The Press

Army starts getting rid of WWII chemical weapons

-

The US Army began destroying the nation’s largest remaining stockpile of chemical weapons yesterday, using explosives to rip open a container of mustard agent inside a sealed chamber and then flooding it with another chemical to neutralise it.

The container was the first of 2600 tons of mustard agent that will be destroyed at Pueblo Chemical Depot in southern Colorado, most of it contained in about 780,000 shells.

‘‘Everybody’s really excited, but we’re being cautious, making sure all the procedures are followed exactly,’’ Bruce Huenefeld, manager of the first destructio­n process at the depot, said.

Mustard agent can maim or kill by damaging skin, the eyes and airways.

It is being destroyed under a 1997 internatio­nal treaty banning all chemical weapons. It will take four years to destroy the Pueblo stockpile.

Another 523 tons of mustard and deadly nerve agents are stored at Blue Grass Army Depot in Kentucky. Blue Grass is not expected to start destroying its weapons until 2016 or 2017, finishing in 2023.

The destructio­n process is safe, officials said.

Most of Pueblo’s stockpile will be dismantled and neutralise­d in a highly automated $4.5 billion plant built at the depot.

About 1400 damaged shells and a dozen metal bottles of mustard agent are considered unsuitable for that plant. They will be opened with explosives and neutralise­d in the sealed chamber, which sits inside an airtight structure near the larger automated plant.

The metal bottles contain mustard that was extracted from the shells for testing.

A single bottle was the first container to be opened and neutralise­d on Thursday. Crews were waiting for the neutralisa­tion to finish before draining the chamber, rinsing it and then removing the remains of the bottle.

Once all the bottles are destroyed, crews will start work on the damaged shells, depot spokesman Thomas Schultz said.

The automated plant is not expected to begin work until December or January. Design and constructi­on have taken years, and final testing and training are under way.

Mustard agent is a thick liquid, not a gas as commonly believed. It has no colour and almost no odour, but it got its name because impurities made early versions smell like mustard. The United States acquired 30,600 tons of mustard and nerve agents, but it never used them in war. Nearly 90 per cent of its original stockpile has already been destroyed, mostly by incinerati­on.

 ?? Photo: REUTERS ?? Awaiting destructio­n: Mustard-gas filled155m­mshells at the Pueblo Chemical Depot in Colorado. The pallets of shells are part of a stockpile of 2600 tonnes of World War II-era mustard-agent weapons being destroyed by theUS Army.
Photo: REUTERS Awaiting destructio­n: Mustard-gas filled155m­mshells at the Pueblo Chemical Depot in Colorado. The pallets of shells are part of a stockpile of 2600 tonnes of World War II-era mustard-agent weapons being destroyed by theUS Army.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand