The US Army's XM1063 projectile is designed to be 'non-lethal' - but is it peaceful or hovering on the brink of illegality?
Is the XM1063 a stink bomb, a banana skin, or a bad trip? It's hard to know. XM1063 is the code name for the US army's new secret weapon which will "suppress" people without harming them, as well as stopping vehicles in an area 100m square. But is it a violation of chemical weapons treaties, or a welcome move towards less destructive warfare using non-lethal weapons?
Exactly how it works is classified, but we have established some details. The first part of the weapon is an artillery round - or as the army puts it, "a non-lethal personal suppression projectile" - fired from a 155mm howitzer, with a range of 28km. It scatters 152 small non-explosive submunitions over a 1-hectare area; as each parachutes down, it sprays a chemical agent. Development was overseen by the US Army's Armament Research, Development and Engineering Centre (Ardec).
A presentation by the makers, General Dynamics, says the XM1063 will "suppress, disperse or engage personnel" and "deny personnel access to, use of, or movement through a particular area, point or facility" (=see PDF).
Smelling it out
Experts suggest three possible payloads: an existing riot-control agent, malodorants or a new chemical agent. Existing agents include CS gas and a form of pepper spray. But these seem unlikely choices, because their effects only last minutes, and could wear off before friendly forces arrive. They could also face a legal challenge: the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention prohibits the use of riot control agents in warfare
"The matter is further complicated if pepper gas was used as the irritant since this is a plant toxin," says Steve Wright of Leeds Metropolitan University. "Such toxins are explicitly banned."
The possibilities seem to boil down to anti-traction agents (which make the whole area impossibly slippery), a malodorant or some novel chemical agents.
Anti-traction agents are possible, but seem unlikely because research in this area (such as Darpa's Black Ice program) still seems to be at an early stage. It would be unusual for an agency to still be doing basic research when another is about to field a finished product.
A malodorant is a super stinkbomb with a truly intolerable smell. The Pentagon has been working on such chemicals for years, and a recent US army briefing on future artillery concepts specifically mentions artillery-delivered malodorants. (see PDF)
This might sidestep the Chemical Weapons Convention with the argument that malodorants are not chemical weapons. However, Ralf Trapp, an independent disarmament consultant formerly with the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, challenges this interpretation.
"That argument rests on the assumption that there are no other toxic effects of these chemicals, and that one can control the dose so that one never crosses into the dose range for toxic effects," says Trapp. "It also is based a concept of toxicity that is centuries out of date - malodorants do have a physiological effect and toxicity is not limited to lethality."
Finally, there is the possibility that the US has decided to ignore the convention and use new non-lethal chemical agents. This approach has supporters in high places. Before the Iraq war in 2003, Donald Rumsfeld pushed for rules of engagement that would allow US forces to use non-lethal chemicals.
Until the 1980s, the US maintained stockpiles of a chemical incapacitant known as BZ or Agent Buzz. BZ is a psychoactive chemical causing stupor, confusion and hallucinations lasting for more than 24 hours. It has an evil reputation, but this is based largely on rumour as few facts are available. Most people have only heard of BZ in connection with the film Jacob's Ladder. This depicted soldiers exposed to a secret chemical weapon in Vietnam with terrible results, including permanent psychosis.
"We are reaping the whirlwind today because of government secrecy in the past," says Jim Ketchum, who ran the BZ testing program in the 1960s. "It has allowed critics to make unsupportable claims about agents such as BZ without rejoinder from the government research community." Although the US is known to have been active in this area since 2000, no comments are available from researchers on non-lethal chemical agents - now termed "calmatives", whatever their chemical action.
Ketchum has written a book, Chemical Warfare Secrets Almost Forgotten, about his experiences of testing BZ on hundreds of volunteers. The effects are very different to those portrayed by Hollywood. None suffered physical harm, mental breakdown or any lasting after-effects. Rather than driving subjects berserk, it has a sedative action. But unlike the fentanyl used in 2002 by Russian police when they stormed a Moscow theatre where Chechen rebels were holding hostages, BZ does not rely on sedation for its effects and does not carry the same risk.
Clouding the issue
Ketchum is now retired, and his successors have had decades to develop more effective and safer agents. But strict secrecy is still in place and there is no information about current research. Ketchum argues that the use of incapacitants would save lives, especially in situations where insurgents are mixed with the civilian population. Others believe that such agents are not just illegal but a step towards unlimited chemical weapons.
"It shouldn't be forgotten that the horrors of gas warfare in the first world war began with teargas, followed up with lethal firepower," says Wright.
As a sideline, the XM1063 projectile also has a "vehicle area denial" component composed of nanoparticles. The US army has researched chemicals to interefere with engine combustion in the past, including work with ferrocene (normally used as an anti-knock additive) which prevent engines from working, with the idea is that this would stop any vehicle within the affected area. However, the potential health risks are unknown, especially when nanoparticles are involved.
Testing of the XM1063 was completed successfully last year and it is due for low-rate production from 2009. Ardec says that the production decision is on hold awaiting further direction from the program manager. It seems the decision on whether to enter a new age of chemical warfare now rests with the military rather then civilians. Unless put under pressure, the US Army seems unlikely to give any details of what's in the surprise package until it is used. And maybe not even then.
© Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
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53 Comments so far
Show All"Run away!! Run away!!!"
So I guess this is going to cost us billions of dollars for a weapon that has an absurdly simple defense: a 20 cent clothespin placed securely on the nose!
Greatbear posits a good question and one I find hard to find a definitive answer to.
I suspect that as a group Americans not only have guilty consciences, but live in absolute fear of others, the world over.
Outside the progressives on these boards, few Americans would ever consider cutting Military spending to a more reasonable amount. For some reason it remains a sacred cow. No candidate that has a chance to win the Presidency would ever suggest cutting Military spending to some 60 billion which is all the US really needs to defend itself.
It hardly like Canada and Mexico a threat to invade.
In virtually every presidential campaign, the issue of Military service is raised and whether Democrat or Liberal, male or female, black or white, the candidate has to show they will be tough on foreigners and willing to wield US military might.
Yet you can go through forum after forum and read about how "Illegal Aliens" are wasting US tax dollars, or how welfare queens wont get off their backsides to work, or how "Socialism" (Governmnet spending for the betterment of the people) will lead the country to ruin.
You mention the largest portion of their tax dollar goes towards the Military and they get a glazed expression.
Sending foreign countries aid so that they can rebuild their econmoies....bad. Bomb the heck out of them and waste 10 times the amount of aid in explosions, tanks and dead and maimed soldiers....good.
An upside down and irrational view of things. It borders on collective insanity.
Weaponry is the ultimate example of Government waste. Build a highway or railroad and millions of Americans can use it for generations to come. Spend the same money on a Bomber, and in 20 years time it has to be sold for scrap.
Americans really need to ask themselves-why does all the money from this administration go into weaponry, and nowhere is it spent on improving the quality of a person's life? Why is there such a focus on weapons-but no interest whatsoever on the standard of living? Why is there such a focus on killing and injuring, but no interest in the quality of life? I weep for humankind.
Is this a great country or what? We spend billions to develop weapons to subdue other nations that will eventually be used on our own people funded by the US taxpayer. Wake up folks.
So this is interesting. I did this google-search on the phrase "XM1063" http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=XM1063.&btnG=Google+Search
and the very first hit is a PDF from General Dynamics. Nothing top-secret but still sort of interesting : www.dtic.mil/ndia/2006garm/tuesday/mccormick.pdf
Another weapon on the back burner will neutralize entire countries without any measurable damage. Unfortunately, no one in the present administration knows how to use it. It's called: NEGOTIATION
BBR001
what about 'exorcised' missiles???????
Oh, the mighty minds of the military industrial complex. The best and the brightest of our top drawer elite schools. The creme de la creme of our blue-blooded aristocratic gene pool: All sitting in their think tanks and laboratories projecting their darkest impulses onto the hapless underclass of the world.... and getting paid exorbitant sums to do so.
Thinking people may not believe in god but surely the devil frolics freely in bowls of paranoid men.
Crom - or the Popular People's Front of Judea (Splitters!)
Some cute and poignant comments, but... Consider that with our without this weapon, the result will be the same neutralization of the 'enemy'. How they do it is secondary to the fact that they are so cool about using military means to suppress the populace.
The reason they want this weapon is surely to sanitize that type of suppression, and make it more palatable to a (potentially...) watchful public. Some of us can recall how dramatic the murder of a few Kent State students was, and how it actually energized so many radicals - including me. In fact, imperialism quietly murders thousands every day, through dire poverty and other injustices, but that doesn't make the headlines. Stinking us out will simply be more palatable and sustainable than a shower of ultrasonic lead.
This underscores the folly of headless riots (and anarchism), which they can readily squash. Neither stink bombs nor bullets can force workers who have put down their tools to return to their jobs. It might sound old-fashioned, but mobilizing organized labor behind a Leninist political party remains the only known formula for replacing inherently violent imperialism with humanistic socialism. If you want to ever win the class war, you must first build that party.
Galen, speaking of exploding or unexploded things, Homeland Security needs to be aware of an organization with that T word -the Judean People's Front or is it the People's Front of Judea? I never can remember which it is.
Cromerovicch- Watch out. Next thing you know, we will have to be on guard for unexploded Scotsmen...
Thank-you Galen, I can never find those pesky instructions. Puts a whole new meaning to "We don't need no stinkin' XM1063"
Then again, nobody expects the XM1063.
This is one more instance of the military developing technology for domestic protest control.
Robert Newhard
'Thou shalt count to three, and three shall be the number of the count. Thou shalt not stop at two, unless proceeding immediately to three. Neither shall thou count to four. FIVE IS RIGHT OUT!'
Perhaps this is what the Holy Hand-Grenade of Antioch was all about. I'd best consult the Book of Armaments.
Research! Why not make a stink the old fashioned way? A diet of beer, onions, beans and pickled eggs in my cousins deer hunting party cleared out a smoky tavern when they got peculating. The escaping crowd had tears in their eyes.
we've all been very naughty and deserve a good spanking....
oh, and homeward-angel, relax the site has not been compromised.
A howitzer stink bomb payload is so grotesque it is on the double dark side of perversion. One would have to visit the world of infinite insanity to find the hideous minds capable of such a creation. Sickness is inadequate to describe them.
Even the word evil is too tame.
Smells of hypcrisy? Weapons production, ala "cut flowers", forms the basis of our economy. The rest is merely window dressing. Look at the figures. What do we think is worth borrowing from our kids for?
COMMON DREAMS HAS BEEN COMPROMISED!!! DOES NOT ALLOW YOU TO SUPPLY VIABLE LINKS!!! compromised!! new age fascism!!!!
COMMON DREAMS HAS BEEN COMPROMISED!!! DOES NOT ALLOW YOU TO SUPPLY VIABLE LINKS!!! compromised!! new age fascism!!!!
COMMON DREAMS HAS BEEN COMPROMISED!!! DOES NOT ALLOW YOU TO SUPPLY VIABLE LINKS!!! compromised!! new age fascism!!!!
COMMON DREAMS HAS BEEN COMPROMISED!!! DOES NOT ALLOW YOU TO SUPPLY VIABLE LINKS!!! compromised!! new age fascism!!!!
I know some of you will say it's about the money, but what intrigues me is the kind of mind that would dedicate itself to coming up with these things? When faced with dark facts I tend to think in humor as an antidote. So for the geniuses on board for the malodorants (and I presume they have to test their work, the way chefs like to taste to be sure of a product in progress) would they be the kids that farted the loudest and most overtly in elementary school who never forgot the humiliation of being called on it? And now looking at their huge paychecks for making that stuff up, professionally, no doubt, they're thinking... you just wait, suckers.
Who else could go for something this inane?
Holy Hand Grenades, Coco!
wtf? i am being cencored by CD~!!!!!!!
GALEN, i doubt if they even know what it means, but yes...............
Coco- do you ever get the feeling that the entire Bush team routinely engages in mass auto-erotic asphyxia?
GALEN
and to take BBR-001's monty python scenario even further we could have:
crucifixion, stink bomb or plastic bag?............
Goose2, check U.S. Army annals.
I have seen the same evidence, but cannot remember. My father showed me a copy of a journal by a trapper that mentioned the infected blankets being intentionally given. Even if it wasn't the army, apparently this trapper and others at the time thought it was and acted accordingly.
My dad was very interested in the old west, especially the trappers and their wanderings. We actually visited the site while on vacation, using the journal to lacte the site.
GALEN
so wouldn't it be cheaper to just issue everyone with a big plastic bag to put over their head?................(at gunpoint of course.)
'Suppress' people AND stop vehicles?
Hmmmm... let's see US Army + artillery + stopping vehicles and disabling people + probable chemical round that has to pass existing treaties.
I know... the sub-munitions could pack compressed CO2. It's natural, not subject to arms control treaties, knocks people out in sufficient concentrations, stops engines, and readily available.
Jclientelle - how very true, if only the brains behind this s--t had been diverted to - irrigating Africa, finding alternatives to fossil fuels, combating disease, putting Bush, Blair, Cheney, Rumsfeld in the Hague.
OK, the last one may not be achievable!
Damn! Great minds think alike. Everyone already said what I wanted.
Is the Guardian suggesting, when they say, "before friendly forces arrive" that American troops, who have invaded numerous countries and killed millions in recent decades are 'friendly'?
America is all about 'winning'. How you win is very secondary!
BBR-001
or a fart in your general direction................
From the description, this is clearly a chemical weapon and should fall under the ban. Has anyone thought about starting a campaign to bring this to Obama's attention. Like cluster bombs, it should brought to visibility in the campaign.
>>You know the country that gave smallpox infested blankets(biologicals) to their own indiginous citizens.<<
Timebiter, this is "common knowledge", but do you have any support of this? I have looked for years and found 0 evidence to support this claim other than, "of course we did, I heard it from xxxx".
The only person that documented such action was Ward Churchill who apearantly misrepresented another book by Thornton on the 1837 Mandan Smallpox outbreak which the American fur traders, not the military, brought to the Mandans by accident. In fact there are many contemporary letters by the doctors available on scene and the fur traders about trying to get the Mandans away from the infected zone as they were the actual labor that went and got the pelts for the traders. The traders had a real incentive to keep them alive to protect their livelyhoods.
The only verified report of giving anything infected (with intent to cause harm) was by the British in 1763 during Pontiac's rebellion by Lord Amhurst and his subordinate Colonel Henry Bouquet.
Surely contact with Europeans was catastrophic for the indigenous peoples (everywhere...) but there is not credible evidence of intentionally giving smallpox to the native-americans other than that one action of the British in 1763.
How about a cow on a catapult? (Monty Python and the Holy Grail). Maybe some of Dubya's Tex-Mex barbecue sauce?
See, the Bush administration plans ahead. When the depression hits, and there are riots in the streets, they have a plan to maintain control -- stink bombs. Of course they would never consider actually doing something to help the people in pain. It is considered a very serious crime against the elite country club gang (the one gang Bush owes his true allegiance to) to use the government to ever help the "losers." Everyone should know that.
HARMLESS...??? why call it a weapon.
Yeah, like "Bunker Busters." Sounds like something from Sesame Street. The reality is one of the worst of the many nuclear horrors we face.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=2093
Remember, "War is not healthy for children and other living things."
WMD's we got'em and we drop'em.
Don't let BushCo. and Cheney Criminaly Incorporated go down the slippery slope of non lethal chemical weapons.
A chemical weapon will always be a chemical weapon... no matter what type of bow you put on the package. It might sound all rosy, cute and non-lethal at first... but when you start dropping this stuff on the battlefield, in the context of nuclear armed world, you will rapidily encounter an opponant who has no other option but to pull off the nuclear gloves and retaliate with increased vengence in the face of defeat by chemical weapons.
Respect the Chemical Weapons Convention, it works.
If it were a stink bomb, it would have probably been named "Turd Blossom".
The government's recently demonstrated pain ray, the ultimate stench bomb; protesting the destruction of our Constitution and Bill of Rights (or any other government misfeasance, malfeasance or nonfeasance) is going to get very interesting in the near future.
This stuff might really work well at the borders so that the people walking across would be stopped. Little spray cans of the stuff would be great for personal security. Sort of the way that skunks do their thing. In large quantities it could be used to depopulate areas such as Iraq, leaving the oil for us. Sort of like the "last roundup". It might have some impact on other organisms as well, so environmental impact might have to be considered. There must be some more uses that come to mind.
A stink bomb? Why not send killer tomatoes? Oh yeah, America has no defense against tomatoes...
Oh that General Jeffrey Amherst....
Anything the USA does is above reproach, as we are a Christian nation, and our intentions are always honorable.
President Bush would intervene immediately if any weapon or action did not meet all of our high ideals and was in any way irresponsible.
I'm really not sure why people are surprised by an article like this. This is after all America, that land of the free and the brave. The country which is highly critical of other countries that use WMD or their ilk. You know the country that gave smallpox infested blankets(biologicals) to their own indiginous citizens. Taught the Nazis about eugenics. Used an atomic weapon on innocents. Napalmed innocents when not spraying them with herbicides. Taught Saddam Hussain how to use nerve agents(most likely provided them as well) and are using depleted uranium shells to increase cancers in innocents around the globe. Hypocracy is part of our national character.
And even if it doesn't kill people (which is unlikely) the MSM won't report it anyway. Now who is the big bad bully with chemical weapons?
More intellect and money wasted on diabolical killing schemes. INSANE.
Here is an idea for a malodorant: Pack the stench of the Bush/McCain cabal into an artillery shell.