Novichok chemical poisoning in Salisbury may have come from Britain's own stockpile
Porton Down is the UK’s prime chemical weapons establishment near Salisbury It is understood that stores of Novichok and other nerve agents are held there for use in the Middle East and elsewhere.Novichok is part of a group of nerve agents developed by the Soviet Union in the 1970s. It is reported to be eight times more toxic than the nerve agent VX, which was used to assassinate the brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un.
Novichok is usually stored as two less toxic chemical ingredients, making it easier to transport. When they’re mixed together, the chemicals react to produce a military-grade nerve agent.
It can kill after being inhaled, injected or absorbed through the skin.It is the chemical used which the UK claim,s Russia used in Salisbury on a double agent and his daughter, and apparently has resulted in the death of a local women and the hospitalisation of her partner. No evidence has been revealed which shows how the Russians imported the chemical to the UK so its seems just as likely that the material came from the UK’s own chemical stockpile. The UK, US, France and Russia all sell weapons throughout the world.
Comments
Post a Comment