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Chemical Warfare Background

The modern history of chemical warfare dates to
World War I and is credited with a million casualties and over 100,000 deaths throughout
the four years of that engagement. Although tear-producing agents were utilized by the
French with limited success in quelling civil disturbances prior to the war, they were not
used once the war began. They were soon replaced by the more toxic, lethal war gases such
as phosgene and chlorine. After the initial successes of the first World War I poison gas
attacks, and as the full implications of this type of warfare became more apparent, a
tremendous amount of research and development was undertaken by both sides. It was
discovered that one particular substance, Chloroacetophenone (CN) produced, in proper
concentrations, copious, and uncontrollable tears.
The balance of terror in Chemical Biological Warfare
(CBW) weaponry was severely dislocated by the discovery of the nerve gases, and following
World War II many nations hastened to manufacture these and a variety of less toxic
chemicals. By the middle 1960s, the United States had settled on seven so-called
standardized chemical warfare agents, having a spectrum of toxicity and useful
applications in munitions.
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