Israeli Vet Offers Pet Lovers Protection From Possible Attack By Iraq

TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - DECEMBER 27: Israeli veterinarian Dr. Rafi Kishon, wearing his own gas mask for show, displays his canine gas mask on four-month-old Coco in Kishon's clinic December 27, 2002 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Kishon says that he is selling about a dozen homemade biological/chemical warfare protection kits a day as Israeli pet lovers are looking for ways to protect their animals in the event of a non-conventional attack by Iraq. The kit, which sells for between $35-$70, depending on the size of the animal, includes a covered muzzle, two nerve gas antidote atropine injections, two tranquilizer injections, antibiotics and a can of high energy food. (Photo by David Silverman/Getty Images)
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - DECEMBER 27: Israeli veterinarian Dr. Rafi Kishon, wearing his own gas mask for show, displays his canine gas mask on four-month-old Coco in Kishon's clinic December 27, 2002 in Tel Aviv, Israel. Kishon says that he is selling about a dozen homemade biological/chemical warfare protection kits a day as Israeli pet lovers are looking for ways to protect their animals in the event of a non-conventional attack by Iraq. The kit, which sells for between $35-$70, depending on the size of the animal, includes a covered muzzle, two nerve gas antidote atropine injections, two tranquilizer injections, antibiotics and a can of high energy food. (Photo by David Silverman/Getty Images)
Israeli Vet Offers Pet Lovers Protection From Possible Attack By Iraq
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1701889
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Getty Images News
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December 27, 2002
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