These are incendiary weapons like napalm. Napalm is nothing more then the same petroleum jelly you use to bugger your girlfriend with mixed with gasoline while phosphorous is a naturally occurring compound. Sure, I wouldn't want to be hit with either one but that doesn't make them chemical weapons nor any worse the chemical composition of traditional high explosives. Anyone pushing to have either of those called a chemical weapon is so deeply biased as to be laughable.
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These are incendiary weapons like napalm. Napalm is nothing more then the same petroleum jelly you use to bugger your girlfriend with mixed with gasoline while phosphorous is a naturally occurring compound. Sure, I wouldn't want to be hit with either one but that doesn't make them chemical weapons nor any worse the chemical composition of traditional high explosives. Anyone pushing to have either of those called a chemical weapon is so deeply biased as to be laughable.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by Boris Godunov
Nobody said it was.
Obviously, the U.S. military doesn't feel that such weapons are o.k. to use, hence the their self-ban of using napalm.
That the US declines to use napalm means nothing in this, aside from the fact that the US government and forces are capable of restraining themselves.
There's not much difference between WP and napalm in its effect.
WP can be delivered by arty (that would not be so good) or it can be direct fired from a gun, or it can be lobbed in a grenade.
In neither of the cases that the US may use the weapon (direct fire or grenade) is it in any way indescriminate in it's use.
Let us know when you have a case of a barrage of WP fired by artillery. That would be something to pay attention to. A marine lobbing a grenade is not.
Did we also fail to note that Fallujah was a city full of innocent civilians? In fact, the news reports from RAI that sparked the outrage in Italy indicated evidence for large civilian casualties due to WP:
Unless you can show me intentional use of WP against civilian targets, the fact that some people rioted against the war (like many others have on general principle) means less than nothing.(\__/)
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Originally posted by Drake Tungsten
WP is a very nasty, indiscriminate weapon that most countries (i.e., all those who signed Protocol III of the Geneva Convention) think should be prohibited.
How could anyone who has read the protocol think that? It obviously tries to prohibit the use of incendiaries on civilians, not their use in general.
Also note that Protocol III is part of the "Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons". WP is covered under that convention because it is a conventional weapon, not a chemical weapon.Tutto nel mondo è burla
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Originally posted by notyoueither
You insinuated it when comparing American use of WP to Saddam's use of chemicals, which he used as area weapons against civies.
If WP is so bad in the way it is used, why no self ban on that?
That the US declines to use napalm means nothing in this, aside from the fact that the US government and forces are capable of restraining themselves.
Napalm is air dropped. It is indescriminate, and it necessarily affects a wide area, civies be damned.
WP can be delivered by arty (that would not be so good) or it can be direct fired from a gun, or it can be lobbed in a grenade.
I don't give a **** why a bunch of ultra-liberals get their panties in a bunch when whipped up by media reports that say a weapon is banned, when it is not.
Unless you can show me intentional use of WP against civilian targets, the fact that some people rioted against the war (like many others have on general principle) means less than nothing.
I love all this dancing by war apologists. Fight over labels to obscure the real issue at hand.Tutto nel mondo è burla
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Originally posted by Drake Tungsten
I can't wait until someone exposes the fact that America has used tons of trinitrotoluene in Iraq, a "chemical weapon" that has been used extensively as a weapon against people, even in urban areas.
I think my 4th grade science teacher used that joke once.We the people are the rightful masters of both Congress and the courts, not to overthrow the Constitution but to overthrow the men who pervert the Constitution. - Abraham Lincoln
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Drake, cite a reference, or it can be considered opinion.Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
"Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead
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I think my 4th grade science teacher used that joke once.
Your 4th grade science teacher foresaw the Iraq war? Or are you saying that you're in 4th grade now? Frankly, I find the latter to be the more believable of the two options...
Drake, cite a reference, or it can be considered opinion.
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Originally posted by Boris Godunov
Since it has been noted that the difference between WP and chemical agents is a technicality (you even quoted that passage yourself), and the issue here is that there is evidence that civilians were affected by it, I don't think it's a completely irrelevant comparison.
There is a very large difference between clouds of toxic gas spreading over an area, and WP fired into a bunker (which is very unpleasant for those inside the bunker, but no more so than a hit by 150mm into a vulnerable spot; they are all dead) or WP deposited as a smoke screen that kills no one.
Can you see the difference between poison gas and smoke?
Probably because the general public hasn't, to date, known much about WP, but thanks to Vietnam it knows about napalm and was rightfully horrified. I'm guessing the military's lying about WP now was in anticipation of such public horror, hmm?
Or, there is no reason for a society that expects to have to fight wars to unneccessarily tie the hands of its soldiers behind their backs and deprive them of a tool that could lead to many of them surviving who otherwise would not.
Doesn't this go to my point? Why is restraint with WP (i.e., not tossing it around civilian areas) not unreasonable?
Properlly used, it is no more dangerous to civies than a concussion grenade. It is significantly less lethal than artillery in a barrage.
Why allow artillery or aerial bombardment on areas where civies live? Because the enemy soldiers and instalations are also there?
Ah. So Mustard gas and other vesicants that aren't air dropped (hell, they used open containers in WWI, and it's never been very effective) would then be ok?
No? because they are area weapons and are indescriminate in who they effect?
Keep in mind the physical effects of vesicants (burning) is much less severe than WP, and yet they are banned.
WP fired direct, or lobbed, are directed at enemy soldiers, not civies. You can't do that with gas.
Use in civilian areas is banned, the damned UK officer YOU quoted even said so. Lo and behold, we have graphic evidence of scores of civilians being hit by it. THAT'S the real issue, not semantics over what kind of weapon it is.
And you continue to ignore linked facts, preferring a hack being quoted, why?
Use of white phosphorus is not specifically banned by any treaty, however the 1980 Convention on Conventional Weapons (Protocol III) prohibits the use of incendiary weapons against civilian populations or by air attack against military forces that are located within concentrations of civilians.
What part of that is hard for you to grasp that shooting at soldiers with the weapon in a city is OK, but spraying the place is not?
I love all this dancing by war apologists. Fight over labels to obscure the real issue at hand.(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.
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Originally posted by notyoueither
There is a very large difference between clouds of toxic gas spreading over an area, and WP fired into a bunker (which is very unpleasant for those inside the bunker, but no more so than a hit by 150mm into a vulnerable spot; they are all dead) or WP deposited as a smoke screen that kills no one.
Can you see the difference between poison gas and smoke?
The issue is WP as a weapon, and WP being used in such a manner in Fallujah that scores of civilians ended up dead because of it.
Or, someone in the Pentagon got things screwed up? Nah, that's never happened before. That couldn;t be it.
You'd have me believe that it was an honest mistake that someone at the Pentagon said the military hadn't used something that most military personnel knew was being used? Even Brit military personnel? Got a bridge for you in Brooklyn...
Or, there is no reason for a society that expects to have to fight wars to unneccessarily tie the hands of its soldiers behind their backs and deprive them of a tool that could lead to many of them surviving who otherwise would not.
Properlly used, it is no more dangerous to civies than a concussion grenade. It is significantly less lethal than artillery in a barrage.
Why allow artillery or aerial bombardment on areas where civies live? Because the enemy soldiers and instalations are also there?
Ah. So Mustard gas and other vesicants that aren't air dropped (hell, they used open containers in WWI, and it's never been very effective) would then be ok?
No? because they are area weapons and are indescriminate in who they effect?
WP fired direct, or lobbed, are directed at enemy soldiers, not civies. You can't do that with gas.
And you continue to ignore linked facts, preferring a hack being quoted, why?
It is further prohibited to make any military objective located within a concentration of civilians the object of attack by means of incendiary weapons other than air-delivered incendiary weapons, except when such military objective is clearly separated from the concentration of civilians and all feasible precautions are taken with a view to limiting the incendiary effects to the military objective and to avoiding, and in any event to minimizing, incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians and damage to civilian objects.
What part of that is hard for you to grasp that shooting at soldiers with the weapon in a city is OK, but spraying the place is not?
So I'm guessing you wouldn't know the issue if it went off like, well, a bomb next to you, eh?Tutto nel mondo è burla
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Originally posted by notyoueither
Why the question about phosgene?12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
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