Knife wrote:I find this whole thing disturbing. If the US is in a treaty currently that forbids its military to use pepperspry and CS because it is considered Chemical Warfare, we need to pull out of that dumbass treaty. The US military has been for years, slowly working in non-lethal weapons into its arsenal to use in police actions and urban warfare. To say that CS (which I have extensive training time with) and pepperspry can even remotely equate to mustard gas, nerve agent, skin agent, or any other chemical weapon is pure bullshit.
There is no moral hypocracy in using CS gernades for screening units just as there is no moral hypocracy in using smoke gernades.
Knife, the treaty as it stands right now is not ridiculous. You are in the military yourself, so don't try to pull bullshit about how it would be applied in an urban warfare situation. You've got troops going in to dig the enemy out, and let's say they use CS to screen their advance, dumping it into buildings before going in. The CS will temporarily incapacitate/hinder the targets, and because you need to advance quickly and in all likelihood have no manpower to just take them prisoner, they'll all get a bullet to the head, maybe excepting some individuals who are deemed more valuable as prisoners (e.g. officers). And in that situation, if I was the defender, knowing I was just gonna have a bullet put to my head without even the possibility to defend myself, and had harder stuff available (e.g. the deadlier gases), I'd damn well use them on you if I could do it without being exposed myself. I'm dead anyway, so why the fuck not?
And
this is why riot control agents in combat operations are prohibited, to prevent
escalation. Take a look at the treaty. I have absolutely no problem with using CS and other riot control agents in a police action, because it is different from warfare. Obviously you can use the stuff for riot control in e.g. an occupied zone (which, assuming war, where the US will emerge winner, will be the whole of Iraq) that you have under your control, because it is not a combat operation to suppress an unruly mob, while it is a combat operation to drive an enemy army from their position.
Knife wrote:CS has no ill effect on a person except for dumping the entire contents of your sinus out of your nose. And for Christs sake, pepperspry? Do we start charging civilians that use pepperspry against muggers and rapists, as warcriminals because they are using pepperspry to defend themselves? This whole thing is riddiculous and if we signed this treaty, we need to break it, burn it, and make another one that is not ridiculous.
Take a look at the sections of the convention I pasted into the opening post, it specifically exempts the use of riot control agents in domestic law enforcement from the provisions of the treaty. Do you have a horse or something you can feed all that straw to or are you going to make a pallet out of it?
Now, if those agents were shipped to the Gulf in anticipation of the post-war occupation and are not intended for combat use, I have no problem, and neither should anyone else, and the CWC won't be violated. This issue is not overly complex like some people here would like to make it seem. It is exceptionally clear-cut.
Edi