Plastic Landmines - According to Protocol I of the 1979 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, weapons that use non-metallic fragments not detectable by X-Ray are prohibited in war. The rationale is pretty obvious, since field surgeons can't remove fragments they can't locate within an injured body. This doesn't prohibit the use of plastic and undetectable materials in weapon design, it just means that weapons can't be designed to use undetectable fragments as a primary damage device.
And that's where you're wrong!
A dead soldier is left there for later pick up.
A wounded soldier imediatly takes 1-2 of his buddies to carry him to safety, wham 3 soldiers less with one bullet.
Remember: There are many kinds of wounded but only one kind of dead.
#16
Toxin, think greek for bow.
They lased their arrows with poop and decaying bodies way back then, nothing new.