
Death By Mustard Gas
How Military Secrecy and Lost Weapons Can Kill
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Death By Mustard Gas
How Military Secrecy and Lost Weapons Can Kill
About this book
In 1943 a top secret consignment of chemical weapons, including deadly mustard gas, arrived in Australia by ship. But there was a problem - it was leaking. Military authorities quickly realised this but, in the interests of secrecy, sent unprotected and unsuspecting wharf labourers into a lethal environment. The result was catastrophic: permanent disability and death. This shocking narrative includes accounts of official deceit, intimidation of gassed labourers and denial of natural justice. The truth, buried in classified documents and the testimony of the few survivors, is that human life was sacrificed for the sake of secrecy. Almost 70 years after war stocks of chemical weapons were apparently totally destroyed, mustard gas is still present on the Australian mainland, in her oceans and along her coastal fringes. The total destruction of chemical stocks is simply another military assumption. The truth is that these deadly weapons were incompletely destroyed, buried or simply lost. Many retain their effectiveness despite the passing of time, a fact that cost one man his life and saw staff and children at a school badly burned in 1964. Mustard gas weapons have been retrieved as recently as 2012 and more may lie in shallow graves waiting to be uncovered. This is a very real lesson for the military of today. This book is a volume in the Australian Army History Collection, published by the Army History Unit (Department of Defence, Australia). It featured on the 7pm ABC news on 28 November 2014.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Other Books By Geoff Plunkett
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- The Australian Army History Collection
- Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Author’s Note
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 – Group 13 Cargo
- Chapter 2 – Worse than the Somme
- Chapter 3 – The Devil’s Hour
- Chapter 4 – Green Vomit
- Chapter 5 – A Fall
- Chapter 6 – Hell Hold
- Chapter 7 – The Tunnels
- Chapter 8 – The Clean-up
- Chapter 9 – Fall Guy
- Chapter 10 – Aftermath
- Chapter 11 – Security Reasons
- Chapter 12 – Conclusion
- Chapter 13 – Nandor Somogyi
- Epilogue – The Idomeneus
- Casualty Roll Call
- Sources
- Endnotes
- List of Photographs and Maps
- Acknowledgements
- Index