Sarin was discovered in 1938 in
Wuppertal-Elberfeld in Germany by scientists at
IG Farben who were attempting to create stronger pesticides; it is the most toxic of the four
G-Series nerve agents made by Germany. The compound, which followed the discovery of the
nerve agent tabun, was named in honor of its discoverers: chemist
Gerhard Schrader, chemist
Otto Ambros, chemist , and from
Heereswaffenamt Hans-Jürgen von der L
inde.
Use as a weapon In mid-1939, the formula for the agent was passed to the
chemical warfare section of the
German Army Weapons Office, which ordered that it be brought into mass production for wartime use. Pilot plants were built, and a production facility was under construction (but was not finished) by the end of
World War II. Estimates for total sarin production by
Nazi Germany range from 500 kg to 10 tons. Though sarin,
tabun, and
soman were incorporated into
artillery shells, Germany did not use nerve agents against
Allied targets.
Adolf Hitler refused to initiate the use of gases such as sarin as weapons. warhead cutaway, showing
M134 Sarin bomblets (c. 1960) • 1950s (early):
NATO adopted sarin as a standard chemical weapon. The USSR and the United States produced sarin for military purposes. • 1953: 20-year-old
Ronald Maddison, a
Royal Air Force engineer from
Consett,
County Durham, died in human testing of sarin at the
Porton Down chemical warfare testing facility in
Wiltshire, England. Ten days after his death an
inquest was held in secret which returned a verdict of
misadventure. In 2004, the inquest was reopened and, after a 64-day inquest hearing, the jury ruled that Maddison had been unlawfully killed by the "application of a nerve agent in a non-therapeutic experiment". • 1957: Regular production of sarin chemical weapons ceased in the United States, though existing stocks of bulk sarin were re-distilled until 1970. • 1976: Chile's intelligence service,
DINA, assigned biochemist
Eugenio Berríos to develop Sarin gas within its program
Proyecto Andrea, to be used as a weapon against its opponents. One of DINA's goals was to package it in spray cans for easy use, which, according to testimony by former DINA agent
Michael Townley, was one of the planned procedures in the 1976
assassination of Orlando Letelier. • March 1988:
Halabja chemical attack; Over two days in March, the ethnic
Kurdish city of
Halabja in northern Iraq (population 70,000) was bombarded by
Saddam Hussein's
Iraqi Air Force jets with chemical bombs including sarin. An estimated 5,000 people died, almost all civilians. • April 1988: Iraq used Sarin four times against Iranian soldiers at the end of the
Iran–Iraq War, helping Iraqi forces to retake control of the
al-Faw Peninsula during the
Second Battle of al-Faw. • 1993: The United Nations
Chemical Weapons Convention was signed by 162 member countries, banning the production and stockpiling of many chemical weapons, including sarin. It went into effect on April 29, 1997, and called for the complete destruction of all specified stockpiles of chemical weapons by April 2007. When the convention entered force, the parties declared worldwide stockpiles of 15,047 tonnes of sarin. As of November 28, 2019, 98% of the stockpiles have been destroyed. • 1994:
Matsumoto incident; the Japanese cult
Aum Shinrikyo released an impure form of sarin in
Matsumoto, Nagano, killing eight people and harming over 500. The Australian sheep station
Banjawarn was a testing ground. • 1995:
Tokyo subway sarin attack; the
Aum Shinrikyo cult released an impure form of sarin in the
Tokyo Metro. Thirteen people died, and over 6,200 people received injuries. • 2002: Pro-
Chechen militant
Ibn al-Khattab may have been assassinated with sarin by the Russian government. • May 2004:
Iraqi insurgents detonated a 155 mm shell containing binary precursors for sarin near a U.S. convoy in
Iraq. The shell was designed to mix the chemicals as it spun during flight. The detonated shell released only a small amount of sarin gas, either because the explosion failed to mix the binary agents properly or because the chemicals inside the shell had degraded with age. Two United States soldiers were treated after displaying the early symptoms of exposure to sarin. • March 2013:
Khan al-Assal chemical attack; Sarin was used in an attack on a town west of
Aleppo city in
Syria, killing 28 and wounding 124. • August 2013:
Ghouta chemical attack; Sarin was used in multiple simultaneous attacks in the
Ghouta region of the
Rif Dimashq Governorate of Syria during the
Syrian Civil War. Varying sources gave a death toll of 322 to 1,729. • April 2017:
Khan Shaykhun chemical attack: The
Syrian Air Force released sarin gas in rebel-held Idlib Province in Syria during an
airstrike. • April 2018: Victims of the
Douma chemical attack in Syria reported to have symptoms consistent with exposure to sarin and other agents. On July 6, 2018, the Fact-Finding Mission (FFM) of the OPCW published their interim report. The report stated that, "The results show that no organophosphorous [sarin] nerve agents or their degradation products were detected in the environmental samples or in the plasma samples taken from alleged casualties". The chemical agent used in the attack was later identified as elemental
chlorine. • July 2023: The U.S. destroyed the last of its declared chemical weapons, a sarin nerve agent-filled
M55 rocket, on July 7, 2023. ==See also==