-
Man set himself alight in fatal Swiss bus fire: prosecutor
-
'This is me, very pretty': inside a Cambodian cyberscam site
-
Spain to deploy tool to track social media hate speech
-
Death toll from Ukrainian attack on Russia's Bryansk rises to 7: governor
-
'Legendary' Barbra Streisand to receive Honorary Palme d'Or at Cannes
-
Devine, Mooney top women's Hundred auction
-
British fintech Revolut gets full UK banking licence
-
US consumer inflation unchanged but price shocks from Iran war loom
-
Kneecap rapper scores new court victory as UK prosecutors lose appeal
-
IEA says members to release 400 mn barrels from oil reserves
-
Trump's 'racist hate speech' fuelling rights abuses: UN watchdog
-
Four killed in Ukraine as Moscow and Kyiv exchange drone strikes
-
India T20 hero dons disguise for unexpected train home
-
Russia says internet outages to last as long as 'necessary'
-
US consumer inflation unchanged at 2.4% year-on-year in February
-
Rana takes five wickets as Bangladesh crush Pakistan in ODI opener
-
Barca blunder: Fan ends up at wrong St James Park
-
Malaysia's JDT reach Asian Champions League quarter-finals
-
Oil jumps, stocks drop as Mideast war prolongs market volatility
-
French aid worker killed in DR Congo air strike
-
Germany, Japan to unblock oil reserves as G7 stands 'ready' to act
-
German defence giant Rheinmetall sees business boost from Mideast war
-
Malawi court dismisses 15-year lawsuit against Madonna charity
-
Trade ships hit as Iran threatens Gulf oil chokepoint
-
Airlines grapple with impact of Mideast war
-
Iran's new supreme leader injured but 'safe', says president's son
-
Thai navy says cargo ship attacked in Strait of Hormuz
-
Poland starts human trafficking probe into Epstein ring
-
Airlines in Asia hike fares as Mideast war raises fuel costs
-
UK govt to release first batch of Mandelson files
-
European football clubs score with stadium rebuilds
-
Trump said Iran 'welcome to compete' in World Cup, says Infantino
-
'No good choice': the Afghans forced to return from Iran
-
Asia stocks rise but oil resumes gains amid IEA supply report
-
Cathay says surcharge to rise as fuel prices jump during Mideast war
-
Cargo vessels hit as Iran threatens to close Gulf oil chokepoint
-
G7 energy ministers 'ready' to take 'necessary measures' on oil reserves
-
Punch the baby monkey isn't being bullied: Japan zoo
-
German defence giant Rheinmetall sees faster growth as Europe rearms
-
Fears of fuel shortage in Pakistan as tankers wait to fill up
-
Cathay Pacific expects to carry more passengers in 2026
-
Yak hack: Kyrgyz want the world to love their blonde bovine beauties
-
Iran women footballers evacuate from safe house in Australia
-
Shabby beauty: Inside Japan's oldest, defiant student dorm
-
Seoul says can deter threats from North if US weapons shifted to Mideast
-
Italy stun United States 8-6 in World Baseball Classic
-
New wave of Iran attacks as oil reserve release weighed
-
Politics meets football as China, Taiwan face off at Asian Cup
-
History offers Scots hope of ending losing run to Irish
-
Trump-Infantino 'bromance' tested by Middle East war
US has destroyed all its chemical weapons: Biden
President Joe Biden announced Friday that the United States has fully destroyed its decades-old stockpiles of chemical weapons, fulfilling a commitment under the three-decade-old Chemical Weapons Convention.
"Today, I am proud to announce that the United States has safely destroyed the final munition in that stockpile -- bringing us one step closer to a world free from the horrors of chemical weapons," Biden said.
The United States was the last of the Chemical Weapons Convention's signatories to complete the task of destroying their "declared" stockpiles, though some are believed to maintain secret reserves of chemical weapons.
"It marks the first time an international body has verified destruction of an entire category of declared weapons of mass destruction," Biden said in a statement.
The announcement came after the Blue Grass Army Depot, a US Army facility in Kentucky, recently completed its four-year job of eliminating some 500 tonnes of lethal chemical agents, the last batch held by the US military.
The US had held for decades stores of artillery projectiles and rockets that contained mustard gases, VX and sarin nerve agents, and blister agents.
Such weapons were condemned widely after their use with horrendous results on the battlefields of World War I.
But many countries retained and further developed them in the years afterward.
The Chemical Weapons Convention, agreed in 1993 and coming into effect in 1997, gave the United States until September 30 this year to destroy all of its chemical agents and munitions.
Other signatories to the pact had already eliminated their holdings, Fernando Arias, head of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), said in May.
That left only the United States to complete the task, he said.
"More than 70,000 tons of the world's most dangerous poisons have been destroyed under the supervision of the OPCW," he said.
According to the US Arms Control Association, in 1990 the United States held nearly 28,600 tonnes of chemical weapons, the world's second largest store after Russia.
With the ebb of the Cold War the superpowers and other countries joined together to negotiate the Chemical Weapons Convention.
Eliminating the stockpiles, doubly dangerous because it means neutralizing not only the chemical agents but also the munitions they are contained in, was a slow process.
Russia completed destroying its own declared stockpiles in 2017.
By April 2022, the US had less than 600 tonnes left to destroy.
Biden urged continued vigilance to ensure all chemical weapons around the world are destroyed and said that the handful of countries that have not joined the convention should do so.
"Russia and Syria should return to compliance with the Chemical Weapons Convention and admit their undeclared programs, which have been used to commit brazen atrocities and attacks," Biden said.
D.Cunningha--AMWN