Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-97.95.138.90-20140330004141/@comment-24260323-20140402154142

186.45.86.77 wrote: But that situation is highly unlikely,Who going to take part in such a war especially with the Grim still around.Secondy what's preventing the military from sending their own forces to destroy such weapons. You'd be surprised what people would fight over when a common enemy is suddenly gone. Look at the Allies and Soviets after the end of WW2 as an example. The moment the Nazis were out of the picture, the Cold War began. I would imagine such a war occuring in a remote area bordered by either the mountains or the sea which would hinder the migration of Grimm, or maybe an island nation holding different peoples (i.e. Britain, Scotland, and Ireland) who had numerous conflicts with each other in the past, but haven't gotten over their grudges and only worked together because of the Grimm existing. Once the Grimm population no longer becomes a threat, they begin to look for a new one. I believe Machiavelli said that a leader must have an enemy to unite their people against.

As for the WMD, it could be a brand new experimental weapon that nobody was expecting and was kept a secret.