Biggles Wrote:BTW, to stir up a hornets' nest: Do mustard gas (found a couple weeks ago) and Sarin (found in the last couple days) count as Weapons of Mass Destruction?
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:Poison gasses are most certainly WMD. Is there real debate about that?
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:Poison gasses are most certainly WMD. Is there real debate about that?I would say there is debate about it. You did ask the question, after all. It depends on how much of it they find. If they only find traces of it in a few shells, do you really consider that WMD? I think more info is required.
jimbow8 Wrote:I would say there is debate about it. You did ask the question, after all. It depends on how much of it they find. If they only find traces of it in a few shells, do you really consider that WMD? I think more info is required.
Biggles Wrote:No question in my mind. Also, crucifixes, Holy Water, and transubstantiated bread and wine would definitely qualify as weapons of mass destruction. See, Midnight Mass. :p
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:Poison gasses are most certainly WMD. Is there real debate about that?
Ken Valentine Wrote:As I see it, WMD is a newly invented term, and the definition has yet to be solidified. So far, it means anything the politicians want it to mean -- kinda like "Wet Lands."
Ken V.
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:I see your point, Ken, but still it seems a useful term--nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, biological weapons...indiscriminant. (And yeah, I know area bombing is too. Maybe the difference is there's no real defense against so-called WMD.)