Pentagon reveals next superweapon: the stinkbomb

Duncan Campbell in Los Angeles
Thursday July 5, 2001
The Guardian

It is, as 10-year-old boys have known for decades, one of the most powerful
weapons known to humanity. Now the world's most sophisticated and well-funded
centre of defence and armaments has finally made the same discovery.

The Pentagon is developing a stinkbomb powerful enough to drive away hostile
crowds in a move towards what will almost certainly be classified as "stench
warfare".

No longer will demonstrators be able to say that they smell a rat when they
spot the police or army gathering to halt their progress - they will be
smelling something altogether more subtle.

The new stinkbomb will be part of the police and army's arsenal for dealing
with the increasing number of violent protests against globalisation that
have been taking place wherever world leaders and financial institutions
gather around the globe, from Seattle in 1999 to Gothenburg last month.

"It would give us an offensive capability against large and unruly groups of
people, if they are unwilling to move or are openly hostile," a Pentagon
spokesman told the New Scientist magazine, which this week published details
of the invention. "And it would minimise the risk to our people and to the
antagonists."

The researchers who have been working on the project said there was a close
link between a particular kind of smell and fear, and that a particular odour
can activate tissue deep within the brain.

The aim would be to use such a smell to send a panic through the ranks of
demonstrators.

Pam Dalton, a cognitive psychologist at the Monell Chemical Senses Centre in
Philadelphia who is leading the search for a more sensitive stinkbomb, has
tested smells on volunteers of different ethnic origins to try to find a
formula that affects everyone.

She is reported to have found two odours that appear to transcend culture; a
mixture of the two could form the basis of the new weapon.

This could also be seen as the authorities getting their own back for the use
of odour warfare by protesters. A favourite ploy has been to lob lion dung
taken from zoos and safari parks at police horses, who panic at the lions'
scent and throw their riders.


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