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Gas Russians Used Was Opium Derivative, U.S. Officials Say
WHDH-TV Boston ^ | 10/28/02 | AP

Posted on 10/28/2002 8:53:37 AM PST by Lady Jag

World News
10/28/2002
Gas Russians Used Was Opium Derivative, U.S. Officials Say
 Printable version
 
 

WASHINGTON -- The mysterious gas Russian forces pumped into a theater to end a hostage crisis was an opiate -- a chemical related to morphine, Pentagon officials said Monday.

The Bush administration, meanwhile, refused to criticize Russian special forces for using the gas, which killed 116 of the hostages as well as the hostage takers.

"The president abhors the loss of life, but he understands that it is the terrorists" who are responsible for the tragedy, Bush spokesman Ari Fleischer said Monday as the president traveled to New Mexico.

Military officials said the U.S. embassy in Moscow had determined that the gas used by the Russians was some sort of opium derivative. Such substances not only kill pain and dull the senses but also can cause coma and death by shutting down breathing and circulation.

Russian authorities have refused to name the substance used, even keeping that information from doctors treating the rescued hostages.

Fleischer did not endorse the tactic in remarks to reporters as Bush flew from Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, to Phoenix, then from Arizona to New Mexico. But he made clear the administration's view that blame for the deaths lay with the captors.

Asked directly about the use of the gas, Fleischer wouldn't say whether the administration believed it was appropriate. "We don't know what all the facts are," he said.

But, he said, "As that information is developed, the president feels very strongly that the people who caused this are the terrorists."

Bush had not spoken to Russian President Vladimir Putin as of Sunday evening, Fleischer said.

Fleischer said the United States still is unsure how many Americans were involved in the siege but blamed that on the difficulty of keeping track of traveling Americans and not on the Russian government.

The measured White House reaction comes as Bush seeks Russia's support for a tough resolution in the United Nations on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.

In Moscow, a U.S. consular officer visited an American survivor of the theater hostage crisis, a State Department official said.

The identity of the female patient was not released for privacy reasons, the official said. Although she was hospitalized, the official said she was not injured.

"We are still continuing to determine the whereabouts of possibly one or two other Americans," the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Russian special forces troopers ended the 21/2-day takeover before dawn Saturday with a raid on the theater shortly before the hostage-takers, rebels from Russia's embattled Chechnya region, had threatened to begin killing their more than 800 captives.

The Moscow Health Department said 405 former hostages, including nine children, remained hospitalized Monday after 239 were released. At least 45 remained in grave condition Monday, Deputy Prime Minister Valentina Matviyenko said Monday.

All but two of the 118 hostages known to be dead were killed by the gas, not their captors. The 50 Chechen rebels holding the hostages also were killed, either by the gas or by gunshots as security services stormed the theater. (AP)



TOPICS: Breaking News; Crime/Corruption; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; Russia
KEYWORDS: gas; hostages; russia; terrorism
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To: strela
The terrorists in this incident had gas masks (called "respirators" by the news reports, but I assume they were gas masks). But they would have had to wear the masks 24 hours a day for the duration, and even then it may not have helped, as I suspect this stuff may be absorbed through skin contact.
61 posted on 10/28/2002 10:46:24 PM PST by kms61
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To: kms61
The terrorists in this incident had gas masks (called "respirators" by the news reports, but I assume they were gas masks).

You're likely right. Something like a Scott Air Pack respirator that firefighters use would likely be too heavy, expensive, and cumbersome for terrorists.

62 posted on 10/29/2002 11:08:17 AM PST by strela
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 61 | View Replies]


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