Modern methods of chemical weapon destruction
- There are two common methods for destroying
chemical weapons, incineration and chemical
degradation. However, there are dozens of
alternative technologies, and the number is
growing. - Under the Baseline incineration process, chemical
weapons are first taken to the demilitarization
facility, where the chemical agent is removed
from the munitions or containers by automated
equipment. - Chemical degradation (or chemical
neutralization) technologies take many different
forms. There are a number of chemicals, like
alkalis and oxidants, which reduce and often
negate the toxicity of chemical agents.
9Should we continue to use chemical weapons?
NO
- We should not continue to use some chemical
weapons. Chemicals are too cruel because they
usually cause extreme pain or irritation , along
with other side effects. Blister agents should
not be used because they cause extreme suffering
in victims also. Some chemicals cause you to die
of asphyxiation. These chemicals should also not
be used. All chemical weapons are very dangerous
and can affect the environment and even kill
animals that get in the crossfire in a war.
10Summary
- Chemical weapons have been used ever since spears
and arrows were invented. Now, the weapons are
much more advanced and deadly. - There are many different types of chemical
weapons and they all have their own unique way of
making a victim suffer. - We should no longer use chemical weapons because
they are harsh and persistent chemicals can
effect the environment and animals.
11The solution
- The only solution is to not have war. The main
reason we have chemical weapons is because we
need them for war. If we didnt have war we would
have no need for chemical weapon development.