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SPECIAL REPORT Chemical Warfare
"Tiny Amounts Can Kill Thousands"
| Anthrax |

A microscopic view of anthrax
bacteria, which live in soil and infect animals
more often than people. (James Webb/PNI)
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How it works: The airborne anthrax
spores are inhaled and lodge in the lungs. There,
they quickly multiply and produce toxins that spread
through the body via the bloodstream.
|
Deadly Amount: One billionth of a gram
can kill one person. |
Previous Uses: The Japanese
experimented with anthrax on the Chinese during World
War II. |
Symptoms: Flu-like symptoms, high
fever and then the body goes into shock.
|
Delivery: Custom-made missiles, spray
tanks attached to low-flying airplanes.
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Prevention: Gas mask, vaccine.
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Botulinal Toxins |

A close-up of clusters of
Clostridium botulinum bacteria, which
produce a potent neurotoxin. (CNRI/PNI)
| How it works: The victim inhales the
airborne toxins into the lungs. The toxins fill the
body with poison. Eventually, complete paralysis and
cardiac arrest occur. |
Deadly Amount: One billionth of a gram
can kill one person. |
Previous Uses: No known previous uses
on man. |
Symptoms: Causes dizziness, sore
throat and dry mouth.
|
Delivery: Custom-made missiles, spray
tanks attached to low-flying airplanes.
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Prevention: Gas mask, vaccine.
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Sarin |

A victim of the Tokyo subway sarin
gas attack is treated in a hospital on March
20, 1995 (Chiaki Tsukumo/AP Photo)
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How it works: Sarin is inhaled and
paralyzes the nerve that makes the diaphragm expand
and contract. Eventually, the victim dies of
suffocation.
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Deadly Amount: One milligram can kill
one person. |
Previous Uses: Saddam Hussein is said
to have used sarin on the Kurds in his own country
in the 1980s. Also, a Japanese cult released sarin in
a Tokyo subway in 1995, killing 12 and injuring 5,500.
|
Symptoms: In low doses, it causes
severe headaches and coughing. In higher doses, it
causes increased perspiration, nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea and difficulty breathing. |
Delivery: Artillery shells, bombs,
land mines. |
Prevention: Gas mask.
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VX Nerve Gas |

1,269 steel containers of VX gas sit
at the Newport Chemical Depot in
western Indiana. (Chuck Robinson/AP Photo)
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How it works: Similar to sarin, it
disrupts the functioning of nerves that control
breathing. The victim dies of suffocation when the
diaphragm fails to expand and contract. Unlike any
other biological or chemical weapons, VX can kill
simply by touching the skin. |
Deadly Amount: One milligram can kill
a person |
Previous Uses: Never been used before,
except on research animals. |
Symptoms: Increased salivation,
coughing, runny nose, headache and nausea.
|
Delivery: Artillery shells, bombs and
land mines. |
Prevention: Gas masks, skin covered by
thick
clot |
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