<<WP burns at 900 degrees, and produces thermal (not chemical) burns. Clothing burns at lower temperatures than skin. >>
There were calls for WP and the Army now admits WP was used. There are probably many ways that WP can be mixed with other substances to maximize its effectiveness as a weapon, each mixture producing some variation in the data that would come out of laboratory experiments on "white phosphorus."
<<No normal clothing that I know of can survive 900 degree flames. >>
There's no evidence that the clothing was subject to 900 degree flames. Or that it wasn't put on after death.
<<And when WP burns, it does not "explode" and "blast clothing off bodies" >>
Probably not. But the explosion I referred to was the explosion of the delivery vehicle, which dispersed the WP in the first place. Unless it was dispersed by a little robot arm that extruded from the shell and then pressed the button on a spray can of WP, while rotating the can 360 degrees.
<<(and the clothes were intact, imagine that! Must be specially designed stripper clothing that comes off instantly without tearing...)>>
Other possibilities of course are that the bodies were dressed after death, or that the WP was dispersed in a mist that easily penetrated fabric, dissolved in surface body sweat and began burning its way into the flesh rather than burning and flaming out on the surface.
<<Oh yeah, WP is not a "mist" - it's a thick, oily substance. Looks like paraffin.>>
Yeah, and water's not a mist, either - - it's a liquid that looks just like vodka, can be poured into and out of containers and will fall straight to the ground if spilled or poured. Unless you put it in a bottle that can spray it out as a mist. Or encounter it as a fog.