Use of plague as a biological weapon Biotero is defined as the intentional use of dangerous microorganisms or viruses to kill a large number of people. Common examples of biological agents include anthrax, botulism intoxication, smallpox and plague. The most common form is the plague that killed most of the European population in the Middle Ages. The plague of Yersinia pestis causes three forms of plague, but because of its benefits in transmission and production, pulmonary plague is used for bioterrorism.
Since September 11, 2001, many people around the world are concerned about terrorism, weapons of mass destruction (WMD), and biological warfare. In addition to smallpox, anthrax, and Ebola plague is suspected as a potential biological weapon. It was initially one of the known biological weapons (Mongolian army threw the patient to the wall of the caffe), and claimed that the United States and the former Soviet Union developed immune sick species for all antibiotics did. During the Cold War, both the United States and the Soviet Union developed methods for atomizing plague particles. If these particles are fired in the air, the occurrence will result in pulmonary plague. Although there is a vaccine against the plague, it takes several weeks for the vaccine to become effective, and the victim of the plague dies long ago, so it can be seen that it is not useful for fashion. It is no wonder that many people are worried about using plague like this in this way.
The last epidemic killed about half of the European population and wandered around and in the 13th and 14th centuries the world's population has decreased by nearly 100 million people. In the late 1980s, the Soviet biological war research program found a way to use the plague as a weapon to fire enemies with missile warheads. How do I get it wrong? In addition to the plague, exiles also revealed that the Soviet biological weapons program still has hundreds of tons of anthrax and ceilings.
The use of biological weapons is rarer than the use of chemical weapons. In the 14th century, it is said that plague-infected bodies were discharged to enemy camps in the Russian Crimean peninsula. In colonial America, British hoped for them to be infected and provided blankets from their smallpox clinic to Native Americans. From the late 1930s to the 1940s, Japan was subjected to the only massive military biological attack against China. The Japanese shed plague and other bacteria on airplanes in several towns, causing disease outbreaks. In 1984, the only massive terrorist attack on biological weapons occurred in the United States. Members of Oregon 's Rajneesh Cult put Salmonella in Salad Bar at several restaurants. 750 people are sick, but no one is dead