Would you count a village as a soft target?
Non-sequitur. This isn't about attacking villages with large numbers of artillery shells containing chemical agents. It's about attacking a movie theater (for example) with a small amount of chemical agent perhaps removed from an artillery shell. And "logistics issues" won't prevent that.
I'm aware of the properties of the various sulphur mustards
And yet you kept talking about it as if it was just a gas and not a liquid.
People tend to notice if you start pooring a liquid across the floor.
Not in a darkened movie theater, they wouldn't.
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You have no basis for that claim. NONE WHATSOEVER.
The chemical attacks in iraq also had flaws.
Another non-sequitur. Your response does not address my observation that you have no basis for claiming "we have no reason to think that future groups will do much better" than the Aum terrorists. One might suspect you don't want to honestly debate this topic, geni, in which case we'd have to examine your motives.
The problem is somewho need to get their mustard gas from a third partly is unlikely to qualify as a reasonably smart terrorist.
That's an unfounded and dangerous assumption on your part. Very few terrorists could build a gun or a nuclear weapon, but they can still use it to create havoc should one come into their possession. Same goes for chemical agents. As I stated, with all the information now on the internet, I would be shocked if a terrorist group that obtained some sarin simply punched some holes in bags of the stuff (like Aum did) and left it up to dripping and air currents to spread the stuff (like Aum did).
You assume they are stupid and can't learn, and that might not be the case. Remember, that some of these people are college educated engineers. al-Zarqawi dropped out of secondary school and was barely literate. Yet, he organized and funded a plot against Jordan and the US embassy in Amman back in 2004. Expert testimony during the Jordanian trial of him and about a dozen terrorists who were captured entering Jordan with the vehicles, explosives, and chemical agents to be used in the attack, said that the plot might have killed 20,000 people.
Remeber though sarin sarin outclasses mustard gas by a significant margin.
Still another non-sequitur. The point wasn't that mustard was better or worse than sarin, but that deaths (which is all you mentioned originally when you dismiss the threat of chemical attacks as minor) are not the only criteria by which to judge a chemical agent's efficacy as a terror weapon. Injuries, and the type of injuries, are important too.
And in terms of the number of injuries that mustard can cause, it may pose just as serious a threat as sarin. Because the effects of sarin will be noticed right away and the area cleared of people. While the effects of mustard will be delayed. Consequently, spread mustard agent on the darkened aisle of a theater and you may have hundreds and hundreds of people walk through it and breath it during the day and they will not show the effects until hours or days later. And they will transport that mustard agent with them to other locations. And should anyone actually touch the floor or an article of clothing that has come in contact with the mustard liquid, they will be dramatically affected. Yes, very few will likely die since the exposure may not be that high, but in the end the number of injured may be very high and the injuries may be just as serious as those caused by sarin. Plus, the disruption to society that follows may be just as serious.
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Many suffered from long term psychological and physical trauma. And with mustard agent, you are talking about something just as serious, an agent that causes life-long scarring, blindness and even DNA damage. And there is no antidote. All you can do is treat the symptoms and hope for the best.
And again you are back to over complicating a petrol bomb.
Non-sequitur. Why don't you try to address the specific affects that make mustard agent so scary that it's use was banned in wartime when there are explosives far worse than petrol bombs being lobbed by the millions at humans and structures?
Okey if you really want play semantics then poison gas aerosol mixes.
The difference between a gas and a liquid is not a matter of symantics. You are again just demonstrating your own ignorance. An
aerosol is a suspension in gas of fine solid or liquid particles. That is not what is being discussed here. Mustard agent, in the form it is in before a chemical shell is fired and detonates … in the form it would be if carried into a darkened theater in a coke bottle after being removed from a Libyan chemical shell, is almost 100% liquid. It is NOT an aerosol mix. That is something you get from specialized munitions or sprayers. Which is not what is being talked about here. Liquid mustard could be poured on the floor of a theater where it would adhere to the shoes of anyone walking by, then slowly over time vaporize. It is not an aerosol. And I wasn't "playing" semantics. But you are.
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And perhaps you don't realize that one means of spreading mustard agent is to use explosives. So what if the terrorists decide to combine the two? Hmmmm?
Thats actualy rather hard to do.
Call me skeptical, but given what lack of understanding you already displayed during this conversation, I don't think you have a clue what you are talking about.
