The Poisoned Legacy: Chemical Warfare, Corporate Shields, and the Global Fight Against Legal Impunity
How Agent Orange, Saddam’s Gas Attacks, and Modern Strikes Reveal a System Where Power Trumps Justice – And Why the Global South Is Starting to Win In the long shadow of the twentieth century, chemical agents have left an indelible stain on the landscape of modern warfare and the fragile promise of international justice. From the dense jungles of Vietnam, where American planes dispersed nearly 19 million gallons of Agent Orange laced with the persistent poison TCDD, to the battlefields of the Iran-Iraq War, where Saddam Hussein’s forces unleashed mustard gas and nerve agents with Western knowledge and material support, the physical toll has been devastating. Generations continue to suffer cancers, birth defects, respiratory failure, and ecological ruin. Yet the legal response has been marked by stark contradictions: American veterans received modest compensation while Vietnamese victims were turned away by U.S. courts; Western suppliers faced minimal accountability for enabling chemi...