How the US violates international treaties banning Bio-Chem Weapons
The information below was researched by the SUNSHiNE PROJECT - to go to the relevant page of their highly recommended website, click here.
US "Non Lethal" Chemical (and Biochemical) Weapons Research:
A Collection of Documents Detailing a Dangerous Program
Documents are listed in reverse chronological order. References to Sunshine
Project publications are provided. Unless otherwise noted, all documents are
in PDF (Adobe Acrobat) format. Additional documents of note will be posted
as they become available.
These documents were obtained by Sunshine Project in requests to the Joint
Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate, the Judge Advocate General of the US Navy,
the National Nuclear Security Administration, and the National Academies of
Science. Several are from public US government websites. The Sunshine Project
has requested almost 100 related documents that have not been released by
those institutions.
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Front End Analysis for Non-Lethal Chemicals (PDF - JPG version here)
Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate
Early 2003Comment: Despite JNLWD's oft-reiterated denials that it is developing
incapacitating chemical weapons, this short item appeared on JNLWD's website
in early 2003. It describes the Directorate's program to categorize and assess
drug weapons, in part by "identifying advances in the pharmaceutical
industry." This work is being conducted with the US Army's Soldier Biological
Chemical Command (SBCCOM), at Aberdeen/Edgewood, Maryland.
Also see:
The US Department of Defense Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program: Program Overview
The Advantages and Limitations of Calmatives for Use as a Non-Lethal Technique
(Penn State's 'bid' for work on this contract.)
NEW
Multi-Shot Launcher with Advanced Less-Than-Lethal Ring Airfoil Projectiles
Proposal by Vanek Prototype Co. (2002-90-CA-IZ) to the US Department of Justice
March 2002Comment: The ring airfoil projectile (RAP) is a "non-lethal"
weapon with both kinetic and chemical variants in its original design. It
is a aerodynamic, circular-shaped munition that can "sting" with
blunt force, or discharge a chemical on impact - or both. In the 1970s, the
RAP was originally produced by the United States in response to domestic unrest,
particularly the shootings at Kent State University in May, 1970. The original
Army version, of which 500,000 were produced, was attached to the end of an
M-16 barrel and fired much like a rifle grenade. The original RAP was probably
never used and was rapidly made obsolete by modifications to the M-16 design.
Under this new contract with the US Department of Justice, Vanek will manufacture
protoypes of a new RAP launcher and projectile, concentrating improving chemical
delivery and creating a launcher (gun) to that can rapidly discharge up to
8 chemical rounds. According to the proposal, these will accurately deliver
chemicals up to 50 meters, and the work will "concentrate on the delivery
of a chemical payload on and about the target. Payloads of incapacitants,
irritants, malodorants, and marking agents would be of first interest..."
The proposal was approved in the amount of $339,000.
Also see:
Assessment Report: US/UK Non-Lethal Weapons (NLW)/Urban Operations Executive
Seminar (on relationship between DOJ and JNLWD)
Warning: This document is large (1 mb).
A Technical Assessment of the 81mm Non-Lethal Mortar Munition (81NLMM)
US Marine Corps contract M67004-99-D-0037, purchase request number M9545002RCR2BC6
January 2002 Comment: This document is a contract between the Marine Corps
Research University (MCRU, at the Applied Research Laboratory of Pennsylvania
State University) and the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate (JNLWD).
See other documents below about MCRU work:
The Advantages and Limitations of Calmatives for Use as a Non-Lethal Technique
Non-Lethal Weapons: Acquisitions, Capabilities, Doctrine, & Strategy:
A Course of Instruction.
To The Future: Non-Lethal Capabilities Technologies in the 21st Century (excerpts)
JNLWD
November 2001Comment: This document consists of slides extracted from a presentation
by the JNLWD Commanding Officer to the University of New Hampshire's Non-lethal
Technology and Academic Research III symposium in November 2001. The slides
discuss JNLWD's work on calmatives and microencapsulation and on long range
delivery devices in their combined context, providing details that are specific
to JNLWD's 81mm mortar program. A slide notes the Chemical Weapons Convention
as a "challenge" to the work. The final slide indicates that "non-lethal
counter-personnel capabilities will attack a target's senses or cognitive/motor
abilities" (also note sidebar) and reiterates the desire for long-range
delivery capabilities.
Slide 2 exhibits two disturbing themes common in many JNLWD presentations:
a) a desire for indiscriminate weapons and b) a tendency to closely relate
peaceful political dissent with acts of terrorism. An equation is evidently
drawn between peaceful political protest (a photo of Serbian children protesting
NATO air strikes) to terrorism (bombing of the USS Cole). The slide reads
that non-lethal weapons provide "assistance in target discrimination";
but this should not be misunderstood to mean that calmatives would be used
discriminately. Much the opposite. JNLWD uses "discrimination" here
to mean sorting out the people it wants and doesn't want, and not in the way
that "discriminate" is used with respect to legality of weapons.
In JNLWD's conception, calmatives would be used on large numbers of people,
combatants and non-combatants, and then US forces would sort through a multitude
incapacitated by gas to identify the "bad guys". In JNLWD's wargaming
(see below), it was noted that soldiers would probably have to be trained
to refrain from killing persons already incapacitated with chemical weapons.
Warning: This document is large (1.4 mb).
NEW
Presentation for the Airline Pilot Association
JNLWD
October 2001Comment: This is JNLWD's "Narco Airways" presentation,
made by then-Commander Col. George Fenton to the Airline Pilots Association
shortly after September 11, 2001. The presentation begins with several slides
that are standard JNLWD promotional material, including photos from the "non-lethal"
mortar and Objective Individual Combat Weapon rounds programs, both of which
involve chemical payloads. Starting with Slide 11, the presentation moves
to discussing the use of incapacitating agents on commercial airliners. A
number of technologies are initially mentioned, and a slide then focuses on
so-called "calmatives". Two slides include diagrams of JNLWD's concepts,
including placement of incapacitant (aerosol) generators onboard, as well
as an "injectable pharmaceuticals" unit outside the cockpit door.
The aerosol generator would disperse a drug throughout the passenger cabin.
A slide identifies a "benefit" of incapacitants as that they can
be "tailored" to adjust for duration and effects including paralysis
and sleep. The same slide asserts that pharmaceutical industry data and JNLWD's
"Front End Analysis" program provide supporting data for these applications
of drugs. Under risks, the slide lists "permanent injury/death to the
infirm".
The Marine Corps FOIA office took 15 months to release this document.
Also see Front End Analysis for Non-Lethal Chemicals (above).
Warning: Due to many greyscale scans, this document isvery large (4.4 mb)
Less-Than-Lethal Program
Office of Science and Technology, National Institute of Justice
US Department of Justice
January 2002Comment: This office of the US Justice Department (DOJ) participates
in JNLWD. Slide 14 of this document describes the National Institute of Justice's
contract to MCRU (ARL/PSU, see above and below) to assess a mixture of pepper
gas (OC) and unidentified calmative chemical agents. The slide indicates that
the chemical weapons mixture was reviewed by a US Department of Justice liability
panel. Under FOIA, however, DOJ has responded that no such review took place.
This document is particularly interesting when read alongside of Assessment
Report: US/UK Non-Lethal Weapons (NLW)/Urban Operations Executive Seminar
(see below), in which JNLWD officials admit that development of "calmative"
chemical weapons violates US Department of Defense regulations; but indicate
that they will nonetheless develop such weapons through their relationships
with the US Departments of Justice and Energy.
This presentation was made at the University of New Hampshire's Non-lethal
Technology and Academic Research III symposium in November 2001. There is
a discrepancy in the date on the document, which is 18 Jan 2002 (Slide 1).
See Delivery of Chemicals by Microcapsules (below) for more from the University
of New Hampshire's work with JNLWD.
Warning: This document is large (1.8 mb).
Non-Lethal Weapons: Acquisitions, Capabilities, Doctrine, & Strategy:
A Course of Instruction
US Marine Corps contract M67004-99-D-0037, purchase request number M9545002RCR2BA7
December 2001Comment: This late 2001 contract between JNLWD and the Marine
Corps Research University (MCRU, at Pennsylvania State Univ.) is for preparation
of an training course on non-lethal weapons. Page 3 of this report indicates
"classified: SECRET" briefings by JNLWD officers on anti-personnel
chemical weapons. The course was given to officers at the Marine Corps Command
and Staff College sometime after March 2002.
Liquid Payload Dispensing Concept Studies Techniques for the 81mm Non-Lethal
Mortar Cartridge
US Army contract DAAE-30-01-M-1444
September 2001Comment: This document is a JNLWD-funded contract between General
Dynamics Aerospace Solid Propellant Systems Group (Redmond, WA, formerly named
Primex Aerospace) and the US Army's Picatinny Arsenal (NJ). This contract
is for work on the aerosol-generating cannister for "non-lethal"
crowd control which was developed for JNLWD by Primex in 1999-2000. (See final
report of that project below, Overhead Liquid Dispersal System (OLDS) Non-Lethal
Demonstration Program).
This newer contract calls for General Dynamics to to use the knowledge gained
in the OLDS program to help develop a "gas dispersion generator"
(aerosolizing payload cannister) for an 81mm mortar round, and to "research
and identify analytical tools that can be used in follow-on design/performance
modeling of droplet formation and dynamics." and to perform "Preliminary
parametric estimates of ground area coverage versus payload volume and height
of burst."
Warning: This document is a Microsoft Word file compressed in ZIP format.
It is large (1.4 mb).
81mm Frangible Case Cartridge
US Army Contract DAAE-30-01-C-1077
June 2001Comment: This document is a JNLWD-funded contract between M2 Technologies
(West Hyannisport, MA) and the US Army's Picatinny Arsenal (NJ). This contract
is for M2 to provide engineering and assembly services for a "non-lethal"
chemical mortar round, culminating in a 2.5km range live fire demonstration
with a "generic payload for visual effect".
Warning: This document is a Rich Text Format (.rtf) word processing file compressed
in ZIP format. It is large (1.2 mb). Fabrication of Composite Mortar
Components and Investigation of mortar Cartridge
Kinetic Energy Mitigation Technique for the 81mm Non-Lethal Mortar Cartridge
US Army Contract DAAE-30-01-M-1289
June 2001Comment: This document is a JNLWD-funded contract between United
Defense LP (UDLP, Minneapolis, MN) and the US Army's Picatinny Arsenal (NJ).
This contract is a follow-on of JNLWD-UDLP contract M67854-99-C1031, which
called for the company to demonstrate a "non-lethal" 81mm mortar
round with 1.5km range. This newer contract is for UDLP to re-engineer and
manufacture new components for a 2.5km range round. The work was scheduled
to be completed in April 2002.
A related contract (under solicitation number DAAE30-02-Q-0314), also funded
by JNLWD, was awarded to Armtec Defense Products of Coachella, CA. This contract
is not available on the US Army's online procurement network and has been
requested by the Sunshine Project under FOIA.
Warning: This document is a Microsoft Word file compressed in ZIP format.
It is large (2.1 mb).
Overview of Legal Issues Affecting Non-Lethal Weapons
International and Operational Law Branch, Headquarters, US Marine Corps
April 2001 Comment: This document stems from a 2001 attempt by the Joint Non-Lethal
Weapons Directorate (JNLWD) to obtain endorsement from the US National Academies
of Science (NAS) for development of chemical weapons including incapacitants,
malodorants, and possibly convulsants. The most important aspects of this
presentation - the Marine Corps discussion of the Chemical Weapons Convention
- can be found in pages 16 through 25. The document format (overhead slides)
can be difficult to interpret. It is best to read this item in conjunction
with the US Navy Judge Advocate General's Legal Review of Oleoresin Capsicum
(OC) Pepper Spray (see below), which clarifies the Pentagon lawyers' meaning
when using phrases such as "not for toxic effect".
The US Department of Defense Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Program: Program Overview
(exerpts)
JNLWD (VA)
April 2001Comment: This document consists of extracts from a longer presentation.
Of particular note is the bottom slide on page 3 (page 8 of the original presentation),
which details the technologies in which JNLWD is investing.
The FY 99/00 program on microencapsulation of chemical weapons included work
by the Advanced Polymer Laboratory of the University of New Hampshire (see
below, Delivery of chemicals by microcapsules.)
The FY 01/02 program on "Front End Analysis of RCAs" is particularly
worrisome and follows on the microencapsulation work of 1999 and 2000. Information
about this program has been difficult to obtain. JNLWD officials have described
it as secret. Public documents, however, indicate that a major contractor
in this program is the US Army Soldier Biological Chemical Command (SBCCOM)
at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland. (See: Front End Analysis for Non-Lethal
Chemicals above.)
In addition to the "Front End Analysis of RCAs" program, SBCCOM
is helping JNLWD develop the "non-lethal" 81mm mortar round (see
below, Design and Development of an 81mm Non-Lethal Mortar Cartridge).
Little has been made public about the FY 00/01 program on a "NL Loitering
Submunition", which centered around the notion of an unmanned aerial
vehicle equiped with a crowd control payload, including chemical weapons in
some conceptions. Much of the work on this program was conducted on US military
bases in Maryland, Virginia, and possibly Texas. (See below, Liquid/Aerosol
Dispersant Module for Short Range UAV Platform.)
US Marine Corps Non-Lethal Weapons Requirements
Marine Corps Combat Development Command (VA)
c. late 2000 or early 2001
Comment: Two items are particularly notable in this report. The first is the indication of a change in the reasons why the Marines are intersted in non-lethal weapons. Initial interest was in weapons for specific situations such as riot control and "military operations other than war" ("MOOTW"), i.e. fallout from the Pentagon's Mogadishu experience. In this document, a shift is signaled toward broader interest in NLW as weapons "effective in the full spectrum of warfare", in other words, use of non-lethal weapons as a 'force multipier', a dangerous strategy that has historically contributed to escalation and geater use of lethal weapons, including weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Examples include the Vietnam War (police tear gas -> urban warfare & other uses) and World War I (obscurants -> mustard gas). Second, this report includes a very strong emphasis on USMC acquisition of incapacitating weapons.
Assessment Report: US/UK Non-Lethal Weapons (NLW)/Urban Operations Executive
Seminar
(Report apparently authored by JNLWD)
November 2000Comment: The most interesting aspects of this report relate to
a) United Kingdom's position that the "calmative" chemical weapons
(see last page, and passages through the text) of interest to JNLWD violate
the Chemical Weapons Convention and b) JNLWD's claim that it can do an end-around
of treaty controls by contracting work out to the US Departments of Justice
and Energy. Circumstances suggest JNLWD is proceding with the plan articulated
here: The National Institute of Justice, a unit of the US Department of Justice,
is currently funding calmatives research (a mix of OC and drug agents) by
the Marine Corps Research University at Pennsylvania State University (see
Justice document above). (Also see The Advantages and Limitations of Calmatives
for Use as a Non-Lethal Technique, below, a report which predates current
DOJ-funded calmatives development.)
Warning: This document is large (840 kb).
81mm Non-Lethal Mortar: Joint RDT&E Pre-Milestone 0 & Concept Exploration
Program
US Army Picatinny Arsenal (NJ)
Report to JNLWD (VA)
20 November 2000Warning: This document is large (2.2 mb).
The Advantages and Limitations of Calmatives for Use as a Non-Lethal Technique
Available in Two Formats:
1) Original Document as Released to the Sunshine Project from the National
Academies of Science
2) Penn State's PDF Version of this report (omits chemical diagram of fentanyl
on the cover.)
Marine Corps Research University (Applied Research Laboratory, Pennsylvania
State University)
October 2000Comment: The biochemical weapons proposed in this shocking report
are of major concern. They violate the federal Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism
Act of 1989, the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention, and the Chemical
Weapons Convention. The lead author of this report recently left Penn State
to become a Dean at the University of Pittsburgh. The other authors, including
a medical doctor, remain at Penn State and continue to work in the development
of "non-lethal" weapons.
As indicated in the report, the Penn State team prepared a database on calmative
agents which it submitted to JNLWD in electonic format (a zip disk). Under
FOIA, JNLWD initially claimed that this database is exempt from release because
it constitutes part of a commercial offer to the government. After more intense
questioning, JNLWD then decided that the database is not exempt from disclosure;
but now claims that the database cannot be located and, therefore, cannot
be released.
Why two versions? Months after the Sunshine Project scanned and placed this
document on its website, the authors released an altered version of the report.
This version deletes the chemical diagram of fentanyl (the agent reportedly
used by Russian Special Forces in October 2002 in the Moscow Theater) found
on the original report's cover.
A more detailed comparison of the different report versions is planned. The
text of the Penn State version is searchable within Adobe Acrobat.
See Sunshine Project publication(s):
The MCRU Calmatives Study and JNLWD: A Summary of (Public) Facts
Pentagon Program Pushes Psychopharmacological WarfareWarning: This document
is large (1.2 mb).
NEW
Double Steal: The use of the Non-Lethal Bio-Weapons in Offensive Operations
World Wide Chemical Conference, US Army Chemical School, Ft. Leonard Wood,
MO
June 2000Comment: This bizarre presentation by the (now deceased) historian
of the US Army Chemical School describes the author's fictional scenario in
which China and North Korea team up to overrun Taiwan and South Korea by using
"non-lethal" anti-personnel and anti-material weapons. The presentation
begins with discussion of the Plague in Europe and the 1918 Spanish Flu. Using
a metaphor from US baseball, the presentation then describes how Chinese and
North Korean use of 'non-lethal' weapons might create a situation where, for
the United States, "surrender is our only option." The author argues
that "these new types of weapons can reduce America's military from the
best technological force in the world, to using bows and arrows."
While it would be tempting to relegate such perspectives to an irrelevant
lunatic fringe, in fact, others with similarly bizarre perspectives on science
and politics have played a major role in shaping the US 'non-lethal' weapons
program. Another US military 'non-lethal' weapons thinker, Col. John Alexander,
is an active investigator of unidentified flying objects and promotes gathering
military intelligence by employing psychics who use 'remote visioning'. Alexander's
National Institute of Discovery Science in Las Vegas, Nevada, describes itself
as "a privately funded science institute engaged in research of aerial
phenomena, animal mutilations, and other related anomalous phenomena".
Among its unusual interests, the Institute investigates and publishes papers
on cases of livestock deaths that are purportedly attributable to activity
by extraterrestrials. Alexander's other responsibilities have included directing
a 'non-lethal' weapons research team at New Mexico's Los Alamos National Lab,
representing the US at NATO, and serving on the National Academies of Science
Panel on Non-Lethal Weapons.
This document is in Microsoft Powerpoint format.
Overhead Liquid Dispersal System (OLDS) Non-Lethal Demonstration Program
(Final Report)
Primex Aerospace Company (WA), a subsidiary of General Dynamics (FL)
Now doing business as General Dynamics Aerospace Solid Propellant Systems
Group
April 2000Comment: This document is the final report of the company's initial
effort to develop an aerosol device for crowd control weapons. The report
notes that the "OLDS" system can be adapted for a mortar round and
that initial experiments to do this were conducted. This report includes photographs
of field tests. In 2001, JNLWD asked General Dynamics to continue this work,
by developing a "gas dispersion generator" for use in the longer-range
81mm "non-lethal" mortar round (see above, Liquid Payload Dispensing
Concept Studies Techniques for the 81mm Non-Lethal Mortar Cartridge).
Design and Development of an 81mm Non-Lethal Mortar Cartridge
United Defense LP (MN)
US Army Soldier Biological Chemical Command (SBCCOM, MD)
US Army Research Laboratory (ARL, MD)
March 2000(Document added: 17 Sep 02)
Comment: This document details the JNLWD-funded development and testing of
the 81mm "mom-lethal" mortar round by a collaboration involving
United Defense, a Minneapolis-based private company and US Army weapons developers
based at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland.
Warning: This document is large (4.1 mb).
Less-than-Lethal Systems: Situational Control by Olfactory Stimuli
Science Applications International Corporation (CA)
June 1998See Sunshine Project publications:
Non-Lethal Weapons Research in the US: Calmatives & Malodorants
US Tests Ethnically-Targeted Crowd Control Weapons
Commercial Backpack Blower / Sprayer System
US Army CBDCOM (MD)
June 1998
Legal Review of Oleoresin Capsicum (OC) Pepper Spray
US Navy Judge Advocate General (VA)
May 1998Comment: This document will be discussed in upcoming Sunshine Project
publications.
Warning: This document is large (732 kb).
Contract DAAD13-98-M-0064: "Establish Odor Response Profiles"
US Army CBDCOM (MD) / Monell Chemical Senses Center (PA)
April 1998See Sunshine Project publications:
Non-Lethal Weapons Research in the US: Calmatives & Malodorants
US Tests Ethnically-Targeted Crowd Control Weapons
Delivery of chemicals by microcapsules
Advanced Polymer Laboratory, University of New Hampshire
1998
Comment: UNH is also a participant in JNLWD's mortar development efforts.
Enhanced Degradation of Military Material
Naval Research Laboratory (DC)
1998 Comment: The biological weapons development described in this proposal
violates the federal Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989 and the
Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention.
See Sunshine Project publication(s):
US Armed Forces Press for Offensive Bioweapons
Pentagon BW Proposals at US Attorney's Office
Non-Lethal Weapons Research in the US: Genetically Engineered Anti-Material
Weapons Anti-Material Biocatalysts and Sensors
Armstrong Laboratory, Brooks Air Force Base (TX)
1998 Comment: The biological weapons development described in this proposal
violates the federal Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989 and the
Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention.
See Sunshine Project publication(s):
US Armed Forces Press for Offensive Bioweapons
Pentagon BW Proposals at US Attorney's Office
Non-Lethal Weapons Research in the US: Genetically Engineered Anti-Material
Weapons
Dose Safety Margin Enhancement for Chemical Incapacitation and Less-Than-Lethal
Targeting
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (CA)
January 1997Comment: This is the final report of a contract with the US Department
of Justice. This report discusses testing of small arms ammunition delivering
an opiate/DMSO mixture and the researchers' discussions with a pharmaceutical
company concerning design of a further combination with naloxone (narcan).
The report's Executive Summary mentions that the LLNL research team has conducted
similar research for "special military operations and low intensity conflict".
The report calls for further testing on animals, human skin, and human subjects.
Page 21 of this document contains a notable passage concerning use of a fentanyl-based
agent: "The dry powder could be dispersed as a smoke during a hostage
situation. Terrorists would be incapacitated by breathing anesthetic smoke
injected into an air duct or office building air conditioning system."
The idea bears a striking resemblance the disastrous events of 2002 in the
Moscow theater, where more than 100 innocent hostages died.This document is
all the more notable when read alongside of Assessment Report: US/UK Non-Lethal
Weapons (NLW)/Urban Operations Executive Seminar (see above), in which JNLWD
officials admit that development of "calmative" chemical weapons
violates US Department of Defense regulations; but indicate that they will
nonetheless develop such weapons through their relationships with the US Departments
of Justice and Energy.
Warning: This document is large (4.5 mb).
Preliminary Legal Review of Proposed Chemical-Based Non-Lethal Weapons
US Navy Judge Advocate General
1997
Nonlethal Delivery System for Nonlethal Mortar Payload
US Army Research Laboratory, Aberdeen Proving Ground (MD)
1997 Depolymerization (Proposed Nonlethal Weapon Project)
Los Alamos National Laboratory (NM)
May 1994
A White Paper for Catalytic Depolymerization of Rubber
Department of Defense Programs, Los Alamos National Laboratory (NM)
April 1994
Antipersonnel Chemical Immobilizers: Sedatives
US Army Edgewood Arsenal (MD)
April 1994
Role of Non-Lethal Chemical Irritants
Naval Air Warfare Center, Weapons Division, China Lake (CA)
April 1994
Biofouling and Biocorrosion
National Security Programs Office, Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL)
1994 Comment: The biological weapons development described in this proposal
violates the federal Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989 and the
Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. Another INEL document from the same
research program titled "Metabolic Engineering" was requested under
FOIA over a year ago. It has not been released.
See Sunshine Project publication(s):
US Armed Forces Press for Offensive Bioweapons
Pentagon BW Proposals at US Attorney's Office
Non-Lethal Weapons Research in the US: Genetically Engineered Anti-Material
Weapons Contaminant Aerosol Munitions
Defense Nuclear Agency (VA)
1994
Frontal Attack Anti-Vehicle Liquid or Aerosol Dispensing Mine
DCS Corporation (NJ)
1994
Liquid/Aerosol Dispersant Module for Short Range UAV Platform
DCS Corporation (NJ)
1994
Lubricant and Grease Additives for Immobilizing Machinery
Sandia National Laboratory (NM)
1994
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| ______________________________________ | June 30, 2004 |
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