FILE - This Jan. 21, 2010 file photo shows 105mm shells containing mustard agent that are stored in a bunker at the Army's Pueblo Chemical Storage facility in Pueblo, Colo. (AP Photo/Ed Andrieski)
PUEBLO, Colo. — The Army has destroyed about half of the 2,600 tons (about 2,360 metric tons) of mustard agent contained in decades-old shells stored at a southern Colorado chemical depot.
Walton Levi, the site project manager of the Pueblo Chemical Depot, made the announcement Wednesday, calling the milestone a “tremendous achievement and one that I am very proud to announce and one we all can celebrate."
The plant started operating in September 2016 and has eliminated more than 220,000 munitions.
The depot is eradicating 780,000 shells filled with thick liquid mustard agent — many of them dating to the Cold War — under an international treaty banning chemical weapons.
Mustard agent, which was first used in World War I, can maim or kill, blistering skin, scarring eyes and inflaming airways.
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