Poison gas

Poison Gas in Southern Victory
Poison Gas is a weapon invented by Germany during the Great War and shared with the United States. It was quickly copied by Entente nations. Originally poison gas was simply highly pressurized chlorine gas shot across a battlefield at enemy positions. By the end of the war, mustard gas was being used, and was being fired in artillery shells.

In the Second Great War, poison gas had taken on the form of a series of highly potent nerve agents. These were dangerous not only when inhaled but when coming in contact with the skin. Gas was used extensively by both sides in that war and was also used by the Freedom Party in the Confederate States to perpetrate the Blach Holocaust.

Poison Gas in World War
Poison Gas was a weapon introduced in World War I and used extensively by both Germany and the Entente. It was so destructive that it was banned from the battlefield in World War II. However, in 1943, when the Race's Conquest Fleet invaded Britain, Prime Minister Winston Churchill authorized the use of both mustard gas and nerve agents to repel the invaders. Afterward, poison gas was used by all Tosevite not-empires for the duration of the conflict. It was not used by the Race, though it was used in the war against Germany in 1965-66.

Otto Skorzeny used poison gas to protect his atomic bomb from Mordecai Anielewicz, Heinrich Jager, and Ludmila Gorbunova in Lodz in 1945.