Kolokol-1
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| This article forms part of the series |
| (A subset of Weapons of mass destruction) |
| Lethal agents |
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| Cyanogen chloride (CK) |
| Hydrogen cyanide (AC) |
| Blister agents |
| Ethyldichloroarsine (ED) |
| Methyldichloroarsine (MD) |
| Phenyldichloroarsine (PD) |
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| Tabun (GA), Sarin (GB) Soman (GD), Cyclosarin (GF) |
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| Diphosgene (DP) |
| Incapacitating agents |
| Agent 15 (BZ) |
| EA-3167 |
| Kolokol-1 |
| Riot control agents |
| Pepper spray (OC) |
| CS gas |
| CN gas (mace) |
| CR gas |
Kolokol-1 (Russian: Колокол, eng. bell) is an opiate-derived, incapacitating agent. Although the exact nature of the active chemical has not been revealed, it is a derivative of the drug fentanyl, possibly the extraordinarily potent carfentanil or 3-Methylfentanyl. It takes effect very quickly, within one to three seconds, reportedly rendering its victims unconscious for two to six hours. Little else is known about this agent.
According to , a former Soviet chemical weapons scientist who now heads the independent in Moscow, the gaseous agent was originally developed around a secret military research facility in Leningrad during the 1970s. Methods of dispersing it were later developed and tested by releasing harmless bacteria through subway system ventilation shafts first in Moscow and then in Novosibirsk. Fyodorov also claimed that leaders of the failed August 20, 1991 Communist coup considered using the agent in the Russian parliament building. [1]
Kolokol-1 was possibly the chemical agent used in the Moscow theater hostage crisis.
References
- ^ Goldiner, Dane. Weir, Fred. (October 29, 2002) Gas looks like secret KGB tool New York Daily News
