Autor: Paola Manduca Data: Assumpte: [NuovoLaboratorio] articolo
"Critics slam US over plans to use riot-control chemicals in the Gulf"
da Nature 422, 363 (2003).
EDOEARDO HAI CONTATTI DIRETTI CIOè UNA MAIL CON Union of Concerned
Scientists????? se si me li passi???
ciao
pm
>Nature 422, 363 (2003); doi:10.1038/422363a
>Critics slam US over plans to use riot-control chemicals in the Gulf
>JONATHAN KNIGHT
>
>[SAN FRANCISCO] As thousands of US troops poured into Iraq last
>week, an argument was breaking out back home about their possible
>readiness to use tear-gas or even chemical calming agents during the
>conflict.
>Some military experts argue that riot-control agents could help to
>reduce enemy and civilian casualties, particularly if urban warfare
>breaks out in the streets of Baghdad. But others contend that the
>use of chemical agents would violate the 1997 Chemical Weapons
>Convention (CWC).
>These objections were delivered to President George W. Bush and
>British Prime Minister Tony Blair in a 20 March letter from interest
>groups including the Union of Concerned Scientists, and Physicians
>for Social Responsibility. The letter urged the two leaders to
>outlaw the use of riot-control agents or calmatives in Iraq.
>The topic first surfaced on 5 February, when US defence secretary
>Donald Rumsfeld told the House Armed Services Committee that he was
>looking for ways to allow commanders in the field to use
>riot-control agents, and implied he would seek presidential approval
>for such measures.
>The United States has a legal framework that could permit such
>action. After the Vietnam War, the then President, Gerald Ford,
>ruled that chemical riot-control agents, such as tear-gas, could be
>used in certain circumstances but only with permission from the
>White House. One such situation would be to disperse civilians that
>enemy troops were using as a human shield.
>The White House has not said whether such permission has been sought
>for the current conflict. The Pentagon confirms that chemical smoke
>and pepper spray have been used in previous conflicts, but declines
>to say what has been supplied to units in Iraq.
>Some observers contend that US forces are carrying more dangerous
>calmative agents, comparable to the gas used to end a siege in a
>Moscow theatre last October that resulted in the deaths of over 120
>hostages and 41 hostage-takers. "We can document Pentagon research
>on these agents," says Edward Hammond of the Sunshine Project, a
>pressure group based in Austin, Texas, that opposes the development
>of chemical weapons. "I think they are chomping at the bit to use
>these things," he says.
>But the Pentagon denies that such a research programme exists. The
>Department of Defense "is not pursuing any chemically or
>biologically based incapacitating agents", says a Pentagon spokesman.
>Experts also disagree on whether the use of riot-control agents
>would violate the CWC. The document's wording covers chemicals that
>cause "temporary incapacitation", but its real targets are strongly
>toxic substances such as nerve gases, says Jim Lewis, a senior
>fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
>Washington DC. "It was poor drafting," he says. "As it stands, it
>includes the mace on your key chain."
>Furthermore, proponents of calmative agents argue that non-lethal
>gases save lives. If enemy soldiers are hiding in a building with
>civilians, for example, it is safer to drive everyone out than to go
>charging in, they point out.
>Objectors counter that the Moscow incident showed that calmatives
>can be lethal (see Nature 420, 7; 2002). And some take exception to
>the use of milder agents such as tear-gas. Mark Wheelis, a
>microbiologist at the University of California, Davis, says that
>many countries would see the use of tear-gas to disarm Iraq of
>chemical weapons as hypocritical. "If the United States uses
>riot-control agents, most of the world would consider it a violation
>of the CWC," he says.
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<div>EDOEARDO HAI CONTATTI DIRETTI CIOè UNA MAIL CON<font
face="Times"> Union of Concerned Scientists</font>????? se si me li
passi???</div>
<div>ciao</div>
<div>pm</div>
<div><br></div>
<div><br></div>
<div><br></div>
<blockquote type="cite" cite><font face="Times"><i>Nature</i><b>
422</b>, 363 (2003); doi:10.1038/422363a<br>
<font size="+2"><b>Critics slam US over plans to use riot-control
chemicals in the Gulf</b></font><br>
</font><font face="Helvetica">JONATHAN KNIGHT<br>
<br>
</font><font face="Times">[SAN FRANCISCO] As thousands of US troops
poured into Iraq last week, an argument was breaking out back home
about their possible readiness to use tear-gas or even chemical
calming agents during the conflict.<br>
Some military experts argue that riot-control agents could help to
reduce enemy and civilian casualties, particularly if urban warfare
breaks out in the streets of Baghdad. But others contend that the use
of chemical agents would violate the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention
(CWC).</font></blockquote>
<blockquote type="cite" cite><font face="Times">These objections were
delivered to President George W. Bush and British Prime Minister Tony
Blair in a 20 March letter from interest groups including the Union of
Concerned Scientists, and Physicians for Social Responsibility. The
letter urged the two leaders to outlaw the use of riot-control agents
or calmatives in Iraq.<br>
The topic first surfaced on 5 February, when US defence secretary
Donald Rumsfeld told the House Armed Services Committee that he was
looking for ways to allow commanders in the field to use riot-control
agents, and implied he would seek presidential approval for such
measures.<br>
The United States has a legal framework that could permit such action.
After the Vietnam War, the then President, Gerald Ford, ruled that
chemical riot-control agents, such as tear-gas, could be used in
certain circumstances but only with permission from the White House.
One such situation would be to disperse civilians that enemy troops
were using as a human shield.<br>
The White House has not said whether such permission has been sought
for the current conflict. The Pentagon confirms that chemical smoke
and pepper spray have been used in previous conflicts, but declines to
say what has been supplied to units in Iraq.<br>
Some observers contend that US forces are carrying more dangerous
calmative agents, comparable to the gas used to end a siege in a
Moscow theatre last October that resulted in the deaths of over 120
hostages and 41 hostage-takers. "We can document Pentagon
research on these agents," says Edward Hammond of the Sunshine
Project, a pressure group based in Austin, Texas, that opposes the
development of chemical weapons. "I think they are chomping at
the bit to use these things," he says.<br>
But the Pentagon denies that such a research programme exists. The
Department of Defense "is not pursuing any chemically or
biologically based incapacitating agents", says a Pentagon
spokesman.<br>
Experts also disagree on whether the use of riot-control agents would
violate the CWC. The document's wording covers chemicals that cause
"temporary incapacitation", but its real targets are
strongly toxic substances such as nerve gases, says Jim Lewis, a
senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington DC. "It was poor drafting," he says. "As it
stands, it includes the mace on your key chain."<br>
Furthermore, proponents of calmative agents argue that non-lethal
gases save lives. If enemy soldiers are hiding in a building with
civilians, for example, it is safer to drive everyone out than to go
charging in, they point out.<br>
Objectors counter that the Moscow incident showed that calmatives can
be lethal (see Nature 420, 7; 2002). And some take exception to the
use of milder agents such as tear-gas. Mark Wheelis, a microbiologist
at the University of California, Davis, says that many countries would
see the use of tear-gas to disarm Iraq of chemical weapons as
hypocritical. "If the United States uses riot-control agents,
most of the world would consider it a violation of the CWC," he
says.</font></blockquote>
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