Words
of Wisdom About Gas, Germs, and Nukes
Posted March, 2003
By SFC Red Thomas, Armor Master Gunner
U.S. Army (Ret) 10.19.01
Since the media has decided to
scare everyone with predictions of chemical,
biological, or nuclear warfare on our turf,
I decided to write a paper and keep things in
their proper perspective. I am a retired military
weapons, munitions, and training expert.
Lesson number one: In the mid
1990's, there were a series of nerve gas attacks
on crowded Japanese subway stations. Given perfect
conditions for an attack, less than 10% of the
people there were injured (the injured were
better in a few hours), and only one percent
of the injured died.
60 Minutes once had a fellow
telling us that one drop of nerve gas could
kill a thousand people; well, he didn't tell
you the thousand dead people per drop was theoretical.
Drill Sergeants exaggerate how terrible this
stuff is to keep the recruits awake in class
(I know this because I was a Drill Sergeant,
too). Forget everything you've ever seen on
TV, in the movies, or read in a novel about
this stuff, it was all a lie (read this sentence
again out loud)!
These weapons are about terror;
if you remain calm, you will probably not die.
This is far less scary than the media and their
"experts" make it sound.
Chemical weapons are categorized
as Nerve, Blood, Blister, and Incapacitating
agents. Contrary to the hype of reporters and
politicians, they are not weapons of mass destruction;
they are "area denial" and terror
weapons that don't destroy anything. When you
leave the area you almost always leave the risk.
That's the difference; you can leave the area
and the risk. Â Â Soldiers
may have to stay put and sit through it, and
that's why they need all that spiffy gear.
These are not gasses, they
are vapors and/or air borne particles. The agent
must be delivered in sufficient quantity to
kill/injure, and that defines when/how it's
used. Every day we have a morning and evening
inversion where "stuff" suspended
in the air gets pushed down. This inversion
is why allergies (pollen) and air pollution
are worse at these times of the day.
So, a chemical attack will
have its best effect an hour of so either side
of sunrise/sunset. Also, being vapors and airborne
particles they are heavier than air so they
will seek low places like ditches, basements
and underground garages. This stuff won't work
when it's freezing, it doesn't last when it's
hot, and wind spreads it too thin too fast.
They've got to get this stuff on you, or get
you to inhale it for it to work.
They also have to get the concentration
of chemicals high enough to kill or wound you.
Too little and it's nothing, too much and it's
wasted. What I hope you've gathered by this
point is that a chemical weapons attack that
kills a lot of people is incredibly hard to
do with military grade agents and equipment,
so you can imagine how hard it will be for terrorists.
The more you know about this stuff, the more
you realize how hard it is to use.
We'll start by talking about
nerve agents. You have these in your house:
plain old bug killer (like Raid) is nerve agent.
All nerve agents work the same way; they are
cholinesterase inhibitors that mess up the signals
your nervous system uses to make your body function.
It can harm you if you get it on your skin,
but it works best if they can get you to inhale
it. If you don't die in the first minute and
you can leave the area, you're probably gonna
live. The military's antidote for all nerve
agents is atropine and pralidoxime chloride.
Neither one of these does anything to cure the
nerve agent; they send your body into overdrive
to keep you alive for five minutes. After that,
the agent is used up.
Your best protection is fresh
air and staying calm. Listed below are the symptoms
for nerve agent poisoning:
- Sudden headache
- Dimness of vision (someone you're looking
at will have pinpointed pupils)
- Runny nose
- Excessive saliva or drooling
- Difficulty breathing
- Tightness in chest
- Nausea
- Stomach cramps
- Twitching of exposed skin where a liquid just
got on you.
If you are in public and you
start experiencing these symptoms, first ask
yourself, did anything out of the ordinary just
happen, a loud pop, did someone spray something
on the crowd? Are other people getting sick,
too? Is there an odor of new mown hay, green
corn, something fruity, or camphor where it
shouldn't be? If the answer is yes, then calmly
(if you panic, you breathe faster and inhale
more air/poison) leave the area and head up
wind, or outside. Fresh air is the best "right
now antidote."
If you have a blob of liquid
that looks like molasses or Karo syrup on you,
blot it or scrape it off and away from yourself
with anything disposable. This stuff works based
on your body weight. What a crop duster uses
to kill bugs won't hurt you, unless you stand
there and breathe it in real deep, then lick
the residue off the ground for while. Remember,
they have to do all the work, they have to get
the concentration up and keep it up for several
minutes, while all you have to do is quit getting
it on you/quit breathing it by putting space
between you and the attack.
Blood agents are cyanide or
arsine which effect your blood's ability to
provide oxygen to your tissue. The scenario
for attack would be the same as nerve agent.
Look for a pop or someone splashing/spraying
something and folks around there getting woozy/falling
down. The telltale smells are bitter almonds
or garlic where it shouldn't be. The symptoms
are blue lips, blue under the fingernails, rapid
breathing. The military's antidote is amyl nitride
and, just like nerve agent antidote, it just
keeps your body working for five minutes till
the toxins are used up. Fresh air is the your
best individual chance.
Blister agents (distilled mustard)
are so nasty that nobody wants to even handle
it, let alone use it. It's almost impossible
to handle safely and may have delayed effect
of up to 12 hours. The attack scenario is also
limited to the things you'd see from other chemicals.
If you do get large, painful blisters for no
apparent reason, don't pop them; if you must,
don't let the liquid from the blister get on
any other area, the stuff just keeps on spreading.
It's just as likely to harm the user as the
target. Soap, water, sunshine, and fresh air
are this stuff's enemy.
Bottom line on chemical weapons
(it's the same if they use industrial chemical
spills) -- they are intended to make you panic,
to terrorize you, to herd you like sheep to
the wolves. If there is an attack, leave the
area and go upwind, or to the sides of the wind
stream. They have to get the stuff to you, and
on you. You're more likely to be hurt by a drunk
driver on any given day than be hurt by one
of these attacks. Your odds get better if you
leave the area. Soap, water, time, and fresh
air really deal this stuff a knock-out-punch.
Don't let fear of an isolated attack rule your
life. The odds are really on your side.
Nuclear bombs. These are the
only weapons of mass destruction on earth. The
effects of a nuclear bomb are heat, blast, EMP,
and radiation. If you see a bright flash of
light like the sun, where the sun isn't, fall
to the ground! The heat will be over in a second.
Then there will be two blast waves, one out
going, and one on the way back. Don't stand
up to see what happened after the first wave:
anything that's going to happen will have happened
in two full minutes.
These will be low yield devices
and will not level whole cities. If you live
through the heat, blast, and initial burst of
radiation, you'll probably live for a very,
very long time. Radiation will not create fifty
foot tall women, or giant ants and grasshoppers
the size of tanks. These will be, at the most,
one kiloton bombs; that's the equivalent of
1,000 tons of TNT. Here's the real deal, flying
debris and radiation will kill a lot of exposed
(not all!) people within a half mile of the
blast. Â Under perfect conditions,
this is about a half mile circle of death and
destruction, but when it's done, it's done.
EMP stands for Electro Magnetic
Pulse and it will fry every electronic device
for a good distance, it's impossible to say
what and how far but probably not over a couple
of miles from ground zero is a good guess. Cars,
cell phones, computers, ATMs, you name it, all
will be out of order.
There are lots of kinds of
radiation. You only need to worry about three,
the others you have lived with for years. You
need to worry about "ionizing radiation,"
little sub atomic particles that go whizzing
along at the speed of light. They hit individual
cells in your body, kill the nucleus and keep
on going. That's how you get radiation poisoning
-- you have so many dead cells in your body
that the decaying cells poison you. It's the
same as people getting radiation treatments
for cancer, only a bigger area gets radiated.
The good news is you don't
have to just sit there and take it, and there's
lots you can do rather than panic. First; your
skin will stop alpha particles, a page of a
news paper or your clothing will stop beta particles.
You just gotta try and avoid inhaling dust that's
contaminated with atoms thatare emitting these
things and you'll be generally safe from them.
Gamma rays are particles that
travel like rays (quantum physics makes my brain
hurt), and they create the same damage as alpha
and beta particles, only they keep going and
kill lots of cells as they go alltheway through
your body. It takes a lot to stop these things,
lots of dense material. On the other hand, it
takes a lot of this to kill you.
Your defense is, as always,
to not panic. Basic hygiene and normal preparation
are your friends. All canned or frozen food
are safe to eat. The radiation poisoning will
not affect plants, so fruits and vegetables
are OK if there's no dust on 'em (rinse 'em
off if there is). If you don't have running
water and you need to collect rain water or
use water from wherever, just let it sit for
thirty minutes and skim off the water gently
from the top. The dust with the bad stuff in
it will settle and the remaining water can be
used for the toilet, which will still work if
you have a bucket of water to pour in the tank.
Finally there's biological
warfare. There's not much to cover here. Basic
personal hygiene and sanitation will take you
further than a million doctors. Wash your hands
often, don't share drinks, food, sloppy kisses,
etc., ... with strangers. Keep your garbage
can with a tight lid on it, don't have standing
water (like old buckets, ditches, or kiddie
pools) laying around to allow mosquitoes breeding
room. This stuff is carried by vectors, that
is, bugs, rodents, and contaminated material.
If biological warfare is so easy as the TV makes
it sound, why has Saddam Hussein spent twenty
years, millions, and millions of dollars trying
to get it right? If you're clean of person and
home, you eat well and are active, you're gonna
live.
Overall preparation for any
terrorist attack is the same as you'd take for
a big storm. If you want a gas mask, fine, go
get one. I know this stuff and I'm not getting
one and I told my Mom not to bother with one
either (how's that for confidence?). We have
a week's worth of cash, several days worth of
canned goods and plenty of soap and water. We
don't leave stuff out to attract bugs or rodents
so we don't have them.
The terrorists can't conceive
a nation this big with this much in resources.
These weapons are made to cause panic, terror,
and to demoralize. If we don't run around like
sheep, they won't use this stuff after they
find out it's no fun. The government is going
nuts over this stuff because they have to protect
every inch of America. You've only gotta protect
yourself, and by doing that, you help the country.
Finally, there are millions
of caveats to everything I wrote here and you
can think up specific scenarios where my advice
isn't the best. This letter is supposed to help
the greatest number of people under the greatest
number of situations. If you don't like my work,
don't nitpick, just sit down and explain chemical,
nuclear, and biological warfare in a document
around three pages long yourself. This is how
we, the people of the United States, can rob
the terrorists of their most desired goal, your
terror.
SFC Red Thomas (Ret),
Armor Master Gunner, Mesa, AZ