Showing posts with label Nerve Agents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nerve Agents. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

7 December 2011 – Imagination and the toxic terrorist

Colleagues,

Consider, for a moment, these two pictures, and the attached deduction:



Congratulations - you've finished the Internet.

I'm going somewhere with this, trust me.

One of the perennial topics at the OPCW these days - and for that matter, in defence and public safety departments everywhere - is the question of chemical terrorism.  For the record, the last significant terrorist attack involving a chemical weapon occurred in 1995.  It was perpetrated by Aum Shinrikyo, and featured poor-quality sarin dispersed using a remarkably ineffective methodology.  Still, 12 people were killed and 5000 sickened by the attack.

More recent incidents have been considerably less effective. On 20 February 2007, for example, a tanker truck carrying chlorine gas exploded outside of a restaurant in the Iraqi town of Taji, a predominantly Sunni settlement some twenty kilometres north of Baghdad.  While some initial reports suggested that the truck may have struck a roadside improvised explosive device (IED), the Iraqi Government subsequently confirmed that the truck had been converted into a vehicle-borne chemical IED by the addition of a small bomb located next to the pressurized chlorine tank.  Six people were killed and approximately 150 injured, both by the initial blast and by subsequent exposure to chlorine gas.  No Coalition personnel were harmed in the attack.

This latter incident had two interesting characteristics.  First, it provided evidence of the evolution of insurgent tactics in Iraq, as previous attempts to employ improvised chemical weapons had focussed either upon producing “home-made” chemical agent (which failed miserably), or making use of the detritus of Saddam’s chemical weapons programs (e.g., attempting to disperse old nerve or mustard agent shells by detonating them with external explosives - which also failed miserably).  Second, it demonstrated a far better understanding of the threat posed by common, high-production-volume toxic industrial chemicals than had hitherto been the case amongst international jihadists, who had to date focussed a great deal of time and effort attempting to produce small quantities of traditional chemical warfare agents or biological toxins, or to weaponize rare and exotic chemical compounds for use in improvised chemical weapons or explosives.   The Surge helped damp down the violence, and while IED attacks and suicide bombings have continued in Iraq and elsewhere, there have been no repetitions of the chlorine attacks.

The deadliest terrorist attack using industrial chemicals occurred on 11 September 2001, of course, and the chemical involved - aviation fuel - was fairly prosaic.  Over the course of the subsequent half-decade, a number of potential attacks were thwarted by police and domestic intelligence services throughout the Western world; few were even slightly successful.  Until the 20 February 2007 chlorine attack, the successful ones all shared one element in common: they employed manufactured chemical explosives, or used easily-obtainable chemicals to produce improvised chemical explosives.  Similarly, many of the unsuccessful attacks appeared to share certain characteristics differentiating them from more lethal and destructive events.

Makeshift CBW.  First, some of the unsuccessful attacks appeared to be disproportionately focused on employing makeshift chemical or biological weapons (CBW).  Producing, weaponizing and effectively disseminating a CBW agent requires precise application of an array of exact sciences, posing daunting challenges to amateurs.  Aum Shinrikyo, for example, carried out at least two attacks using home-made sarin nerve gas, and at least one using home-grown anthrax.  Despite access to trained scientific personnel, virtually unlimited funding, a highly permissive security environment, and lax policing by officials worried about violating the patina of religion employed by Aum to conceal their activities, the perpetrators failed to produce the intended high casualty count.  Even with the widespread proliferation, particularly via the Internet, of detailed information on the production and deployment of CBW agents, groups lacking specialized scientific expertise in the field of chemical or biological weapons appear thus far to have been unable to overcome the hurdles.

Late in 2003, for example, London police uncovered a plan by an Islamic terrorist cell to employ the biological toxin ricin in terror attacks.  Ricin, despite its ease of production and high toxicity, is difficult to disperse and is simply not an effective weapon.  Canadian, British and American scientists conducted extensive experiments with ricin in a variety of munitions and dissemination devices during and after the Second World War, eventually abandoning it in favour of the more reliable nerve agents.



"Ricinis Communis" - the Castor Bean plant

Other plots have been even more exotic.  On 6 April 2004, British police foiled what appeared to be a plot to use osmium tetroxide as a chemical weapon.  From a technical perspective, osmium tetroxide makes a poor weapon; a crystalline solid with a melting point of 42° C, it is unlikely to produce, even through sublimation, a significant vapour mass, which is the most important operational criterion for an agent designed to injure or kill through inhalation.  The other option for dissemination – formation of a respirable aerosol by explosive dissemination – is a much more challenging technical problem, and given osmium’s propensity to act as an explosive catalyst, explosive dissemination would likely cause the agent to combust and disperse quickly.  Experts in chemical toxicity consulted by the media in the wake of the arrests fell into two distinct groups: those who noted the absolute toxicity of osmium tetroxide and were very concerned by the alleged incident; and those who noted its toxicity in comparison to modern chemical warfare agents, such as Sarin or VX, or to other less toxic, but more widely available, industrial compounds, and were rather less concerned.


Osmium tetroxide - not exactly a "high production volume" chemical

Toxic industrial chemicals.  This latter group of chemical experts tended to consider the incident in the broader context of comparative hazards and risks.  There is a vast array of industrial chemicals more toxic than osmium tetroxide (or more acidic, caustic, explosive or carcinogenic), most of which are readily obtainable in far larger quantities.  Virtually all of them are also considerably cheaper.  According to one UK report, osmium tetroxide may be obtained over the internet at a price of ₤17 per gram, making it twice as expensive as pure gold (and even kilogram quantities would likely be insufficient to generate a significant toxic hazard over a large area; using it to poison people would be like a footpad bludgeoning his victims with a Faberge egg).  By contrast, less exotic industrial chemicals like hydrogen fluoride, chlorine, sulfuric acid, dimethylamine, hydrogen sulfide, phosgene and sulfur dioxide are all produced worldwide in enormous quantities, and are shipped virtually everywhere by train-car and tank-truck – including across Canadian rail and highways.

Comparative risk is the key component in analyzing the hazard posed by toxic industrial chemicals.  Osmium tetroxide – based inter alia on its toxicity (high), how often it is shipped (infrequently), how much is shipped (very small quantities) and whether it has ever featured in an industrial accident or terrorist attack (it has not) – was recently assigned an overall risk value of 6 on a scale of 1 to 15 by a joint CANUKUS scientific board.  This makes it about 1560th on a list of nearly three thousand industrial chemicals evaluated by the board.  The same group rated sodium hydroxide, a highly caustic and very common industrial chemical, as 231st and assigned it a risk value of 10, noting that it ranked as one of the ten most common chemicals involved in industrial accidents.  By way of comparison, aviation fuel is number ten on the same list; and gaseous chlorine, number two.

These and hundreds of thousands of tons of equally hazardous industrial chemicals are shipped across North America via railroad, highway and inland waterway on a daily basis.  9/11 killed thousands using aviation fuel.  The 2004 Madrid train bombings killed hundreds with conventional explosives.  A similar attack against a train traversing a major city while carrying a thousand tons – a mere five tanker cars – of chlorine, hydrogen fluoride, hydrogen sulfide, dimethylamine, or an organophosphorous pesticide like parathion (or any of dozens of other highly toxic compounds) could, with a favourable wind, kill thousands.

The threat posed by toxic industrial chemicals is severe.  It would be far easier for terrorists to obtain a large quantity of a highly toxic (or for that matter, highly flammable) industrial chemical than to acquire even a few kilograms of an exotic substance like osmium tetroxide.

PSYCHO-ANALYZING THE 'TOXIC TERRORIST'

In view of the ready availability of large quantities of more common hazardous substances, one wonders why some terrorist groups appear to be concentrating on complex operations featuring exotic and unpredictable compounds unlikely to have the same impact as even a primitive improvised explosive device.  Either the individuals and groups planning these attacks are deluded as to the probability of success, or their motivation, goals and modi operandii differ significantly from those of their ideological brethren.  Presuming incompetence leaves no role for further analysis, though, and is in any case dangerous; a more prudent assessment may be that different organizations are following different operational philosophies.

Some groups appear to favour high-casualty operations featuring simple, proven technologies (improvised explosive devices, car bombs, hijacked aircraft) conducted by individuals prepared for and seeking martyrdom.  This approach appears to be shared by the more nihilistic of the Islamic terrorist organizations, including some Palestinian terrorist groups, the 9/11 hijackers, the various truck- and car-bombers operating in Iraq, the perpetrators of the railway blasts in Madrid and the would-be assassins of Pakistani President Musharraf.  Al Qaeda, the Tamil Tigers and numerous Palestinian terrorist organizations have enjoyed considerable success with this approach.

By contrast, other groups appear to favour a competing and thus far ineffective operational methodology – one characterized by complex operations featuring exotic substances based on unproven, experimental technologies which, even if successful, are unlikely to result in vast numbers of casualties.  The individuals caught in the course of staging these operations appear to be more likely to plan for their own escape, and may therefore be less inclined to seek “martyrdom”.  Given that these attacks appear to be perpetrated by a more educated class of individual, this may represent an inverse relationship between intelligence and willingness to become at martyr (as opposed to merely advocating martyrdom).  Additionally, in view of the fact that, notwithstanding the number of times this has been tried, a noteworthy chemical or biological attack has yet to be carried out, these groups also appear to be more likely to be caught.  In view of the fact that informants are reportedly playing a part in successful investigations, this category of attack seems to be conducted by a less dedicated class of individual – or at the very least, one reliant upon a wider network of actors, and perhaps less concerned with maintaining operational security. 

Many terrorists, of course, fall outside of this admittedly simplistic categorization.  The Bali bombers, for example, used a traditional improvised explosive approach, but apart from one member, appear to have made allowance for their own survival.  Similarly, the 2001 anthrax attacks in the United States employed both an exotic agent and a delivery method highly unlikely to cause mass casualties – but this attack was carried out by a disgruntled US government employee.  And pulling it off took an employee who had high security clearance, access to virulents bioagent strains, and more than a decade's experience as a biowarfare scientist.

Our principal enemy, international jihadism, seems to be plagued by a competency gap.  Despite the jihadists' obvious interest in employing weapons of mass destruction, they appear to lack even the rudimentary skills and knowledge necessary to obtain, weaponize and effectively deliver a CBW attack.  This may be due to any (or all) of a number of factors, including:

·        the capture or killing of a significant proportion of the educated, intelligent and scientifically literate leadership during the war in Afghanistan, the Iraq War, and subsequent worldwide policing and security sweeps (this may be particularly true with respect to al Qaeda);

·        the loss of Afghanistan (and for Ansar al-Islam, of Iraq) as a pied-à-terre and training ground has likely forced many of the survivors into constant movement in order to avoid death or capture, preventing them from accumulating the laboratory infrastructure and stockpiles of chemicals required to stage an attack; (note A) and

·        the fall of Saddam, allied restriction of the Afghan drug trade, Libya’s renunciation of both WMD and terrorism, increasing international scrutiny of Saudi Arabia, Iran and Syria, and the progressive tightening of controls on funding to terrorist organizations may be severely constraining their financial and logistic resources.(note B)

These and other constraints imposed by the “War on Terror” may have induced the opposition into hasty attempts to conduct ill-conceived operations.

Other explanations should also be considered.  Since 9/11, the Western media (abetted, to be sure, by government overuse of highly imaginative threat matrices) has succeeded in creating an atmosphere of apprehension, especially with respect to the potential use by terrorists of weapons of mass destruction.  The 2001 anthrax attacks in the US and the resulting panic likely taught our adversaries an important lesson regarding the susceptibility of Western publics to WMD-induced hysteria.  Indeed, this is almost certainly why Ayman al-Zawahiri once claimed that al Qaeda had acquired a “smart [nuclear] briefcase bomb” from disaffected Russian scientists.(Note C)  Given variable public sensitivity to WMD issues (and, by contrast, public indifference to industrial accidents, at least those short of the Bhopal scale), a terrorist attack that featured dispersion of an unfamiliar substance such as osmium tetroxide would be likely to generate panic to a degree that a much larger and therefore much more dangerous dispersion of a less exotic compound like caustic soda or ammonia would not.  It may therefore be useful to draw a distinction between two varieties of WMD-seeking terrorist: the calculating type hoping to terrorize in order to modify the behaviour of the target state; and the more recent, and more dangerous, Islamic nihilists, whose interest in WMD lies not in their potential to terrorize, but rather to kill large numbers of people.

SO WHAT?

We haven't seen the end of toxic terrorism.  While Osama bin Laden is no longer among the vertical, in 1998 he declared the acquisition and use of CBW a religious duty for muslims,(note D) and later requested and received a fatwa, issued by Saudi Sheikh Nasi bin-Hamid al-Fahd, condoning the use of CBRN weapons against non-Muslims.(note E)  There will be more of this, and if the jihadists see the light and focus on TICs instead of the unusual stuff, our problems are going to multiply.  The volume of chemical transfers is increasing, and new technologies like microsynthesis are making rapid production of small quantities of exotic, even supertoxic, chemicals easier than ever before.  Thus far the jihadists appear to have focused their efforts on large-scale attacks using more traditional, reliable means; but they are still trying to get their hands on supertoxic chemicals that industrialized states consider "chemical weapons."  Lack of success in this area suggests that it is probably only a matter of time until they turn their attention to the possibilities offered by the enormous volumes of toxic industrial chemicals produced and traded annually.  When they do, their operational patterns of behaviour suggest that they will eschew small-scale, exotic plans based on unpredictable, difficult-to-obtain compounds, and focus instead on large-scale, simple operations featuring hazardous chemicals that are available widely and in large quantity. 

To put it another way, crashing a VBIED into a building requires that you steal a V and build an IED.  Crashing a tanker full of toxic, caustic, acidic, flammable or explosive chemicals into a building requires only that you steal the right truck.  Combining both methods – a small bomb with a truckload of toxic chemicals – could greatly magnify the impact of such an attack, especially if operationally-savvy terrorists researched the properties of the chemicals they planned to steal, and made the most of geographic and meteorological conditions to conduct a release at the most damaging time and place.  This isn't rocket science; militaries have been doing it since 1915.


Accidental chlorine tanker derailment, Graniteville S.C., January 2005
5000 evacuated, 1450 hospitalized, 550 injured, 9 killed

Western nations should be exploring why the competent jihadists have yet to pursue this course of action.  The answer might tell us how much time we have before they figure it out.  Instead, what are we doing?  Worrying about exotic threats like ricin, osmium tetroxide, and whether a bunch of guys who haven't been able to figure out how to release chlorine as effectively as the Germans did at St. Julien are going to be able to cook up a batch of VX in somebody's bathtub without poisoning themselves first.  Those kinds of exotic threats are sexy, and they attract all sorts of press and (therefore) CT funding; but they're unrealistic, and they're nowhere near as potentially damaging as one guy who nabs a truck carrying chlorine, caustic soda or propane, and slams it into the Centre Block.  If the 20 February 2007 chlorine attack is any indication, maybe they're already starting to get it.

Which brings me back to the photo montage at the beginning of this message, and its disturbing deduction about the topology of the theoretical Hitler-Worf facial hair overlap.  My point is simple, and is applicable to separating realistic threats of chemical terrorism from wild-eyed fantasies about homemade VX and osmium tetroxide bombs: just because something is technically possible, that doesn't mean it's likely

Cheers,

//Don//

Notes

A) Quillen notes, “Clearly, the al-Qaeda CBRN programs that existed in Afghanistan under the Taliban were at least temporarily disrupted by the 2001 US-led invasion”.  Chris Quillen, “Three Explanations for al-Qaeda’s Lack of a CBRN Attack”, Terrorism Monitor, Vol. 5, No. 3 (15 February 2007).

B) That said, unless one is trying to legitimately purchase large quantities of highly expensive compounds such as osmium tetroxide, the resources required to stage a successful chemical attack are not great.

C) No such proliferation occurred, and indeed, it is questionable whether such a weapon ever existed.

D) Bin Laden’s declaration was delivered in the course of an interview with Jamal Isma’il in December 1998.  It was rebroadcast by al-Jazeera in September 2001.

E) Shiekh Nasir bin Hamid al-Fahd, “A Treatise on the Legal Status of Using Weapons of Mass Destruction Against Infidels”, May 2003 [http://www.carnegieendowment.org/static/npp/ fatwa.pdf].

Sunday, June 24, 2012

23 June 2011 – Buffalo Springfield and the Valley of Death

There’s something happening here / What it is ain’t exactly clear   - Buffalo Springfield, 1967

Colleagues,
On Sunday 7 June 1998, CNN telecast the first edition of a new show.  Entitled “Newsstand: CNN & Time”, the show was to be a joint venture by the two journalistic titans, and to whet the public’s appetite for the fare on offer, they had one whiz-banger of an opening segment:

ANNOUNCER: This is CNN NEWSSTAND.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

JEFF GREENFIELD, CO-HOST: NEWSSTAND: tonight CNN & TIME.

“Valley of Death”: the U.S. military and a top-secret target. American defectors.

JIM CATHY (ph), FORMER AIR FORCE RESUPPLY FOR SOG COMMANDOS: I believe they were turn-toads. I believe they were traitors.

ANNOUNCER: The U.S military and a top-secret weapons.

MICHAEL HAGEN, OPERATION TAILWIND VETERAN: Nerve gas. The government don’t want it called that, but it was nerve gas.

GREENFIELD: The U.S. on a top-secret mission. Operation Tailwind.

JAY GRAVES (ph), FORMER SOG RECONNAISSANCE LEADER: Because they were using nerve gas in that shit and not telling anybody about it.

GREENFIELD: A mission in far away secret war, unreported, until now.

ROBERT VAN BUSKIRK, OPERATION TAILWIND VETERAN: They’re shooting anything that moves. This was the “valley of death.” [Note A]

“The Valley of Death.”  Peter Arnett reporting, with images of US troops in Vietnam, and Buffalo Springfield playing in the background (I’m not kidding, it’s in the transcript), with the inimitable Steve Stills asking Hey, what’s that sound, and exhorting everybody to look at what’s goin’ down. 

Groovy.  As for the CNN-Time report, what a scoop, eh?  A secret program, launched under the Nixon Administration, to send US Special Forces personnel into Laos - a country that both sides in the conflict had deemed off-limits - to use nerve gas, specifically Sarin (also known as GB), to slaughter US military defectors?  Was it the biggest bombshell since the Pentagon Papers?  Since Watergate? 

Or was it a giant crock of crap?

Yeah, it was a giant crock of crap.  This post isn’t about journalistic bias, or the inexplicably persistent obsession of the left-wing elements of the US media with the Vietnam War (and more particularly, the glory days of Woodward and Bernstein), or even the deep-seated willingness of some elements of that community to believe just about anything negative about military folks, and the more calumnious the better; no, it’s about what happens when neophyte writers who don’t know anything about the subject they’re writing about get their hands on a tiny bit of information that looks too good to be true, and are too biased, too lazy or just too dumb to do the research necessary to find out what’s really “goin’ down.”

Basically, here’s what happened.  The principal producer on the show, CNN’s April Oliver, interviewed a couple of Vietnam veterans who for reasons that are unclear - possibly over-exposure to the cinematic works of Martin Scorsese and Oliver Stone, or an attack of Sudden John Kerry Syndrome - decided to embellish their personal accounts of a relatively minor operation in the course of the war.  To a CNN reporter, these fellows no doubt sounded plausible.  There were a few fragments of what appeared to be circumstantial evidence; and there was at least a patina of truth to some of what they were saying.  After all, Operation TAILWIND really did happen.  It just didn’t have anything to do with US military defectors, or nerve gas.

As those of us who have worked in the Policy Group can imagine, the airing at 2200 hrs on a Sunday night of a news documentary critical of the military sparked a burst of activity at the Pentagon.  The following morning, then-SecDef Bill Cohen directed the military departments (Army, Navy, Air Force) and the CJCS to investigate the charges and report back to him within 30 days.  The order ended up being directed to two key recipients: the US Army and the JCS investigated the allegation that the operation had been intended to hunt down and murder US military defectors; and the US Air Force was directed to investigate the allegation that nerve gas bombs had been dropped in the course of the operation.

For obvious reasons, I’m more interested in the nerve gas allegations.  Ironically, I came across Op TAILWIND while doing research not on nerve gas, but on the use of CS or “tear gas” in military operations.  CS (the chemical name is O-chlorobenzylidene malonitrile) was originally developed for the US military, which was looking for a more effective irritant compound than CN (2-chloroacetophenone, commonly called “Mace” after the trade name adopted by one manufacturer).  ”Tear gas” is a misnomer; a crystalline powder, CS is usually thermally dispersed by heating, producing a fine particulate aerosol that irritates the mucous membranes and provokes coughing.  In high concentrations, it has been known to cause vomiting and “intestinal upset” (decorum prohibits a more fulsome description).  Although severe reactions are rare, some individuals prove to be hypersensitive to CS, and can display symptoms ranging from prolonged dermatitis to multisystem responses included kidney and liver damage.  There are numerous cases of people expiring in jail after being tear-gassed, although the agent itself is not always the cause.

Cast your minds back to the fall of 1970.  Nixon, having won the 1968 election in large part on the strength of his promise to extricate the US from Johnson’s Southeast Asian quagmire, was having great difficulty finding a means of doing so.  Troop draw-downs were progressing, but “Vietnamization” was proceeding poorly; news of the My Lai massacre and the impending courts-martial were percolating through the public consciousness; Kissinger was discovering, through talks with Le Duc Tho, that the North Vietnamese were, like any professional revolutionaries, prepared to simply wait Washington out; the ouster of Prince Sihanouk by Lon Nol had thrown Cambodia into civil chaos; Nixon had expanded the war into Cambodia as a result; and the Kent State killings had convulsed the nation.

Operationally, General Abrams was facing an impossible situation, restricted by policy from interdicting troop and supply movements on the Ho Chi Minh trail - a situation that would not be resolved until ARVN forces began to launch attacks against the trail early in 1971.  One of the proposed means of interfering with NVA and VC movement along the trail was to blanket choke points with CS.  Dispersed as a powder, CS retains much of its potency as an irritant; and once improved formulations had been trialled to mitigate the degrading effects of a damp jungle environment, it proved to be both effective and persistent.  When deployed via thermal dispersion (e.g., in a grenade or smoke pot), CS in its crystalline form is used.  For area denial missions, however, two new versions were produced: CS1, which was micronized CS mixed with 5% silica gel to aid its flow characteristics; and CS2, which improved both flow and persistency by microencapsulating the micronized powder with silicone, making it less likely to “cake” and easier to disperse from carrier vessels equipped with spraying attachments.

The US used a lot of CS in Vietnam, procuring more than 3000 tons of the powder in the first three years of its widespread use (1966-69).  At the time, there were three principal munitions for the aerial delivery of CS.  The simplest was the BLU-52, a 750-pound repurposed fire bomb casing:

 Figure 1: The BLU-52A, a “dumb bomb” for CS dispersal

BLU-52, it turned out, was not a terribly effective means of dispersing CS as an area-denial agent.  Although it carried 260 pounds of micronized CS, it simply scattered the agent by breaking apart on impact, producing very uneven coverage.  According to a declassified top secret RAND report from 1968 examining the results of experiments in the Panama Canal zone, blanketing a single grid square (1000 m x 1000 m) with enough CS to produce the concentration necessary to achieve the desired irritant effects would require 120 BLU-52A munitions, which in turn would require 20 F-4 Phantom sorties, or 60 F-100 sorties.  As laydown attacks require flying at low level, the number of sorties required is always a matter of concern, as more sorties expose more aircraft and pilots to ground fire - a significant problem in Vietnam, given the profusion of small-calibre AA guns that were available to the NVA and VC forces.

A better option was a cluster munition known as the CBU-19.

 Figure 2: The CBU-19, a primitive cluster munition for CS dispersal

Known as the XM165 while in development, the CBU-19 had originally been designed for crowd control by helicopter.  Although it contained much less agent than the BLU-52 - a mere 14 pounds of CS - the fact that the agent was dispersed by 528 BLU-39 grenade-sized submunitions (using the traditional thermal dispersion technique) made for far more even coverage.  Testing in the Canal Zone in Panama had confirmed that a grid square could be covered by only 40 munitions, necessitating only 4 sorties by A-1 Skyraiders, or 7 by A-37 Cessna Dragonflys.  This made CBU-19 a far preferable munition for area denial missions.  Except for one problem - something that’s probably obvious from the designators for the aircraft used in the tests.  As the shape of the CBU-19 suggests, the munition was not optimized for use by high-performance aircraft like the F-100 and F-4; it tended to break apart at high speed.  If it was to be used, it could only be used by low-speed aircraft like the piston-engined Skyraiders and Dragonflys.

Enter the CBU-30.

 Figure 3: The SUU-13 / CBU-30

Figure 4: The SUU-13 / CBU-30

Based on the SUU-13 (“Suspension Unit, Universal”) carrier munition, the CBU-30 was designed for use by high-performance strike aircraft.  With 1280 BLU-39 submunitions (more than twice the number carried by the CBU-19) in a downward-dispensing configuration, the CBU-30 carried 66 pounds of CS, and only 14 munitions were required to blanket a grid square with agent.  By 1970, the CBU-30 was the weapon of choice for carrying out area-denial missions with CS; the USAF report on TAILWIND notes that the CBU-19 was “little used after 1969.”

Speaking of Operation TAILWIND, let’s get back to it.  According to the official report prepared by the US Air Force in response to Secretary Cohen’s June 1998 directive, TAILWIND began on 11 September 1970 when Marine CH-53 and AH-1G helicopters (the latter in a supporting role) carried a combined team of 16 Americans and a Special Commando Unit (SCU) of Montagnard troops into Laos, near Chavane.  The American personnel were indeed Special Forces types, from Company B, Command and Control Central, Military Advisory Command Studies and Observation Group (MACSOG).  The mission, which was originally intended to be only three days long, had two purposes: reconnaissance and intelligence collection; and to serve as a diversion for a larger operation which was taking place simultaneously to the north.

During the operation, the team received continuous air support by Air Force, Army and Marine assets.  Seventh Air Force provided Forward Air Control and Airborne Command and Control Centre support, and flew 76 combat sorties in support of TAILWIND, using the code word “Prairie Fire” to identify infiltration and exfiltration operations.  The report notes that “Prairie Fire” was the customary MACSOG code word for cross-border operations into Laos at the time.

According to Air Force records, most of the strike missions in support of TAILWIND employed high explosive fragmentation bombs and napalm.  However, one A-1 Skyraider was always loaded with smoke and CS bombs. 

Figure 5: A munitions load pattern for an A-1 Skyraider in Search-And-Rescue configuration (from a USAF report on SAR missions in Southeast Asia, 1 July 1969 - 31 December 1970).  Note the two CBU-30s on the inboard hardpoints (“stubs”).  The M47s are smoke bombs used for concealment

Aircraft so configured (which according to the historical reports of 56 Special Operations Wing were called “Gas Birds”) were kept available for use in operations to extract downed pilots in contact with the enemy.  The enemy had apparently become very adept at responding quickly to shoot-downs of US aircraft, and understood that closing with a downed pilot was the best means of staying alive.  CS could be used to blanket an area, and if the pilot were incapacitated along with his would-be captors, most considered it a small price to pay to avoid an extended stay in the “Hanoi Hilton” (at best).

One downed US Air Force pilot gave a graphic account of what it was like to be treated to a heavy dose of CS in the course of being rescued:

They laid it all along the top of the ridge . . .[some of] it hit me . . . I might as well tell you what it feels like when that stuff goes off. I ran into a tree and was wrapped around the tree urinating, defecating, and retching all at the same instant. . .It also made me want to sneeze. It was a beauty to have 500 pounders and everything go off because it would give me a chance to sneeze. . .It goes into effect instantaneously. Physically and mentally you can’t control yourself. . .After that every time I’d come up on the air and ask for Vodka (A-1s carrying CBU-19), as soon as I’d tell them where, how far and the heading, I’d tell them “Don’t get it close to me.”

Clearly, CS got used from time to time.  Not so sarin.  The USAF investigation into TAILWIND turned up a number of documentary records that, in addition to demonstrating the lack of any foundation for CNN’s charges, at least help to explain why the producers made the mistakes they did.  During the broadcast, Peter Arnett (he of “Reporting to you from under a coffee table in Baghdad” fame) made the following statement:

ARNETT: Oliver asked Admiral Moorer about a special weapon the military called CBU-15, a cluster bomb unit that was filled with GB, sarin nerve gas. Moorer confirmed that nerve gas was used in Tailwind.

Actually, Admiral Moorer (who was CJCS at the time of TAILWIND) never confirmed any such thing.  Here’s the transcript of his interview with April Oliver:

OLIVER: So, CBU-15 was a top secret weapon?

MOORER: When it was it should of been. Let me put it that way.

OLIVER: What’s your understanding of how often it was applied during this war?

MOORER: Well, I don’t have any figures to tell you how many times. I never made a point of counting that up. I’m sure that you can find out that from those that used them.

OLIVER: So isn’t it fair to say that Tailwind proved, that CBU- 15 G-B is an effective weapon?

MOORER: Yes, I think -- but I think that was already known, otherwise it never would have been manufactured.

Oliver never asked Moorer whether the US had used nerve gas in Vietnam; she asked him about “CBU-15 GB”.  Thing is, at the time there was no such thing as a “CBU-15”, either loaded with “GB” or anything else.  I don’t know what Moorer heard; he was 85 at the time of the interview, and might have thought “GB” was some sort of designator rather than Sarin; surely he would have responded differently to allegations about nerve gas being used in Vietnam.

A word about nomenclature.  The CBU-14 and CBU-25 were both used in Vietnam, and both were based on the SUU-14, a different universal suspension unit from the SUU-13 used for the CBU-30 CS munition.  The CBU-14 and CBU-25, moreover, were cluster bomb dispensers; CBU-14 dispensed large grenades for use against light vehicles like trucks, while CBU-25 dispensed smaller grenades for anti-personnel use.  It helps to go back to the ammunition expenditure records.  The USAF report included a 39-page printout from the Southeast Asia Database (SEADAB) of all operational missions flown in Laos during the period 11-14 September 1970.  The vast majority of air-delivered weapons, not surprisingly, consisted of the classic Mk-82 500-pound HE bomb (either in the Slick, i.e. normal, or Snakeye, i.e. retarded configuration).  The strikes during that period also included Mk-83, Mk-36 and Mk-117 bombs, laser-guided Mk-82s, LAU-3 and LAU-59 rockets, Mk-20 antitank missiles, CBU-24 and 25 cluster bombs, the AGM-12 Bullpup missile, Blu-32 firebombs, air-delivered sensors, M47S smoke bombs, MK-24 flares, CBU-49 mines, BLU-27 firebombs (the casing upon which the BLU-52 CS bomb was based), AIM-9 Sidewinders, AIM-7 Sparrows, and even leaflets.

But there were definitely some tear gas bombs used.  According to the strike mission database, in Mission 1624, two USAF A-1 Skyraiders that took off from Nakhon Phanom airbase on 13 September expended four “CBU30RIOTCTRL” at 0225 hrs.  While no target is listed (which is not unusual in the database), the same aircraft are listed as having also used sixteen CBU-25 cluster bombs and four LAU-3 rockets against “Personnel/Any”.  Roughly two hours later, another pair of A-1s (Mission 1478) expended two more CBU-30s against “Personnel/Any”. It should be noted that “Personnel/Any” is a very common notation in the strike database, accounting for roughly half of the identified targets.  “Personnel/Any” received another four CBU-30s courtesy Mission 1479, another pair of A-1s, at 0540 hrs on the 14th of September; and two more at 0815 hrs (Mission 1623).  All of these missions were flown by the 56th Special Operations Wing (SOW), and were listed as “Armed Recon” missions.

Figure 6: An entry from the SEADAB database showing CBU-30s expended by 56 SOW A-1 Skyraiders, at 0815 hrs on 14 September 1970 during an ‘armed recon’ mission in Laos

The USAF historians conducting the report cross-referenced the SEADAB database with the CACTA, the Combat Air Activities Database, for the period 11-14 September 1970.  Swinging through 49 pages of printouts looking at the names of the thousands of items of ordnance expended during those three days is a bit of a pain, but the CACTA records do show that a USAF Skyraider, call-sign “Hobo”, expended CBU-30s on 14 September 1970.

Well, what was going on during those days?  You guessed it - extraction of the TAILWIND team.  As of 12 September the team was in heavy contact with the enemy, and declared a “Prairie Fire emergency”, triggering massive air support, which operation personnel later described as “magnificent”.  The first attempt at extraction, under heavy fire from enemy forces in contact, took place on 13 September and was unsuccessful, resulting in the loss of a Marine CH-53 (the helicopter was destroyed, but the crew was saved).  The second extraction attempt, at 1500L on 14 September, succeeded (another Marine CH-53 was lost in this attempt).  Both exfiltration attempts were supported by dozens of aircraft flying strike sorties - including, according to the reports of the operation, the use of CBU-30s by 56 SOW Skyraiders (call-signs Firefly 24 and Hobo 46 on the 13th, and Firefly 44 and Hobo 20 on the 14th).

As for sarin...well, there’s no such thing as a “CBU-15” among lists of US chemical munitions or other explosive ordnance, and there is no record of any nerve agent munitions ever being shipped to Southeast Asia, let alone being used in theatre.  The CNN allegations were vigorously denied by everyone interviewed in the course of the USAF investigation.  The most convincing denials were provided by those most knowledgeable about munitions handling; the transport and storage of the types of air-deliverable unitary nerve agent munitions stockpiled by the US in those days required special equipment and procedures, none of which were in place in Vietnam.  LCol Wilfred Turcotte (Ret’d), commander of the 456 MMS at the time of TAILWIND, said during an interview that the idea of having sarin in Vietnam was a “startling concept” to him; the men who worked in his squadron loading munitions onto aircraft did so with no protective gear and often worked “stripped to the waist”.  The munitions depots had no protective equipment, masks, aprons, gloves, decontamination equipment or medical treatment kits for dealing with nerve agent.  The lack of any safety precautions pretty much precludes the presence of a nerve agent - especially a highly volatile one like sarin, which has very high percutaneous toxicity, and which vaporizes quickly in hot temperatures, forming lethal gas clouds.

So why did CNN automatically jump to the conclusion that the US had used nerve agent in Laos?  It seems they had been given some documents that raised questions.  One of them was a shipping label for 2.75” rockets sent to the theatre in January 1970 that contained the notation “poison gas”:

Figure 7: The suspicious shipping label

Leave aside the fact that the US has never put nerve agent into 2.75” rockets (the M-55 sarin-filled free-flight artillery rockets that the US has been destroying for the past decade are a little over 4” in diameter).  This mystery was resolved by referring to Department of Transport regulations, which require any munition carrying a chemical agent to be labelled as “Poison Gas” regardless of the agent in question.  The rockets referred to in the shipping label, according to the USAF report, were probably XM99 CS rockets for Army use; these were still experimental in 1970, but the Army was eager to deploy them.

(You’ve seen something similar to the XM99, incidentally; they were based on white phosphorous incendiary rockets, one version of which were packaged in rectangular four-rocket pods for multiple-launch applications.  Rae Dawn Chong can be seen using one of these pods as a shoulder-fired weapon to blow up a car following her and Arnold Schwarzenegger in “Commando”.)

Matrix: Where did you learn how to do that?
Cindy:I read the instructions.

She didn't read it very thoroughly, as she was holding the thing backwards.  Hey, it ain't about the realism - later on, Arnie slaughters a battalion of enemy troops with an 8" belt in his M-60. 

Well, what about the “CBU-15”?  The USAF historians researching TAILWIND found more than 2000 mentions in the SEADAB of “CBU-15 Anti-Material” munitions being dropped by Skyraiders.  They knew this was an error, as CBU-15 was not then a designator for any explosive munition, and it seemed unlikely that a nerve agent weapon could’ve been dropped secretly more than 2000 times without anyone noticing.  As it turned out, the problem originated in the transfer of the database during the period 1972-1974, when “415” was selected as an item code for the CBU-14 anti-material cluster bomb mentioned above.  The error was transmitted through to the 1974 edition.  The bottom line is that in 1970, when the dropping of non-existent “CBU-15 Sarin gas bombs” was supposedly taking place, “CBU-15” was not a munition code anywhere in the US military; the card code was “415”, and this referred to CBU-14’s.  When the 1970 SEADAB tapes were re-run using the 1970 card codes, the munitions came up with their proper designators: CBU-14, CBU-24, and CBU-25 (all high explosive cluster bombs) and CBU-30 (“Tear Gas”).  Mystery solved.

So, what came of all of this?  CNN officials got to sit down to a healthy meal of crow.  The network conducted a review of its reporting in the “Valley of Death” series and, on 2 July 1998, slipped the following out with a minimum of fanfare:

Our central conclusion is that although the broadcast was prepared after exhaustive research, was rooted in considerable supportive data, and reflected the deeply held beliefs of the CNN journalists who prepared it, the central thesis of the broadcast could not be sustained at the time of the broadcast itself and cannot be sustained now. CNNs conclusion that United States troops used nerve gas during the Vietnamese conflict on a mission in Laos designed to kill American defectors is insupportable.

CNN should retract the story and apologize.[Note B]

I said this wasn’t going to be a screed about journalistic integrity, but I have to point out that the reason the network ended up airing such an enormous crock of nonsense in the first place was precisely because the story “reflected the deeply held beliefs of the CNN journalists who prepared it” - specifically, their deeply held belief that the government of the United States is sufficiently execrable that it would use nerve gas to murder American citizens (a belief that resonates today in the “9/11 Truther” movement, I might add).  Or as Buffalo Springfield put it,

Paranoia strikes deep
Into your life it will creep
It starts when you’re always afraid...

See, the reporters’ beliefs were the cause of their ludicrously scurrilous allegations, not an explanation or an excuse for them.  The “Valley of Death” series exemplifies what happens when supposedly objective researchers who know bugger-all about the subject they’re studying succumb to confirmation bias and use ideology in the place of evidence.  The best that can be said of Miss Oliver and her cohorts in this debacle is that at least they didn’t manufacture fake documents to support their story.  That’s more of a CBS thing, I guess.

Sure sells books for worn-out journalistic hacks, though.


Incidentally, I seem to recall Arnett doing most of his Baghdad reporting from a prone position under a coffee table while SLCMs buzzed past his window.  I could be wrong, though.

By the way, while the US didn’t use nerve agent in Vietnam, the Soviets DID use nerve agent in Afghanistan.  Some governments really are execrable.  Just something to think about.

There’s a lot more to be said about Op TAILWIND and the use of CS in Vietnam, and the place that the history of such events holds in the evolution of international efforts to prohibit the use of riot control agents in warfare - efforts that culminated in paragraph 5 of Article I of the Chemical Weapons Convention, under which States Parties to the Convention undertaken never to use riot control agents “as a method of warfare”. But that’s more of a paper than a CoP post, and frankly it’s a lot less interesting than uncovering the real history behind allegations about secret programs to nerve-gas US defectors, so let’s leave it for another day.

If you’re interested in a copy of the Op TAILWIND report, you can get it here

Trust me...it’s groovy.

Cheers,

//Don//


Notes


[A] [http://www.aim.org/publications/special_reports/NewsStand06-07.html]

[B] [http://articles.cnn.com/1998-07-02/us/9807_02_tailwind.findings_1_operation-tailwind-cnn-broadcast-inaugural-broadcast?_s=PM:US]

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

19 May 2011 – Chemical Weapons Destruction update

Colleagues,

Between spending most of the past week writing a paper on the status of Libya’s chemical weapons (CW) destruction process in the context of the current crisis in that country, and wasting two fantastic hours last Saturday watching The Destroyer melt Acuras with his face, the word “destruction” has been on my mind a lot lately. 



Figure 1 - In Asgard, they understand that incineration is far superior to hydrolysis as a CW destruction methodology


So it’s not surprising that, whilst perusing the riveting Gossip and Style sections of the Salt Lake Tribune on Tuesday last, a headline all but jumped out at me: “Last of bulk mustard gas destroyed at Deseret Chemical Depot.”(Note A)  This naturally drew my attention away from the neighbouring article, which described the remarkable case of a chap ingesting his 25,000th Big Mac a mere 39 years after consuming his first, and caused me to dig into my back-files on the US chemical weapons programme to refresh my memory.

Deseret is one of the facilities that’s a plague to dabblers in the CW world, because it’s one of two names applied to what is essentially the same place.  Technically, the name of the facility is the ”Deseret Chemical Depot”, but due to the fact that it’s associated with the Toelle Army Depot and is located in Toelle, Utah, it tends to get referred to in international fora, and from time to time even by the Americans, as “Toelle” (pronounced “Two-Ella”).  Although not the oldest CW-related site in the US (that honour belongs to Edgewood Arsenal in Maryland), Toelle is far and away the largest.  When the Chemical Weapons Convention entered into force in 1997, the depot held more than 13,600 tons of CW agent - roughly half of the entire declared US stockpile - in close to a million different containers and projectiles. 


Figure 2: The US CW Stockpile at entry-into-force, 1997

The grand total of munitions stored at the depot was staggering:

H, HD, HT (Mustard)
105 mm artillery shells: 54,663
155 mm artillery shells: 63,568

GB (Sarin)
105 mm artillery shells: 798,703
155 mm artillery shells: 89,141
M-55 free-flight artillery rockets: 17,353

VX
155 mm artillery shells: 53,216
M-55 free-flight artillery rockets: 3,966
M23 land mines: 22,690

Additionally, the depot also held blister and nerve agent in one-ton bulk storage containers and spray tanks. 



Figure 2 - 1-ton containers of distilled mustard (HD) stored at the Deseret depot, 1998 (there’s more mustard in this picture than Libya has left in its stockpile)


Such a vast quantity of weaponry and toxic chemicals - much of it aging (some of the mustard dated to the Second World War, while the depot also held quantities of pre-WWII Lewisite, as well quantities of Tabun(GA) that had been captured from the Nazis during the War) - posed a wide variety of challenges to destruction.  Mustard, for example, tends to polymerize (thicken) in storage, becoming first gluey, then gelling, and finally taking on the consistency of a hockey puck.  This makes it impossible to destroy by hydrolysis, necessitating incineration.  However, due to the nature of production processes used at the time the mustard was synthesized, a good deal of it turned out to be contaminated with mercury, imposing much tighter emissions controls and necessitating the installation of very fine filters, scrubbers and electrostatic precipitators on the incineration equipment (and consequently pushing costs through the roof; at last report, the US CW destruction programme was projected to cost well over $40B by the time it is complete in a decade or so).  Different agents and weapons posed different problems; one-ton containers tend to be easy to drain and destroy, while artillery shells have to be defuzed and drilled first.  Land mines contain fuzes, too.  Worst of all were the M-55 rockets, which - because they have thin-walled aluminum bodies - tend to develop leaks, making them horrible to handle, and which contain fuzes, rocket motors, high explosives and batteries.  The technology that had to be developed to demilitarize VX-filled M-55 rockets was nothing short of staggering.

Unlike the Russians, the US tackled the hard stuff - the mines, shells and rockets - first, and left the easy stuff (the ton containers) for the end.  Completion of the bulk mustard destruction process therefore means that Toelle is getting near to the end of a programme that got underway in 1996, before the Convention even came into effect.  Only a small quantity of munitions remain to be destroyed, among them about 350 shells where the mustard was so badly polymerized that it was impossible to remove the agent from the projectiles.  Such problem cases tend to be destroyed by contained explosion in specially-built mobile destruction facilities.


Figure 4 - the US Army Chemical Materials Agency’s Explosive Destruction System (EDS) can safely detonate and decontaminate up to 6 CW projectiles at once

The staff at Deseret also plan to destroy the above-mentioned Lewisite and Tabun munitions by early next year.  Once this has been taken care of, all that will remain at Deseret are the “solid waste management pits” - old munitions dumps dating from decades ago, when munitions were destroyed in the open air (which is now forbidden by the Convention).  Most of the personnel will be transferred to the Toelle Army Depot, and the destruction facility will be closed.

The impending closure of the Deseret/Toelle CWDF brings up an interesting problem that the States Parties to the Convention will have to wrestle with at this year’s Conference of the States Parties (coming up in Nov-Dec 2011 in The Hague).  In 2009, there were 13 CW destruction facilities (CWDFs) in operation around the world: one in India, four in Russia, and eight in the US.  India has since completed its destruction programme and closed its CWDF, and the destruction operations at Kambarka in Russia, and at Newport, Indiana and Dugway, Utah have likewise come to a close.  Libya began destroying chemical precursors at its CWDF (at Rabta, with three sub-sites at Ruwagha east of Waddan, about 700 km southeast of Tripoli) last May, and commenced mustard destruction there last fall, which was going well up until the hydrolysis equipment broke down and repair parts could not be obtained due to the present crisis.

The decline in destruction activities is inevitable as CW stockpiles continue to fall; more than 62% of all declared CW have been destroyed to date; and it is relevant because the vast bulk of inspection activity conducted by the OPCW - more than 85% of inspector-days - is related to continuous monitoring and verification at the destruction facilities.  Article VI (or “Industry”) verification accounts for only about 1/6 of the Organization’s inspection activities.  Once all the weapons are gone, not nearly as many inspectors will be needed.

But it won’t be a smooth decline.  The final deadline for destruction of all CW is 29 April 2012.  Both Russia and the US have advised that they are likely to miss this deadline, probably by many years (and it now looks like Libya could miss it, too).  The difficulty from the perspective of the Organization is that CWDFs that have been operating for many years now are coming to the end of their programmes, while some others - for example, at Kizner and Pochep in Russia, and at Blue Grass, Arkansas and Pueblo, Colorado in the US - are still under construction, and in some cases won’t commence operations for years.(Note B)  As a result, there is going to be a gap of several years during which there will be a much smaller need for continuous monitoring and verification at CWDFs than there has been for the past 14 years.  This means that the OPCW is going to have to cope with direction from the States Parties to significantly downsize both the Inspectorate and its operational budget for 2-3 years (or even longer, if construction on new CWDFs proceeds slowly) - and then will have to expand both again once the new facilities begin destruction operations.
This won’t be easy; trained chemical munitions specialists are no longer common, because there are no longer any large CW programmes in the world.  The generation that supplied inspectors to UNSCOM, UNMOVIC and the first generation of the OPCW is retiring.  The OPCW now has to make inspectors instead of simply hiring them with years of experience.  Unfortunately, there is no alternative to downsizing; States Parties will not accept having the Inspectorate grossly underemployed for several years; and although it would be highly desirable to reorient allocated inspector-hours to Industry verification, for political reasons this would be impossible.  Every year the Technical Secretariat attempts to increase the number of Industry inspections by 5-10 (there were 208 Article VI inspections in 2009, but more are required, the argument being that the true threat of CW proliferation is no longer at CW storage and destruction facilities, but rather at small, flexible, multipurpose batch production plants), and every year it takes days of intensive wrangling between States Parties to agree on the total number of Article VI inspections - generally with the Western European and Other Group (WEOG) demanding more inspections, and the Non-Aligned Movement, led or goaded on by India, Cuba, South Africa, Iran and China, demanding fewer inspections (often as leverage to wring more Article XI, or “Economic and Technological Development”, money out of the Organization - but that’s a topic for another CoP).  So simply quintupling or sextupling the number of Industry inspections to keep the Inspectorate busy, however desirable it might be, is just not an option.

The wrap-up of the bulk mustard destruction programme at Deseret illustrates how time moves on, things change, and international organizations - if they want to remain relevant - have to change with them.  Dealing with the downsizing of the Inspectorate, a significant trimming of the Organization’s budget (in 2009, verification accounted for €34.9M of the Organization’s expenditures of €71.3M - Note C), and the impending non-compliance of the US, Russia and possibly Libya with the Convention’s destruction obligations, are sure to make for fascinating fodder at this year’s Conference of States Parties. 
A good thing, too, because as some of you probably know from first-hand experience, Den Haag in December is a lot more like Jotunheim than Asgard.

Cheers,

//Don//

Notes
A) http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/news/51823485-78/chemical-depot-weapons-agent.html.csp
B) REPORT OF THE OPCW ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE CONVENTION ON THE PROHIBITION OF THE DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCTION, STOCKPILING AND USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS AND ON THEIR DESTRUCTION IN 2009, OPCW, C-15/4, 30 November 2010, 5.
C) ibid., 63.

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

25 February 2011 – North African turmoil, CW worries

Colleagues,

The events of the past few weeks in North Africa make me wonder about the security of the chemical weapons (CW) programmes of the states that are presently melting down.  Both Egypt and Libya have CW.  Egypt, because it never joined the Chemical Weapons Convention, has never been required to make a declaration; but Cairo almost certainly has stockpiles of mustard and possibly G- and V-agents, and probably has the capability to produce more advanced CW.  For those who are interested, I’ve attached a paper - almost 13 years old, now - by Dany Shoham, from the 1998 Spring-Summer edition of the Non-Proliferation Review, that gives a comprehensive overview of Egypt’s chemical and biological weapons programmes at time of writing, including details of the support Cairo has supplied to other CBW proliferators, like Syria and pre-liberation Iraq.

We know a little more about Libya.  Shortly after the US Army pulled Saddam out of his furnished septic tank in December 2003, Qadafy, having recently been caught trafficking in nuclear what-nots by the Proliferation Security Initiative, turned states-evidence, voluntarily joining the CWC and declaring tons of CW agents, precursors, and unfilled munitions.  The OPCW conducted its first visit to Libya in February of 2004 and destruction got under way the same month, beginning with the easy stuff: the Category 3 chemical weapons, Libya’s unfilled munitions (mostly, as I understand it, empty aircraft bombs that could have been filled either with mustard or nerve agent).  These were destroyed via the highly technical process of lining them up on the sand and driving a bulldozer over them.  That part of the program was complete by March 2004.  Libya submitted its initial declaration immediately thereafter, declaring approximately 23 metric tonnes of mustard gas, one inactivated CW production facility, and two CW storage facilities.  No filled munitions were declared. (Note A)

The “inactivated CWPF” quickly became a bone of contention.  Known as al-Rabta, Libya soon requested permission to convert the facility into a pharmaceutical plant.  However, according to paragraph 72 of Part V of the Verification Annex, conversion of any CWPF for “purposes not prohibited by the Convention” must be completed not later than six years into entry after force of the Convention.  As the Convention entered into force on 29 April 1997 and Libya did not join until March 2004, the deadline for conversion was automatically missed.  This caused the Conference to approve a Technical Change to the Verification Annex, inserting paragraph 72bis establishing that conversion deadlines for states parties entering after the six year deadline to be set by the Executive Council.  This was only the second Technical Change ever made to the Convention (the first being a Canadian-instigated change - the insertion of paragraph 5bis into Part VI of the Verification Annex eliminating the requirement for 30-day advance notification of transfers of 5 milligrams or less of Saxitoxin for medical/diagnostic purposes).  Libya stated that it had completed conversion of the two separate facilities at al-Rabta in 2009.

Destroying Libya’s CW stockpile has been a lot trickier.  By the end of 2009, Libya had not destroyed any of its Category 1 chemical weapons (agent and precursors) and only 39% (551 tonnes) of its Category 2 CW.  The Categories, incidentally, are a declaration mechanism designed to assist States Parties and the Inspectorate in prioritizing declared CW for destruction.  Laid out in paragraph 16 of Part IV(A) of the Verification Annex, the categories are:

·          Category 1 - CW based on Schedule 1 chemicals (the traditional warfare agents) and their parts and components

·          Category 2 - CW based on all other chemicals and their parts and components

·          Category 3 - Unfilled munitions and devices, and equipment specifically designed for use directly in connection with employment of CW

Bottom line, Libya still has many tonnes of mustard and an awful lot of G-agent precursor chemicals (the Cat 2 materials, mostly phosphorous compounds) still kicking around.  This is because impoverished and technically unsophisticated countries tend to have difficulty coming up with a destruction plan that does not involve burial, sea-dumping or open-air burning, all of which are prohibited by the Convention.  Incineration and neutralization by hydrolysis are both acceptable methods, provided appropriate environmental constraints are observed, but they take a certain degree of scientific and engineering competence.  I’ve heard stories about Libya’s destruction programme over the past year that would curl your hair - the phrase “and then they set the desert on fire” came up.  Fascinating, so long as you’re not downwind.

In 2009, Libya’s mustard was reloaded from small storage canisters into new tanks for shipment to the destruction facility; 22.3 tonnes of it, anyway.  The reloading process demonstrated one of the more unpleasant qualities of mustard - its tendency to polymerize in storage, forming a gooey “heel” with all of the toxicity and mutagenic properties of pure mustard, but with a consistency varying from that of molasses to that of tar to that of a hockey puck.  2.5 tonnes of this horrid goop remained in the original containers. You can’t hydrolyze polymerized mustard unless you can make it dissolve first, and that’s no easy task even with potent organic solvents.  This is why smart people prefer high-temperature incineration.  It’s the chemical equivalent to “nuking the site from orbit” - it’s the “only way to be sure.”

Interestingly, Wikileaks has provided some corroboration of the problems Libya is experiencing with its CW programs.  According to one of the released secret cables (reported in The Telegraph), the head of Libya’s CW destruction programme, Dr. Ahmed Hesnawy (who is also the former head of its CW production programme), told the US Embassy in Tripoli in  late 2009 that a “grassroots environmental campaign” and “civil defence concerns about possible leaks” had caused “all hell to break loose” with the programme.  The embassy’s comments on these explanations were sceptical about the environmental movement, but gave credence to the concern about leaks: ”Given tight Libyan Government controls over national security facilities and programs, we find it hard to believe that a grassroots movement could affect Libyan policy or action on a sensitive program such as the Rabta facility”; and “The UK DCM, who visited the storage facility earlier this year, told P/E Chief that the containers currently housing the material were in fact leaking when he observed them.” (Note B)

Libya’s difficulties prompted Tripoli to request an extension, and in December 2009, the Fourteenth Conference of the States Parties approved an extension to 15 May 2011 (C-14/DEC.3, 2 December 2009.  A deadline of 31 December 2011 was set for Libya’s Cat-2 CW, approved by the 11th Conference in 2006).  Intermediate deadlines were extended by the 15th Conference last December.  There was already some doubt whether these deadlines were achievable; now, they seem unlikely to be achieved at all.  Libya could easily miss the final destruction deadline (29 April 2012), along with the US and Russia, as the destruction operations have to be carried out under continuous monitoring and verification by the OPCW, and the OPCW cannot send its inspectors into a civil war.

But at least the bombs were crushed first.  Given Colonel Mo’s demonstrated propensity for using air-to-surface weapons for crowd control, we should be grateful for that small mercy.

Cheers,

//Don//

Notes

(A) http://www.opcw.org/news/article/libya-submits-initial-chemical-weapons-declaration/

(B) http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wikileaks-files/libya-wikileaks/8294660/LIBYAS-CHEMICAL-WEAPONS-DESTRUCTION-CHIEF-DEFENDS-EXTENSION-REQUEST.html