- Joined
- Apr 28, 2021
I wasn't talking about a chemical weapon, I don't think even the Americans are callus enough to go down that route. I was talking about deploying herbicides on mass. Yeah they could be poisonous to humans as well but they are usually nothing like a dedicated chemical weapon.The Military Industrial Complex has long since lost the agility needed to develop and deploy a new chemical weapon in a timescale that'd matter to this war. Developing anything seems to take them a decade plus, and there is absolutely no incentive to slow down the graft train when it comes to a war on foreign soil - even if the war is lost, that just makes everyone worried about the Russians, which is more business in their pockets.
I know folks might think "Its just a new payload for an existing shell" but nah when it comes to chemical weapons of any form, you really absolutely do not fuck around with just shoving it in an old design and hoping for the best. You absolutely ground up redesign that thing less you inadvertently create a mix that weakens the old sealing compound over a six month period, and end up gassing out half your clients. If they were regularly making new shit then they might be capable, but as it stands they're too busy spending a decade failing to recreate 1980's level space launch technology, and failing to understand that no amount of computers and 'battle space tactical awareness' will deflect Russian tank rounds when they hit your fancy armored car.
The biggest practical problem is not to get the chemicals, they have tons of all kinds of stuff in storage. The problem is how they get it on the fields as they can't exactly spray it from airplanes like they did in Vietnam because the Russians have air superiority. Maybe they can deploy vapor clouds in the evening when the wind is blowing the right way, which then condenses when temperatures fall during night time? Ofc, with this method, they will contaminate vast areas with this herbicide besides where they want it.