DrRajpalSingh
October 3rd, 2013, 10:02 PM
The British had developed devastating chemical weapon [M Device] at Porton Laboratories in Wiltshire and described by the head of munitions as the most devastating chemical weapon ever devised.
Giles Milton, British Historian has unearthed the hidden letters of British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill in which he advocated the use of Chemical weapons to eliminate Indians who were raising their voice against the British Imperialism.
He writes: ''What I found really shocking was when Winston Churchill wrote this internal memo to the India Office, along the lines of 'We should use it against the tribes on the North West Front [of India]. They are really troublesome, let's gas them.''
Churchill sanctioned the use of the most devastating chemical weapon called M Device which is like a shell with a canister of gas on the end ever devised against the Russian Bolsheviks also. Churchill's idea was to use the M Device against the Russian Bolsheviks. 50,000 of them were taken up in planes and then dropped on the Bolshevik controlled villages in Northern Russia between August and September, 1918.
For full report log in www.tribuneindia.com dated October 3, 2013 Chandigarh edition.
Giles Milton, British Historian has unearthed the hidden letters of British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill in which he advocated the use of Chemical weapons to eliminate Indians who were raising their voice against the British Imperialism.
He writes: ''What I found really shocking was when Winston Churchill wrote this internal memo to the India Office, along the lines of 'We should use it against the tribes on the North West Front [of India]. They are really troublesome, let's gas them.''
Churchill sanctioned the use of the most devastating chemical weapon called M Device which is like a shell with a canister of gas on the end ever devised against the Russian Bolsheviks also. Churchill's idea was to use the M Device against the Russian Bolsheviks. 50,000 of them were taken up in planes and then dropped on the Bolshevik controlled villages in Northern Russia between August and September, 1918.
For full report log in www.tribuneindia.com dated October 3, 2013 Chandigarh edition.