As far as I know, white phosphorus is in flash bangs and smoke grenades, so I'm sure it's in all sorts of other devices.
It was used to illuminate the area. You can't be 100% accurate with anything.
The only drawback I can see is that the US Army NOT firing at enemy positions: instead, they were firing to illuminate the positions. I'd rather they fire that shit right into a group of rifle-toting motherfuckers and burn them to death.
By this definition of "chemical," everything is a chemical weapon: bullets become projectiles thanks to a chemical reaction.
The article does mention the use of napalm; I didn't realize the US army still uses that stuff, but it's definitely nasty. Well, I don't really care what we use on guys that are stuck in the 12th century and want everyone to join them on their jihah for Muslim rule. Thanks, but I'll stick to our democracy, no matter how flawed it is.
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As far as I know, white phosphorus is in flash bangs and smoke grenades, so I'm sure it's in all sorts of other devices.
It was used to illuminate the area. You can't be 100% accurate with anything.
The only drawback I can see is that the US Army NOT firing at enemy positions: instead, they were firing to illuminate the positions. I'd rather they fire that shit right into a group of rifle-toting motherfuckers and burn them to death.
By this definition of "chemical," everything is a chemical weapon: bullets become projectiles thanks to a chemical reaction.
The article does mention the use of napalm; I didn't realize the US army still uses that stuff, but it's definitely nasty. Well, I don't really care what we use on guys that are stuck in the 12th century and want everyone to join them on their jihah for Muslim rule. Thanks, but I'll stick to our democracy, no matter how flawed it is.
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