The Denver Post

Gas attack changed war

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On Tuesday, the 2013 Nobel Peace Prize-winning Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons will hold a commemorat­ive meeting close to the fields. The organizati­on today monitors reports that chlorine gas has repeatedly been used in Syria’s civil war.

The first use by allied forces came in September, when the British unleashed poison gas on the Germans at the Battle of Loos, just across from Ypres in northern France.

Rival armies ultimately launched 146 gas attacks in Belgium, which covered only a small patch of the Western Front. The Germans used about 150 tons of gas in their first attack. Germany ultimately used 68,000 tons. The Allies used more: 82,000 tons.

Historians estimate that more than 1 million soldiers were exposed to gas — and 90,000 killed. The end of the war brought no end to the suffering caused by the weapon.

“A lot of the effects did not kill you, but they were lasting. You have chronic bronchitis, pneumonia,” Chielens said. “The veterans of the war took it with them to their graves.”

Dormant shells littered farmland. Even today, farmers suffer health problems after digging up this toxic harvest.

The French army told Georges Lamour’s wife, Angele, that he either died from gas or was taken prisoner. She kept believing her husband was alive.

Month after month, she wrote letters to “Mon bien cher Georges.” On May 2, 1918, three years after his presumed death, she still wrote: “Is springtime coming so late for you as it is for us?”

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