Frederick Thomas Frederick Thomas

The Heroism of Logistics, April 1945

Eighty years ago, in April 1945, a detachment of one officer and seven enlisted men from the 757th Chemical Depot Company were finally given the forward assignment they wanted. Their orders sent them from their Company’s base at Hickam Field in Hawaii to the Mariana Islands to assist in the firebombing attacks then being conducted on Japanese cities. Although personnel of the 757th had experience and expertise with both toxic chemical bombs and the most sophisticated of America’s incendiary bombs, this mission was planned to help fill a critical shortage of standard incendiary bombs with the quick delivery of low-tech barrel bombs.

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Frederick Thomas Frederick Thomas

The Chemical Bombs that DIDN’T Fall on Nagasaki

Eighty years ago, on March 5, 1945, Lt. Col. Wyss from U.S. Chemical Warfare Headquarters in Calcutta visited Ondal Advanced Chemical Park in West Bengal, India. The purpose of his visit was to reassess the stockpile of toxic chemical bombs then being maintained at Ondal by the 771st Chemical Depot Company (Aviation). Immediately after Wyss’s visit, the soldiers of the 771st began a major project to dispose of tens of thousands of chemical bombs that were judged to be either unneeded or unusable.

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Frederick Thomas Frederick Thomas

The US Must Accept Responsibility for the Toxic Bombs We Buried in India

Long-secret documents from WWII show that the US Army’s 771st Chemical Depot Company buried thousands of M47A2 mustard-filled bombs at Ondal Airbase in British-ruled India. The 769th Chemical Depot Company helped bury hundreds of similar bombs at nearby Chakulia Airbase. Practically, legally and morally, the US should acknowledge its responsibility to remediate these burial sites.

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