Posts Tagged ‘Weapons’
Weapons Of Mass Destruction Music Video – Mind Delay ft. eYeDeaLR & Germ Free
weapons of mass destruction Music Video – Mind Delay ft. eYeDeaLR (Chamber Records/Concept Artists) & Germ Free…(2006) Directed by Daniel Anthony of Eye Level Productions…Check out eYeDeaLR’s music @ www.myspace.com/eyedealr & www.myspace.com/conceptartists & www.myspace.com/chamberrecords626
Duration : 0:4:5
M-40 NBC Mask
M-40 NBC (Nuclear Biological Chemical) Mask.
Takes standard NATO 40mm screw-in filtration cartridges.
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Duration : 0:5:12
the truth about weapons of mass destruction
new anti war documentary available to watch for free in June 2007
www.thetruthaboutweaponsofmassdestruction.com
Duration : 0:3:50
Cover up: Russians dumped nuclear waste and chemical weapons on Swedish territory!
Perhaps even old soviet nuclear warheads…
My blog: http://byfanenfrandalarna.wordpress.com
To see the tv program visit this link (In Swedish from original source):
http://svtplay.se/v/1874961/uppdrag_granskning/ and click on “del 4″ from 3rd of February.
Duration : 0:2:13
Surviving Political Unrest Part 2- Food, Water, and Rations Continued
This section finishes up our discussion of the importance of having plent of food, water, and other non-perishable goods on hand in time of disaster, politcal revolution/unrest, or martial law.
Duration : 0:4:34
History of Chemical Warfare
The use of poisons that could be considered chemical weapons (CW) dates to antiquity. During the Peloponnesian War (431-404 BC), for example, the Spartans used arsenic smoke. A millennium later at the siege of Constantinople (637 AD), the Byzantine Greeks employed “Greek Fire” – a mixture of petroleum, pitch sulfur and resins. The first modern use of CW, however, occurred during the First World War. At the second battle of Ypres in April 1915, the German army released hundreds of tons of chlorine gas. Thousands of Allied troops were killed or wounded in the gas cloud attacks, including nearly 7,000 Canadians (1,000 dead and 5,975 injured). The British war poet Wilfred Owen described the horror of seeing a fellow soldier guttering, choking, drowning, as if under a green sea of chlorine gas. Throughout the war, both the Allied and the Central Powers developed toxic chemical warfare agents and the means to deliver them. They also refined their tactical doctrines to take into account the new reality of chemical warfare. By 1918, the World War I battlefield was saturated with a variety of persistent and non-persistent chemicals, which caused casualties among troops and increased the danger and difficulty of military operations. By the end of the First World War, approximately 125,000 tons of toxic chemicals had been used, causing more than 1.3 million casualties, including more than 100,000 deaths. To this day, live rounds of World War I chemical munitions remain buried beneath the battlefields of Europe. While the consequences of the use of gas during the war – images of wounded and blinded men waiting in long lines to be given medical assistance – created in the general public a visceral loathing of chemical weapons, the development and use of CW continued throughout the twentieth century. Italian troops employed chemical weapons during their invasion of Ethiopia (1935-1936) while Japan used CW during its war with China (1937-1945). During the Second World War, both the Allied countries (including Canada) and Axis powers developed a significant inventory of chemical weapons; the lack of effective large-scale delivery systems played a part in the decision of both sides not to use them (another powerful constraint was the fear of retaliation). Egypt used chemical weapons in North Yemen (1963-1967) and both Iraq and Iran employed CW during the Gulf War (1983-1988). It wasnt until 29 April 1997, after long and difficult negotiations, that the International Chemical Weapons Convention entered into force. By banning these weapons, the Convention heralded the beginning of the work to destroy the stockpiles that had been amassed. April 29 is Remembrance Day to pay tribute to the victims of chemical warfare. The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)( http://www.opcw.org/ ) is the implementing body of the Chemical Weapons Convention. The OPCW is given the mandate to achieve the object and purpose of the Convention, to ensure the implementation of its provisions, including those for international verification of compliance with it, and to provide a forum for consultation and cooperation among States Parties. This clip is from the 1950s episode, the Unseen Weapon, from the The Big Picture documentary television program which ran on the American Broadcasting Company from 1953 to 1959. The program consisted of documentary films produced by the United States Army Signal Corps Army Pictorial Service.
Duration : 0:1:6
Iraq’s Weapons of Mass Destruction
The purpose of this video is simply to present the facts of the Iraqi Survey Group and the conclusions of the Robb Silbermann report. Many people continue to believe that some of the intelligence regarding Iraq’s WMD was accurate, or that Iraq had a small scale weapon’s program. The Robb Silbermann report repudiates all of these claims.
Also the failure to discover WMD in Iraq has generated a cottage conspiracy theory industry among some on the Right. There are allegations that Iraq shipped its weapons to Syria, or that the Russians assisted Iraq in removing its WMD, or that Saddam destroyed his weapons right before the war, or that Iraq sought uranium from Niger. These conspiracies are false.
The story many Americans were led to believe in 2002 about Iraq stockpiling, amassing, and producing tons of deadly WMD in which to threaten the United States was fictional — a fairy-tale.
I still think the most important chapter in the WMD saga has yet to be written. How did the October 2002 NIE on Iraq end up being so terribly wrong? Did lots of bad intelligence just happen to fall fortuitously into the CIA’s lap as the Bush Administration was trying to build a case for war? Do you believe it?
More on the claim that Iraq sought uranium from Niger:
“The Iraq Survey Group also found no evidence that Iraq sought uranium from abroad after 1991. 113 With respect to the reports that Iraq sought uranium from Niger, ISG interviews with Ja’far Diya Ja’far, the head of Iraq’s pre-1991 enrichment programs, indicated that Iraq had only two contacts with the Nigerien government after 1998–neither of which was related to uranium. 114 One such contact was a visit to Niger by the Iraqi Ambassador to the Vatican Wissam Zahawie, the purpose of which Ja’far said was to invite the Nigerien President to visit Iraq (a story told publicly by Zahawie). 115 The second contact was a visit to Iraq by a Nigerien minister to discuss Nigerien purchases of oil from Iraq–with no mention of “any kind of payment, quid pro quo, or offer to provide Iraq with uranium ore, other than cash in exchange for petroleum.” 116 The use of the last method of payment is supported by a crude oil contract, dated June 26, 2001, recovered by the ISG.”
Duration : 0:2:33
Surviving Political Unrest Part 5- Odds and Ends/Finishing Up
This section covers some basics on navigation, vacum sealing technology, emergency fishing kits, and final thoughts.
Duration : 0:8:30
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