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This story was printed from Warfare,
located at /27393/dreamwvr/warfare/timeline1.htm
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TIMELINE
600 BC
Assyrians contaminated the water supply of their enemies by poisoning their
wells with [Rye Ergot]. The master tactician
Solon used the purgative herb [hellebore] (skunk
cabbage) to poison the water supply during his siege of Krissa.
1346 AD
Plague broke out in the ranks of the Tartar army during its siege of Kaffa.
The Tartars then hurled the corpses of the dead over the city walls using
catapults and the plague epidemic which soon followed forced the defenders to
surrender. Historians believe that those infected Kaffans who managed to escape
detection and escape could have started the Black Death pandemic which spread
across Europe.
1797 AD
Napoleon tried to infect the people of Mantua with swamp fever during his
Italian campaign.
WW1
Chlorine and Mustard Gas were used extensively by the Germans
1915
Dr Anton Dilger, a noted German-American Physician, established a small
biological agent production facility at his northwest Washington, DC home. Using
cultures of Bacillus Anthracis (Anthrax) and Pseudomonas Mallei (Glanders)
supplied by the Imperial German government, Dilger produced an estimated liter
or more of liquid agent. He reportedly passed the agent and a standard
inoculation device to dock workers in Baltimore who used them to infect a
reported 3500 horses, mules and cattle destined for the Allied troops who were
waging World War 1. Several Hundred military personnel were infected as well.
1925
The use of chemical weapons in World War 1 clearly unnerved the scientific
community. The Geneva Protocol was established to prohibit the use of such
agents in war ever again. The protocol, however, did not ban the production of
such agents.
1931
Japanese military officials tried to poison delegates of the League of
Nations' Lytton Commission that had been assigned to investigate Japan's seizure
of Manchuria in 1931. The officials allegedly laced the fruit provided by the
delegates with cholera germs but the Japanese government maintained that
"the investigators did not develop the disease"
WW2
Despite the efforts of the international community to control the use of
biological and chemical weapons, Japan dabbled with such weapons throughout the
30s and employed them against the Chinese forces when invading China and
Manchuria.
1942
The British conducted Anthrax tests off the coast of Scotland on Gruinard
Island. Today, the abandoned island is still believed to be infected with
anthrax spores.
1950
- 1970
The US proceeds with its offensive biological weapons initiative that started
during World War 2. The U.S Army conducts tests in certain US States using [nonpathogenic]
bacteria. The program ends with a large number of tests being carried out in the
Pacific Ocean. Sources indicate that offensive biological weapons were used and
the operation, carried out in the utmost secrecy, involved many ships loaded
with caged animals. At the end of 1969, President Nixon orders the termination
of the offensive biological weapons program and orders all stockpiled weapons
destroyed.
1972
The Biological Weapons Convention prohibits the research, development and
proliferation of offensive biological weapons. The treaty does, however, allow
defensive work in this discipline to continue.
1979
In Sverdlovsk, Russia, around a hundred people are infected with Anthrax. In
this outbreak, 64 die and the Russian government blames the outbreak on
contaminated meat. International scientific and intelligence communities are
doubtful about that claim and wonder if an accidental release of Anthrax spores
from a nearby bio weapons facility was responsible instead. Finally, in 1989,
Dr. Vladimir Pasechnick, the former director of the Leningrad Institute of
Ultrapure Biological Preparations, defects to the UK and reveals that the
Russian government had an offensive biological weapons program despite it
signing the BWC in 1972.
1980
The 80s saw the eradication of smallpox and, to a certain extent, polio after
a long and successful vaccination campaign by the Center for Disease control,
based in Atlanta. Today, only two labs officially have smallpox stocks. The
Center for Disease Control in Atlanta and the Ivanovsky Institute in Mexico.
1980 -1988
Iraq uses chemical weapons in its war against neighboring Iran. After it's
defeat at the hands of the US Forces in 1991, Iraq is ordered by the UN security
council to halt all biological, chemical and nuclear weapons programs it might
have.
1989
Communism falls.
1991
Evidence of an offensive program in Russia is found when US and UK inspectors
visit suspected biological facilities in Russia. The team believed that
biological agents such as smallpox, anthrax and plague were used. The Russians
deny any wrongdoing and within a year, send over a team to inspect closed-up US
biological facilities Dr. Kanatjan Alibekov , former deputy director of the
civilian arm of Russia's biological weapons program, defects to the US and
confirms suspicions that Russia had used smallpox to make weapons. President
Yeltsin, in an unprecedented move, admitted that the Anthrax outbreak in
Sverdlovsk was caused, in part by activity at the military installation.
1993
The Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) is established. Similar to the BWC, it
prohibits the research and production of chemical agents such as Sarin and VX
Nerve Gas . In the same year, Six people die and hundreds are injured when a
bomb explodes at the World Trade Towers in New York City. Six people die and
hundreds are injured. Analysts suspect the bomb was laced with Cyanide that
failed to ignite.
1995
Members of the Shinrikyo religious sect release Sarin into the Tokyo
underground rail system, killing 12 and injuring thousands. Due to the inferior
quality of the Sarin agent and inefficient dispersal techniques, the death toll
were lower than predicted.
1998
The US Defense Department starts an Anthrax vaccination program to immunize
all personnel against Anthrax. President Clinton, backed by Congress, approves
two new presidential decision directives to improve the country's ability to
respond to the threat of a biological and chemical weapons terrorist attack. An
additional one billion is channeled into the defense budget and Richard Clarke
is appointed as the national coordinator for all antiterrorism initiatives.
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