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ID182955
Title ProperCovert battlefield
Other Title InformationDoctor Witaszek, the WKZO, and the Polish use of biological and chemical warfare against the Third Reich
LanguageENG
AuthorPetersen, Robert
Summary / Abstract (Note)During World War II, the Polish resistance movement used chemical and biological weapons (CBW) against the Third Reich. The use of CBW against the Third Reich most likely originated in a secret Polish biological-weapons program, which existed in the 1930s and went underground after the September 1939 German invasion. Between 1940 and 1942, a unit of the Polish resistance movement named WKZO (Wielkopolskie Kierownictwo Związku Odwetu—the Greater Poland Leadership of the Union of Retaliation) conducted CBW sabotage in the German-annexed area Reichsgau Wartheland and its main city Posen (today’s Poznań). By investigating the use of CBW by the WKZO until its destruction in 1942, it is possible to demonstrate how these weapons were made and used. The article also describes the German reaction, including what defensive measures the German high command took to meet the threat of CBW.
`In' analytical NoteNonproliferation Review Vol. 27, No.4-6; Jul-Dec 2020: p.289-308
Journal SourceNonproliferation Review Vol: 27 No 4-6
Key WordsPoland ;  Chemical Weapons ;  Germany ;  Non-State Actors ;  Biological Weapon ;  World War II


 
 
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