Chemical weapons have been an international taboo for decades. But now, some in the United States Air Force are pushing to use them again. A recent study out of the Air War College calls for using chemicals as "first-use weapons against terrorists" -- part of a larger pitch to rethink the long-time pariah of military warfare:
Of course, as the author points out, chemical weapons have also been tremendously, and tragically, unsuccessful in some cases; think Waco and the Branch Davidians, or the Dubrovka theater siege in Moscow, where authorities used a supposedly nonlethal chemical to subdue terrorists, and wound up killing 117 hostages in the process (including the woman in the photo, above). Nonetheless, the writer, Naval Commander George N. T. Whitbred IV, makes a reasoned argument for investing in nonlethal chemical technologies, such as "calmative agents," "sticky foams," and "malodorants," and limiting the use of those weapons to highly trained special operations forces.
The benefits, in Whitbred's eyes, would include: "reduced collateral damage," "more options in the application of force," and the ability to help "close the gap between war and peace." In order to reach them, Whitebred advocates amending the Chemical Weapons Convention and overturning Executive Order 11850, in which the U.S. renounced the "first use of riot control agents in war." That way, the U.S. would be free, legally, to employ "the offensive use of nonlethal chemicals as first-use weapons against terrorists."
While this is just a report by a single officer, some Pentagon officials are taking a fresh look at chemical agents, criticizing the artificial distinction that allows national law enforcement agencies to use riot control agents, but not the military. Then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld pushed for something similar, on the eve of the Iraq war. Last year, Joseph A. Benkert, principal deputy assistant defense secretary for international security policy, argued that current policy was too restrictive and should be rethought. In an article (that was subsequently, and with no explanation, withdrawn) by the American Forces Press Service, Benkert was quoted as saying:
As I wrote last week, the debate has also sparked at least one participant in a former Army chemical agent investigation to publish a memoir that supports use of calmative agents for nonlethal warfare.
Given the history of chemical warfare, it'll be a politically charged debate.
(Photo: Justin Sutcliffe, Sunday Telegraph)