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UNSC WARNING: This document, Project VENATOR, is property of the UNSC and is Classified [NOVEMBER BLACK], protected under Office of Naval Intelligence Security Protocol 1A. Disclosure of its contents to, or access or alteration by, personnel with a clearance level lower than GAMMA THREE is an offense punishable by court(s) martial and imprisonment or execution for treasonous acts. Failure to disclose confirmed or suspected breaches of security will be treated as complicity, and is punishable by dishonourable discharge and/or imprisonment.
Lieutenant Commander Michael Pomare, Office of Naval Intelligence, UNSCDF Navy
ONI Seal 1
Terminal This fanfiction article, Project VENATOR, was written by Specops306. Please do not edit this fiction without the writer's permission.

The Office of Naval Intelligence has had a long history of biological warfare development, stretching back even before the formation of the UNSC during its early history as part of the United States military. Under the UNSC, Geneva Conventions forbidding such weapons have officially been strictly enforced - unofficially, Project: VENATOR was one of dozens of projects established to find biological weapons that would be able to inflict devastating casualties on Covenant populations, slowing their advance and perhaps driving them to negotiate for a stalemate, earning humanity enough time to reinforce its remaining defences and produce counters. Records pertaining to Project VENATOR have long since been deleted or otherwise destroyed, but investigations by Operation: VORAUSSICHT in 2557 have uncovered much of its history, the personnel involved, and the project aims. No products of VENATOR ever saw deployment during the Human-Covenant War, though a single Blood Covenant colony has been implicated as being the victim of a test deployment by VENATOR during this later conflict, immediately prior to being shut down by VORAUSSICHT.

History[]

Formation[]

Recruitment[]

Test Deployment[]

Discovery[]

Project Aims and Methods[]

Genetic engineering of Internecivus raptus for improved suggestiveness and obedience
Study variation dependent on incubator host and relation to lifecycle
Small-scale test-deployment of I. raptus
Large-scale test-deployment of I. raptus
Full deployment of I. raptus

Remarks[]

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