Shotguns. But yes, America's enemy Germany tried to get the shotgun banned on the basis that they were unnecessarily painful, but the U.S. used them to quickly clear German trenches. America had a suspicion that Germany was declaring them illegal because they were effective, not because they were cruel.
During World War II, the Japanese were known to coat bamboo spikes with animal feces so that even if the spikes didn't kill you, an infection certainly would. Though flamethrowers aren't entirely banned, you can't use them to fry your enemies, according to Protocol III of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons.
The reason some weapons are banned from war is because they are too indiscriminate, too horrible, or too dangerous to third parties, non combatants, or the planet. Too uncontrollable, too terrible, too many non combatants at risk of death.
Sarin is generally considered a weapon of mass destruction. Production and stockpiling of sarin was outlawed as of April 1997 by the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993, and it is classified as a Schedule 1 substance.
- Poisonous Gases. There are five types of chemical agent banned for use in warfare.
- Non-Detectable Fragments.
- Land Mines.
- Incendiary Weapons.
- Blinding Laser Weapons.
- “Expanding” Ordnance.
- Poisoned Bullets.
- Cluster Bombs.
The rules of war, or international humanitarian law (as it is known formally) are a set of international rules that set out what can and cannot be done during an armed conflict. The rules of war are universal. The Geneva Conventions (which are the core element of IHL) have been ratified by all 196 states.
Chemical weapons use has been outlawed worldwide for over 90 years and outlawed comprehensively through the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which bans all development, production, and deployment of deadly chemical arms and requires the verifiable destruction of remaining stockpiles.
The Artillery used mustard gas with significant effect during the Meuse-Argonne Offensive on at least three occasions. The United States began large-scale production of an improved vesicant gas known as Lewisite, for use in an offensive planned for early 1919.
It is called mustard gas because impure forms of the gas have an odor that resembles that of mustard. The name is somewhat misleading because at room temperature the substance is actually a liquid, not a gas. In order to be used as a weapon, it must be finely dispersed.
Know Your World War I Chemical WeaponsChlorine gas, used on the infamous day of April 22, 1915, produces a greenish-yellow cloud that smells of bleach and immediately irritates the eyes, nose, lungs, and throat of those exposed to it. At high enough doses it kills by asphyxiation.
Mustard gas belongs to a class of organic compounds that include sulfur mustard (Yperite) and nitrogen mustard. Lewisite is an arsenic-containing agent in this class. As gases, these agents appear yellow-brown in color and smell like mustard, garlic, or horseradish.
Ammonia is also an excellent cleaner. Mixing bleach and ammonia will create a chlorine gas that is incredibly dangerous, particularly in tight spaces like bathrooms. Although it's not mustard gas like many believe, the fumes are still deadly. It's vital to keep bleach and ammonia separate in application and storage.
The Germans unleashed mustard gas in the summer of 1917. It attacked the skin and blinded its victims, thereby defeating existing gas masks and respirators. By the Armistice, chemical shells made up 35 percent of French and German ammunition supplies, 25 percent British and 20 percent American.
The gas reacts quickly with water in the airways to form hydrochloric acid, swelling and blocking lung tissue, and causing suffocation. The most widely used, mustard gas, could kill by blistering the lungs and throat if inhaled in large quantities.
Despite isolationist sentiments, after the War, the United States became a world leader in industry, economics, and trade. The world became more connected to each other which ushered in the beginning of what we call the “world economy.”
Technically it makes chlorine gas not mustard gas. And the chlorine generated would react with either the urea or water in urine. The major issue with chlorine gas is that it reacts with the water in your lungs to make HCl. But you would most likely be fine.
* Mustard Gas is an EXTREMELY DANGEROUS POISON GAS and contact with the liquid or exposure to high vapor concentrations can cause severe eye burns and permanent eye damage. * Mustard Gas can cause severe skin burns and blisters.
The vesicant property of mustard agent can be neutralized by oxidation or chlorination, using household bleach (sodium hypochlorite), or by nucleophilic attack using e.g. decontamination solution "DS2" (2% NaOH, 70% diethylenetriamine, 28% 2-methoxyethanol).
Unlike chemical nerve agents such as organophosphates or sarin gas, which immediately incapacitate victims, mustard gas victims typically don't exhibit symptoms of poisoning until 12 to 24 hours after exposure. However, higher concentrations of the gas can cause symptoms to develop within one to two hours.
Relatively easy to make, it is a common component in the arsenals of countries with chemical weapons. It featured amongst the chemical agents uncovered in Iraq by the Gulf War of 1991, and stockpiles there are still being destroyed. Some of the symptoms of Gulf War syndrome suggest exposure to mustard gas.
The modern use of chemical weapons began with World War I, when both sides to the conflict used poisonous gas to inflict agonizing suffering and to cause significant battlefield casualties. As a result of public outrage, the Geneva Protocol, which prohibited the use of chemical weapons in warfare, was signed in 1925.
Poison gas was indiscriminate and could be used on the trenches even when no attack was going on. A poison gas attack meant soldiers having to put on crude gas masks and if these were unsuccessful, an attack could leave a victim in agony for days and weeks before he finally succumbed to his injuries.
Gas masks were developed in WWI to protect soldiers from the effects of chloride gas. Chemical warfare using chloride gas was first released by German troops on April 22, 1915, killing 1,100 Allied soldiers and injuring an unknown number of others.
Although the gas masks with respirators protected the respiratory tract and eyes of the troops against chemical attacks, mustard gas was still able to burn and blister even through clothing. During the first world war, the Germans used bleaching powder to treat their soldiers' contaminated skin.