North Yemen hospital at Uqd, North Yemen, where the use of chemical weapons was alleged to have occurred The first attack of the
North Yemen Civil War took place on June 8, 1963, against Kawma, a village of about 100 inhabitants in northern Yemen, killing about seven people and damaging the eyes and lungs of 25 others. This incident is considered to have been experimental, and the bombs were described as "home-made, amateurish and relatively ineffective". The Egyptian authorities suggested that the reported incidents were probably caused by
napalm, not gas. There were no reports of gas during 1964, and only a few were reported in 1965. The reports grew more frequent in late 1966. On December 11, 1966, fifteen gas bombs killed two people and injured thirty-five. On January 5, 1967, the biggest gas attack came against the village of Kitaf, causing 270 casualties, including 140 fatalities. The target may have been Prince Hassan bin Yahya, who had installed his headquarters nearby. The
Egyptian government denied using poison gas, and alleged that Britain and the US were using the reports as psychological warfare against Egypt. On February 12, 1967, it said it would welcome a UN investigation. On March 1,
U Thant, the then
Secretary-General of the United Nations, said he was "powerless" to deal with the matter. On May 10, 1967, the twin villages of Gahar and Gadafa in Wadi Hirran, where Prince Mohamed bin Mohsin was in command, were gas bombed, killing at least seventy-five. The Red Cross was alerted and on June 2, 1967, it issued a statement in Geneva expressing concern. The Institute of Forensic Medicine at the University of Berne made a statement, based on a Red Cross report, that the gas was likely to have been halogenous derivatives—phosgene, mustard gas, lewisite, chloride or cyanogen bromide.
Rhodesian Bush War Evidence points to a top-secret
Rhodesian program in the 1970s to use
organophosphate pesticides and heavy metal
rodenticides to contaminate clothing as well as food and beverages. The contaminated items were covertly introduced into insurgent supply chains. Hundreds of insurgent deaths were reported, although the actual death toll likely rose over 1,000.
Angola During the
Cuban intervention in Angola,
United Nations toxicologists certified that residue from both VX and sarin nerve agents had been discovered in plants, water, and soil where Cuban units were conducting operations against
National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) insurgents. In 1985, UNITA made the first of several claims that their forces were the target of chemical weapons, specifically
organophosphates. The following year guerrillas reported being bombarded with an unidentified greenish-yellow agent on three separate occasions. Depending on the length and intensity of exposure, victims suffered blindness or death. The toxin was also observed to have killed plant life. Shortly afterwards, UNITA also sighted strikes carried out with a brown agent which it claimed resembled
mustard gas. As early as 1984 a research team dispatched by the
University of Ghent had examined patients in UNITA field hospitals showing signs of exposure to nerve agents, although it found no evidence of mustard gas. The UN first accused Cuba of deploying chemical weapons against Angolan civilians and partisans in 1988. The attack occurred shortly after one in the afternoon. Four Angolan soldiers lost consciousness while the others complained of violent headaches and nausea. That November the Angolan representative to the UN accused South Africa of employing poison gas near Cuito Cuanavale for the first time. However, the tear gas grenades were employed as nonlethal weapons to avoid British casualties. The barrack buildings the weapons were used on proved to be deserted in any case. The British claim that more lethal, but legally justifiable as they are not considered chemical weapons under the
Chemical Weapons Convention,
white phosphorus grenades were used.
Afghanistan There were reports of chemical weapons being used by
Soviet forces during the
Soviet–Afghan War, sometimes against civilians.
Vietnamese border raids in Thailand There is some evidence suggesting that
Vietnamese troops used
phosgene gas against
Cambodian resistance forces in
Thailand during the
1984–1985 dry-season offensive on the Thai-Cambodian border.
Iran–Iraq War , Iran
Chemical weapons employed by
Saddam Hussein killed and injured numerous
Iranians and
Iraqi Kurds. According to Iraqi documents, assistance in developing chemical weapons was obtained from firms in many countries, including the United States,
West Germany, the
Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and
France. About 100,000 Iranian soldiers were victims of Iraq's chemical attacks. Many were hit by mustard gas. The official estimate does not include the civilian population contaminated in bordering towns or the children and relatives of veterans, many of whom have developed blood, lung and skin complications, according to the Organization for Veterans. Nerve gas agents killed about 20,000 Iranian soldiers immediately, according to official reports. Of the 80,000 survivors, some 5,000 seek medical treatment regularly and about 1,000 are still hospitalized with severe, chronic conditions. According to the
Foreign Policy, the "Iraqis used mustard gas and sarin prior to four major offensives in early 1988 that relied on U.S. satellite imagery, maps, and other intelligence. ... According to recently declassified CIA documents and interviews with former intelligence officials like Francona, the U.S. had firm evidence of Iraqi chemical attacks beginning in 1983."
Halabja In March 1988, the Iraqi
Kurdish town of
Halabja was exposed to multiple chemical agents dropped from warplanes; these "may have included
mustard gas, the nerve agents sarin, tabun and VX and possibly cyanide." Between 3,200 and 5,000 people were killed, and between 7,000 and 10,000 were injured. However, chemical weapons expert
Jonathan B. Tucker, writing in the
Nonproliferation Review in 1997, determined that although "[t]he absence of severe chemical injuries or fatalities among Coalition forces makes it clear that no
large-scale Iraqi employment of chemical weapons occurred," an array of "circumstantial evidence from a variety of sources suggests that Iraq deployed chemical weapons into the Kuwait Theater of Operations (KTO)—the area including Kuwait and Iraq south of the
31st Parallel, where the ground war was fought—and engaged in sporadic chemical warfare against Coalition forces." In 2014, tapes from Saddam Hussain's archives revealed that Saddam had given orders to use gas against Israel as a last resort if his military communications with the army were cut off. In 2015,
The New York Times published an article about the declassified report of Operation Avarice in 2005 in which over 400 chemical weapons including many rockets and missiles from the Iran-Iraq war period were recovered and subsequently destroyed by the CIA. Many other stockpiles, estimated by UNSCOM up to 600 metric tons of chemical weapons, were known to have existed and even admitted by Saddam's regime, but claimed by them to have been destroyed. These have never been found but are believed to still exist.
Croatian War of Independence On September 22, 1991, during the critical
Battle of Šibenik, the
Federal Secretary for National Defense sent a letter to the
President of the Republic of Croatia accusing the Croatian forces of employing non-lethal chemical agents in combat. The charge alleged that Croatian troops used tear gas as a tactical weapon to successfully storm and seize the Yugoslav naval base located in the city's main harbour.
Iraq War During
invasion of Iraq, American service members who demolished or handled older explosive ordnance may have been exposed to blister agents (mustard agent) or nerve agents (sarin). According to
The New York Times, "In all, American troops secretly reported finding roughly 5,000 chemical warheads, shells or aviation bombs, according to interviews with dozens of participants, Iraqi and American officials, and heavily redacted intelligence documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act." Among these, over 2,400 nerve-agent rockets were found in summer 2006 at
Camp Taji, a former
Iraqi Republican Guard compound. "These weapons were not part of an active arsenal"; "they were remnants from an Iraqi program in the 1980s during the Iran-Iraq war". In August 2016, a confidential report by the
United Nations and the
OPCW explicitly blamed the Syrian military of
Bashar al-Assad for dropping chemical weapons (chlorine bombs) on the towns of Talmenes in April 2014 and Sarmin in March 2015 and
ISIS for using sulfur mustard on the town of Marea in August 2015. In 2016,
Jaysh al-Islam rebel group had used
chlorine gas or other agents against Kurdish militia and civilians in the
Sheikh Maqsood neighborhood of Aleppo. Many countries, including the United States and the European Union have accused the Syrian government of conducting several chemical attacks. Following the 2013 Ghouta attacks and international pressure, Syria acceded to the
Chemical Weapons Convention and the
destruction of Syria's chemical weapons began. In 2015 the UN mission disclosed previously undeclared traces of sarin compounds in a "military research site". After the April 2017
Khan Shaykhun chemical attack, the United States launched its first
attack against Syrian government forces. On 14 April 2018, the United States, France and the United Kingdom carried out
a series of joint military strikes against multiple government sites in Syria, including the
Barzah scientific research centre, after a
chemical attack in
Douma. ==Terrorism and anti-terrorism==