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binary weapon

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binary weapon

In chemical warfare, weapon consisting of two substances that in isolation are harmless but when mixed together form a poisonous nerve gas. They are loaded into the delivery system separately and combine after launch.

With conventional chemical weapons, chemical stockpiles deteriorate, unstable compounds break down, and the handling and security of such deadly compounds present serious problems to any country possessing them. The development of binary chemical weapons in the USA served to minimize these risks, since the principle on which they are based is the combination of two individually harmless compounds into a deadly chemical agent only in the shell or bomb they are housed in, and then only when the projectile is armed or fired. This greatly reduces storage and handling problems.



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Iraq made 800 tons of sarin, as well as binary weapons like the shell.
According to unclassified portions of the new report, released last week by the General Accounting Office (GAO), the congressional watchdog agency, the 14-year, on-again-off-again Bigeye program has not yet demonstrated that these binary weapons will achieve their design potency, will function as expected or can be delivered reliably and safely.
But advances have given birth to binary weapons, which means deploying lethal weapons like VX, sarin and mustard gas is much easier.
 
 
 
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