Nerve agents

Nerve agents is a term that is broadly applied to various chemically complex poison gases.

Nerve Agents in World War
Nerve agents had been developed by Germany for use in its concentration camps in World War II. In 1943, Germany and other Tosevite not-empires began using them against the Race. The Race did not respond in kind until its 1965-66 war against Germany, when it used nerve agents in Poland.

In 1945, Otto Skorzeny used nerve agents against Mordechai Anielewicz, Heinrich Jager, and Ludmila Gorbunova when the three attempted to prevent him from destroying the city of Lodz with an atomic bomb after the Peace of Cairo, in which Germany had agreed to recognize Lodz as the Race's territory.

Nerve Agents in Southern Victory
A series of nerve agents had already been developed by both the United States and the Confederate States by the time the Second Great War. They were used extensively on the battlefields of that war as well as in the Freedom Party's concentration camps as part of the Black Holocaust.