Bat Bombs - In the second world war, Americans experimented with a secret weapon designed to decimate Japanese cities. At the time, most of Japan's cities were made of wood and paper. The idea was to release a bomb filled with sleeping bats (captured from caves in New Mexico), wearing collars containing a napalm-like incendiary. Upon release at dawn, the bats would disperse and roost under the eaves of Japanese homes up to 40 miles away. The project, code-named "X-Ray," was tested in 1944, but the war effectively ended with the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It might sound funny today, but testing showed these unusual weapons to be tremendously effective...some say even more so than the A-Bomb. Today, bat bombs would certainly be prohibited under Protocol III of the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons.
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.