Making A Difference

Irregular Weapons Used Against Iraq

Collected information on irregular weapons used by the United States and the United Kingdom since the official beginning of their war against Iraq.

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Irregular Weapons Used Against Iraq
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Regular air and ground weapons such as missiles, light bombs and bullets often cause more civiliancasualties than irregular weapons (cluster weapons, depleted uranium, napalm, etc.).   However, theterrorizing, indiscriminate, experimental, and often long-lasting nature of these weapons make for horribleand illegal battle tactics.   In no way do I suggest that the invasion of Iraq would be legally,morally, or otherwise justified given the absence of these weapons.  However, their usage adds an elementof lasting terror and suffering which significantly worsens this already horrific and illegal war.

At this stage of the war, and probably indefinitely, a complete list of instances in which these weaponswere used would be impossible to compile.  The amount of information seeping through Iraqi battlefieldsand cities is likely to be incredibly small compared to the reality on the ground.  Still, a collectionof examples that have surfaced in the English-language media will help to document the use of these atrociousweapons.

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CLUSTER BOMBS AND MUNITIONS

Cluster bombs, dropped from the air, and cluster munitions, fired from the ground, are designated as suchbecause they fragment into many smaller bombs.  When a cluster weapon is dropped or fired, it opens inthe air and disperses hundreds of smaller explosives (submunitions, or bomblets) which scatter over an area ofup to hundreds of thousands of feet.  

Most of these submunitions explode upon impact, but between 5% and 30% fail to ignite.  These"duds" retain their deadly features, and typically will explode immediately when touched.  Hereinlies the main threat to civilians, since dud bombs act as landmines across vast areas for many years.

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During the first Gulf War, the US and its allies dropped cluster bombs containing around 20 millionbomblets.  In addition, cluster munitions spread more than 30 million bomblets.  In Kuwait, around200 cluster duds are still being found and destroyed each month.   In Afghanistan, the United Statesdropped 1,228 CBU-87 cluster bombs containing 248,056 bomblets.   Assuming a 7% failure rate, this would leave roughly 17,363 unexploded bomblets scattered across Afghanistan.
 
The US and UK are quick to point out that cluster bombs and cluster munitions are not specifically bannedunder the 1997 Ottawa Mine Ban Treaty.   Still, the indiscriminate nature of scattered explosivesand the lingering danger of unexploded bombs make these weapons nearly identical to landmines.  A strongcase can also be made that cluster bombs and munitions are illegal under the Geneva Convention, which demandsthe protection of civilians even when intermingled with military personnel.


Cluster Bombs used against Iraq

The US and the UK both officially acknowledged on April 3 that their air forces have been dropping clusterbombs on Iraq.   Judging by the high numbers of cluster bombs dropped by the US on Afghanistan,Kosovo, and Iraq in 1991, the bombs have probably been used much more often than has been reported.

  • On April 1, the residential al-Hilla outskirts of Babylon were hit with an undetermined number of BLU-97A/B cluster bombs.  Each bomb releases 202 bomblets which scatter over an area the size of two footballfields, with a dud rate of 5%-7%.   Immediate reports stated that at least 33 civilians died and around300 were injured in the attack.  Amnesty International condemned the attack, saying that "the use ofcluster bombs in an attack on a civilian area of al-Hilla constitutes an indiscriminate attack and a graveviolation of international humanitarian law."   Independent reporter Robert Fisk wrote from al-Hilla,saying that many dud bombs landed, and remain, inside civilian homes.

  • The British Ministry of Defence said on April 3 that RAF Harrier jets had dropped RBL755 cluster bombs onunspecified locations in Iraq.  These bombs scatter 147 bomblets, and have a 10% rate of failure.

  • Also on April 3, the United States reported that it had used B-52 bombers to drop six CBU-105 clusterbombs on Iraqi tanks defending Baghdad.  On the same day, Iraq’s Information Minister reported that acluster bomb attack on Baghdad had killed 14 people and wounded 66.  

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Cluster Munitions used against Iraq

Cluster munitions are similar to cluster bombs, but are fired from the ground and contained in artilleryprojectiles or rockets.  When artillery or rockets fire cluster munitions, the result is the same as incluster bombs: multiple bomblets scatter, many of which fail to explode.  Human Rights Watch reportedthat more than 4,000 civilians were killed or injured by cluster munitions in Iraq after the end of the firstGulf War.
 
The UK has admitted to firing cluster munitions around Basra.   The US has yet to report that it isusing cluster munitions, but numerous reports and videos from journalists embedded with US units show thesemunitions in use.

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  • Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS), which only use cluster munitions, have been used by artillery unitsof the US 3rd Infantry Division.  The standard warhead for the MLRS contains 644 M77 individualsubmunitions, also known as dual-purpose grenades, which have a failure rate of 16%.  The standard volleyof 12 MLRS rockets would leave more than 1,200 unexploded grenades over an area of 120,000-240,000 meters.

  • On March 28, while supporting the 101st Airborne Division, US MLRS fired 18 Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS)against suspected air defense sites.  An ATACMS releases either 300 or 950 submunitions and has a 2% rateof failure.

  • An embedded journalist reported "hundreds of grenades" being fired by the 3rd Light ArmoredReconnaissance Battalion using 155mm artillery.  Human Rights Watch believes these were M483A1 and M864projectiles, which release 88 and 72 dual-purpose grenades respectively and have a 14% rate of failure.

  • Two US Marines died after stepping on unexploded cluster munitions in southern Iraq on March 28 and March29.

  • The British Ministry of Defence says that it has fired cluster shells on Basra.  L20 cluster shellshave been shot from long-range (30km) howitzers at targets described as "in the open."  TheseIsraeli-made shells contain 49 bomblets with a failure rate of 5%.

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NAPALM

Napalm is an incendiary chemical mix first tested during the Second World War, but used mainly during theVietnam War.  The mix, stored in bombs and dropped from the air, was initially used to clear junglelanding pads, but has also been used against civilian populations.  The US claims to have stopped usingnapalm in the early 1970s and officially destroyed its last batch of stockpiled napalm on April 4, 2001.

  • On March 22, reporters from CNN and the Sydney Morning Herald / Melbourne Age embedded with the 1stBattalion 7th Marines at Safwan Hill near Basra reported air strikes dropping napalm to beat Iraqi resistance. Martin Savidge of CNN said,

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It is now estimated the hill was hit so badly by missiles, artillery and by the Air Force, that they shaveda couple of feet off it. And anything that was up there that was left after all the explosions was then hitwith napalm. And that pretty much put an end to any Iraqi operations up on that hill.

Lindsay Murdoch wrote for the Sydney Morning Herald and the Melbourne Age,  "[Marine artillery] weresupported by US Navy aircraft which dropped 40,000 pounds of explosives and napalm."   When theAge’s foreign editor asked Murdoch to confirm the napalm use, the account was repeated to her by a marineofficer.

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The US Navy denied the reports, submitting this letter to the Herald,

Your story ('Dead bodies everywhere', by Lindsay Murdoch, March 22, 2003) claiming US forces are usingnapalm in Iraq, is patently false. The US took napalm out of service in the early 1970s. We completeddestruction of our last batch of napalm on April 4, 2001, and no longer maintain any stocks of napalm. - JeffA. Davis, Lieutenant Commander, US Navy, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense.

BUNKER BUSTER BOMBS

The GBU-28 Bunker Buster is a 5,000 pound bomb designed to penetrate up to 6 meters of concrete or 30meters of earth before exploding.  While former Nobel Peace Prize nominee Helen Caldicott warns that thecasing of bunker busters are made of uranium 238 (depleted uranium, or DU), it is unclear whether the GBU-28used on Iraq contains DU.

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  • Two bunker busters were dropped in Baghdad on March 28.  The bombs hit a communications tower and dug "huge craters" around the main telephone exchange center.   Little information hassurfaced from the attack, and there has been no indication as to why a penetrating bomb was used on an aboveground target.


DEPLETED URANIUM

Used in anti-tank shells since the first Gulf War, depleted uranium (DU) is uranium 238, the isotoperemaining after uranium 235 has been enriched for use in nuclear weapons or reactors.  When DU-tippedshells are fired at high speeds from tanks or planes, the radioactive material burns through tank armor,igniting the vehicle.  After exploding, 70% of the shell is vaporized into tiny particles and can becarried by the wind for many miles.   Although DU is only half as radioactive as uranium 235, thetiny particles can become trapped inside the human body for long periods of time, creating serious healthproblems. 
 
During the first Gulf War, US tanks fired 14,000 DU shells, and anti-tank aircraft fired another 940,000rounds, leaving a total of 564,000 pounds of DU either vaporized or unexploded on the desert floor.  Iraqis have since experienced extremely abnormal rates of cancer, birth defects, and miscarriages in the areaswhere DU was used, particularly around Basra.   The "Gulf War Syndrome" experienced by USveterans has also been widely blamed on depleted uranium.

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The US and UK are unapologetic about DU, however, insisting that it poses no health risks and refusing toreduce DU usage in the current war on Iraq.   DU will be used in most tank battles, and the amountand location of DU shells are impossible to judge at this point. 

DU shells are also being used against exposed troops as well as tanks, a tactic which may be usedincreasingly as tanks begin to wage urban warfare in Baghdad and Basra.

  • On March 28, a tank unit fired two 120mm DU rounds down the main road of urban Kifl, creating a vacuumeffect that "literally sucked guerrillas out from their hideaways into the street, where they were shot downby small arms fire or run over by the tanks."

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Courtesy: Znet. For a complete list of sources andfootnotes, to suggest instances not documented in this article, or for other inquiries, please contact SimonHelweg-Larsen at simonhl@ziplip.com

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