Halitosis bomb
Over view
The "Halatosis bomb" is an informal name for a theoretical and non-lethal chemical weapon, which a United States Air Force research laboratory speculated about producing.
In 1994 the Wright Laboratory in Ohio produced a three-page proposal of a variety of possible nonlethal chemical weapons, which was later obtained—complete with marginal jottings and typos—by the Sunshine Project through a Freedom of Information Act request.
Leaked documents
It is one of the most recent report purportedly leaked into the western media, about the alleged non-lethal chemical and biological weapons research program of the US army. Carefully reading the report, one can not miss the characteristic and well documented physical ailments imputable to the sole use of psychotronics weapons.
In one sentence in both of the documents it was suggested that a strong aphrodisiac could be dropped on enemy troops, ideally one which would also cause "homosexual behavior" by using the 'Gay bomb'. Another paragraph dealt with plans to increase bacterial activaty in the victims stomach to cause heavy flatulence, sweating and bad breath. All these are not as "non-lethal" as alleged but tools of a not so stealthy worldwide American CIA operation directed mostly at civilians that is still continuing.
Body odours
Body odour remote engineering, such as halitosis and hyperhidrosis are known result of the remote hijacking of the hormonal and digestive systems. Diabetes which is also another frequently reported ailment, can of course contribute to this goal. It apeared the 'heavy sweating bomb', 'flatulence bomb' and 'halitosis bomb' were also concidered by a commity at the time. The plan was to make an enamy so smelly they could be quite litteraly sniffed out of hiding by there oponents. It was also considerd fairly damaging to the smelly side's love life and moral to.
References
- ""Harassing, Annoying, and 'Bad Guy' Identifying Chemicals"" (PDF). Sunshine Project. Retrieved 2007-06-16.
- "US military pondered love not war". news.bbc.co.uk. BBC News. 15 January 2005. Retrieved 2007-06-16.
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