According to Clausewitz,1 the logic of war abhors moderation. In Vom Krieg (On War, 1832), the Prussian soldier and military thinker argues:
“If the wars of civilised people are less cruel and destructive than those of savages, the difference arises from the social condition both of states in themselves and in their relations to each other. Out of this social condition and its relations war arises, and by it war is subjected to conditions, is controlled and modified. But these things do not belong to war itself; they are only given conditions; and to introduce into the philosophy of war itself a principle of moderation would be an absurdity.”
For this reason, the international community has been trying to introduce that principle for a century and a half, including a complete ban on the use of chemical weapons. The Hague Convention of 1899 (reiterated in that of 1907) stated categorically, “The right of belligerents to adopt means of injuring the enemy is not unlimited.” It was specifically forbidden: “To employ poison or poisoned weapons.” Indeed, the “Contracting Powers” further agreed “to abstain from the use of projectiles the sole object of which is the diffusion of asphyxiating or deleterious gases.”
The ban had first been voiced exactly 150 years ago in the “Declaration of St. Petersburg” (November 1868).
War’s tendency to extremes
And yet, on 22 April 1915, at the Second Battle of Ypres, on the Western Front, one of the contracting powers, Germany, launched a huge and deadly chlorine gas attack against the British and French armies. In September, at the Battle of Loos, the British army retaliated, but with almost catastrophic results, for at this time gas could only be released from canisters in the front line, and depended therefore on wind direction for effect.
The following year, the (British) War Department Experimental Station opened at Porton Down in Wiltshire for the testing of chemical weapons, and, in May 1917, took on the additional responsibility for anti-gas defence and respirator development.
By 1918, both sides were routinely using both poisonous and incapacitating gas, delivered with increasing range and sophistication by artillery rather than released from canisters. There were, by some assessments, around 1.3 million casualties overall attributed to the use of gas, and the psychological effect on troops may have had an even greater effect. The casualties were by no means all fatal, but many were life-changing, and the full effects were often realised only later.
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