Kris Alexander is a Captain in the U.S. Army, with experience in intelligence, homeland security, hazardous materials, and weapons of mass destruction. His March, 2005 story for Wired, "We Need Spy Blogs," has quietly become one of the most influential articles on intelligence matters in recent years. Everyone here at the DANGER ROOM is beyond psyched to have Kris contributing. Chlorine is to weapons of mass destruction as Run/DMC is to rap: old school. The OG of WMD is making a comeback on the mean streets of Baghdad, and it isn’t good. Fellow DANGER ROOM contributor Jason Sigger has pointed out the media hype that has followed these attacks. And he’s right so far.
Chlorine is more hype than hurt, but it does add an ugly new facet to the war. So let’s put on our thinking hats and learn a little about our nasty little friend chlorine.
It’s everywhere and sometimes in large quantities. One of its primary uses is water purification so everywhere that there is water production, there is chlorine. Good news: in the US, Hazmat teams spend a lot of time dealing with it and training for releases. Lugging around a chlorine kit in a Level A suit is not fun (trust me), but dealing with chlorine releases is part of the curriculum for all Hazmat Technician training. There are releases, but fire departments with hazmat teams are ready.
This is not to say that these releases aren’t significant emotional events. According to the 2004 Emergency Response Guide (which every concerned citizen should know and love) the impact of chlorine release is as follows:
More:
http://blog.wired.com/defense/2007/02/chlorine_bombs__1.html