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After the Second World War, most people thought there would be no more wars for quite some time. Unfortunately, the Korean War flared up soon after and turned out to be a battle of ideologies - Capitalism versus Marxism.
By the time the Korean War started in 1950, the U.S. had five anti-personnel agents and two anti-crop agents, tested in cluster-bombs. In 1952, the U.S. Air Force requisitioned 23,900 of these cluster-bombs. U.S. scientists were also experimenting with the use of flies, fleas, lice, mosquitoes and ticks, to spread germs. Between 1951 and 1953, during the Korean War, the U.S. spent $345 million on research into biological warfare (about $2.2 billion in current dollars).
Originally posted by lilwolf
no evidence only here say, and there was nothing to be seen that would verify that it ever happened...
and
Bio warfare has been going on a lot longer than korea and the war there, and yet no one has presented much on this particular issue... perhaps because there is nothing to present...
The US has always dismissed the Korean war charges as communist agitprop, but serious questions remain. American pilots who became prisoners of war confessed to the Chinese they had used biological weapons - dropped fleas infected with plague and turkey feathers coated with toxins. When the pilots came home after the war they retracted their confessions, but under threat of court martial.
Endicott and Hagerman have produced the most impressive, expertly researched and, as far as the official files allow, best-documented case for the prosecution yet drawn. The authors conclude from the circumstantial evidence that the US is guilty - not of waging a prolonged biological attack on North Korea and China, but more likely a limited, covert action; a kind of experimental foray with biological weapons to test the kind of war Washington would have waged, had the Korean conflict led to a third world war.
The US experience in Korea, say the authors, "reveals a military culture that allowed an army to resort to scorched-earth tactics, to incendiarism [in 1952, US forces were using an average of 70,000 gallons of napalm daily], to a strategy of total warfare within the confines of Korea, even to the condoning of war crimes". Indeed, their book shows in alarming detail how doggedly the US was developing an array of biological weapons for offensive purposes at a time when the American public was being told the arsenal was purely defensive.
Originally posted by deltaalphanovember
I don't want to go too off-topic here, what is your point? The US tortured captives in order to make them confess they were terrorists plotting against the USA. It must be true - and they have invaded countries and assasinated people solely on this testimony.
Why are tortured confessions acceptable if the US is the torturer?
Originally posted by deltaalphanovember
In Korea, the testimony of the captured pilots must never be used as a main argument because of how that information was gathered.
However, it is mentioned here because it is one of the first public accusations by Korea that the US was engaging in germ warfare at the time.
The book, "Unit 731" said that the bombs that NK said were dropped on their country by the US look like the ones the Unit 731 used on the Chinese during WW2, not like what the US had in the 1950's.
From Sanders's first investigation in the autumn of 1945, MacArthur acceded to granting immunity to members of Unit 731 in exchange for data of research on biological warfare. He also inculcated on Sanders to keep silence on "human experiments."
Originally posted by deltaalphanovember
Clearly it is easier to point fingers at other countries, eh?
Originally posted by deltaalphanovember
It is perfectly reasonable that the US not only used Japanese research, but also used their weapons designs.
Originally posted by deltaalphanovember
Regarding the British designed (specialised germ carrying) bombs - please point me to a link that includes the information that they were better designed than the Japanese version?
Originally posted by deltaalphanovember
Don't forget, the US borrowed a lot of captured tech after WWII - German and Japanese technology. How do you think they got into space?