This Wednesday marks the 100th anniversary of the first large-scale implementation of chemical weapons (CW) in warfare. On Thursday 22nd
April 1915, near the Belgian town of Ypres close to the French border,
German forces released a deadly greenish fog into the air – chlorine gas
– and watched as it dissipated, caught the wind and drifted silently
towards Allied soldiers.
Chlorine
gas was only one of around 50 different such weapons to be used by
troops during the First World War. One of the most popular and most
shocking was mustard gas, which affected not only the respiratory tract,
but skin, too.
Photographs of
soldiers suffering from the devastating effects of mustard gas – a
“blister agent”- can be easily found, and make for extremely distressing
viewing. In one example, a soldier is bolstered up in bed by two
nurses, his eyes shut tight with pain, his skin marked by large, bulbous
blisters.
In John Singer Sargent’s 1919 painting Gassed
a line of nine soldiers blinded during a mustard gas attack walk
single-file, aided by two others, while around them other affected men
lie bandaged and incapacitated.
Chemical
warfare was used by all sides during World War One and is estimated to
have caused 90,000 deaths, as well as more than a million casualties
between 1915 and 1918. By the end of the war, 125,000 tons of chemical
weapons had been expended.
Despite
the horror caused by CWs during the First World War, and contrary to the
terms of the Geneva Protocol of 1925, which prohibited their use in
international warfare, many countries continued to deploy them in the
succeeding years.
Although they were
scarcely used in Europe during the Second World War, their terrible
efficacy was exploited by the Japanese in China during the Second
Sino-Japanese war (1937-1945), primarily against prisoners of war and
civilians.
According to the website
for the Royal Society of Chemistry, since 1945 over 50,000 Japanese
chemical weapons have been found scattered across 90 sites in China and
have “reportedly caused 2000 injuries and even a few fatalities”.
This
last example demonstrates one of the most significantly harmful
characteristics of chemical weapons: the long-term damage to victims.
CWs have a sustained effect upon the human body and these effects can
even be passed on across generations.
Between 1961 and 1971, at the height of the Vietnam War, US forces used a cocktail of herbicides known as Agent Orange to defoliate areas of the country in order to expose North Vietnamese and Vietcong forces.
The
harmful effects of these chemicals have since been strongly felt by US
veterans of the war and members of the Vietnamese population. Among the
illnesses now considered to have been caused by exposure to Agent Orange
are Leukemia, Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and prostate cancer.
Whilst acknowledging the damage done to US veterans by Agent Orange,
the US government has failed to accept responsibility for the prolonged
effects of the operation on the Vietnamese people, whose claims have
since been supported by independent investigations.
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