Chemical attacks next? More protection against ‘Nazis’.

Warnings from the US of “clear signs” that Russia is considering using chemical or biological weapons in Ukraine have raised the spectre of gas attacks.

US intelligence has been remarkably accurate in predicting Russia’s actions in the war so far, and the timing of the latest warning raises concerns for the fate of Mariupol. The city has held out for almost a month against relentless shelling that has reduced much of it to ruins. Power, food, water and medical supplies have been cut off, yet still defenders refuse to surrender. It is the sort of scenario where many observers fear Putin could turn to weapons of mass destruction.

Mariupol is a strategic port, but at this point its significance may lie more in Putin’s need for something he can sell to Russians as a victory. It is far short of his original war aims, but the Russian military is struggling and it might be enough for him to negotiate a peace deal and believe he can still cling to power.

The first Russian use of chemical weapons came not on foreign soil but in Moscow in 2002, when Chechen militants seized a theatre and took 850 people hostage. Russian security forces pumped a chemical agent into the theatre, killing all 40 militants and 130 of the hostages.

In 2004 Russia was accused of responsibility for the attempted assassination of Ukrainian presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko, who was left permanently disfigured after being poisoned with dioxin.

In 2006 Alexander Litvinenko, a former FSB officer and defector, was murdered by Russian agents in London with Polonium-210, a highly radioactive isotope that caused irreversible radiation sickness.

In 2018, Novichok emerged as Russia’s chemical agent of choice when it was used in the failed assassination attempt on Sergei Skripal, a former double agent, and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury, England. Novichok was used again in the failed 2020 poisoning of Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader now in jail.

Even if Russia does not have sufficient stocks for sustained chemical warfare, the sheer potency of agents like Novichok is cause for concern. The small perfume bottle used in the 2018 Skripal poisoning contained enough Novichok to kill several thousand people.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-n...ld-use-chemical-weapons-break-siege-mariupol/
 
Of course our resident Putin cock gobbler Moonshi'ite still maintains that polonium, sarin and novichok have never used and it's just propaganda by the West.
 
Published back in January;

Documents expose US biological experiments on allied soldiers in Ukraine and Georgia
By Dilyana Gaytandzhieva -January 24, 2022


DTRA-Georgia-696x464.jpg


While the US is planning to increase its military presence in Eastern Europe to “protect its allies against Russia”, internal documents show what American “protection” in practical terms means.

The Pentagon has conducted biological experiments with a potentially lethal outcome on 4,400 soldiers in Ukraine and 1,000 soldiers in Georgia. According to leaked documents, all volunteer deaths should be reported within 24 h (in Ukraine) and 48 h (in Georgia).

Both countries are considered the most loyal US partners in the region with a number of Pentagon programs being implemented in their territory. One of them is the $2.5 billion Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) Biological engagement program which includes research on bio agents, deadly viruses and antibiotic-resistant bacteria being studied on the local population.

Project GG-21: “All volunteer deaths will be promptly reported”

The Pentagon has launched a 5-year long project with a possible extension of up to 3 years code-named GG-21: “Arthropod-borne and zoonotic infections among military personnel in Georgia”. According to the project’s description, blood samples will be obtained from 1,000 military recruits at the time of their military registration physical exam at the Georgian military hospital located in Gori.

The samples will be tested for antibodies against fourteen pathogens:
Bacillus anthracis
Brucella
CCHF virus
Coxiella burnetii
Francisella tularensis
Hantavirus
Rickettsia species
TBE virus
Bartonella species
Borrelia species
Ehlrichia species
Leptospira species
Salmonella typhi
WNV
The amount of blood draw will be 10 ml. Samples will be stored indefinitely at the NCDC (Lugar Center) or USAMRU-G and aliquots might be sent to WRAIR headquarters in US for future research studies. Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR) is the largest biomedical research facility administered by the U.S. Department of Defense. The results of the blood testing will not be provided to the study participants.

Such a procedure cannot cause death. However, according to the project report, “all volunteer deaths will be promptly reported (usually within 48 h of the PI being notified)” to the Georgian Military Hospital and WRAIR.

https://dilyana.bg/documents-expose...ts-on-allied-soldiers-in-ukraine-and-georgia/
 
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