WAR in IRAQ: U.S. Cluster Bombs - Duds A Threat
BBSNews - 2003-03-19 -- Dangerous explosive duds from cluster
munitions used by allied forces in the 1991 Persian Gulf War are still
being found and destroyed in Kuwait at the startling rate of 200 per
month, according to official documents obtained by Human Rights Watch.
Human Rights Watch released a new briefing paper today warning against
the use of cluster bombs in Iraq.
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| Unexpended BLU-97 Munition, a "dud" |
Expended BLU-97 Munition |
Documents from the Kuwait Ministry of Defense show that 2,400 explosive
cluster munition duds were found and destroyed in Kuwait in 2002, and a
similar number the previous year.
"The use of cluster munitions in Iraq will endanger civilians for years
to come," said Mark Hiznay, senior researcher at Human Rights Watch and
author of the new briefing paper. "Cluster bombs also threaten U.S. and
friendly soldiers during combat."
Human Rights Watch has issued detailed analyses of the U.S. use of
cluster bombs in the Persian Gulf War, in Kosovo and in Afghanistan.
During the 1991 Gulf War, the United States and its allied coalition
dropped bombs containing about twenty million submunitions, and also
reportedly fired artillery projectiles containing more than thirty
million submunitions. These resulted in millions of hazardous duds, each
functioning like an indiscriminate antipersonnel landmine.
At least eighty U.S. casualties during the war were attributed to
cluster munition duds. More than 4,000 civilians have been killed or
injured by cluster munition duds since the end of the war.
Human Rights Watch called attention to four particular types of U.S.
cluster munitions that have had high failure rates in combat or in
testing:
- The Multiple Launch Rocket System (MLRS) with M77 submunitions has had a failure rate of 16 to 23 percent. Each standard volley of twelve MRLS rockets would likely result in more than 1,200 explosive duds.
- 155mm Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munition (DPICM) artillery projectiles with M42 and M46 submunitions have had a failure rate of 14 percent.
- Rockeye CBU-99/CBU-100 air-dropped bombs with Mk 118 submunitions. This Vietnam-era cluster munition was used extensively in the 1991 Gulf War and has accounted for a very large percentage of the explosive duds subsequently encountered. Almost 20 percent of the cluster munition duds found in Kuwait in 2002 were from Rockeye bombs.
- The CBU-87 Combined Effects Munition with BLU-97 submunitions had a failure rate of at least 7 percent in Yugoslavia and Kosovo in 1999. More than 10,000 air-dropped CBU-87s with more than 2 million submunitions were used in the Gulf War; more than 1,000 with over 200,000 submunitions were used in Afghanistan.
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| Rockeye Munition |
Rockeye Munition |
The United States has cluster munitions containing more than one billion
submunitions in current stockpiles, including more than 434 million
155mm DPICM artillery submunitions and more than 309 million MLRS rocket
submunitions.
Human Rights Watch has called for a global moratorium on use of cluster
munitions until the humanitarian problems are addressed. Short of that
commitment, Human Rights Watch urges that the United States, United
Kingdom, and others that may deploy cluster munitions in Iraq take the
following steps:
- Prohibit the use of any cluster munitions in attacks on or near populated areas;
- Suspend use of and withdraw cluster munitions that have been tested and identified as producing high dud rates;
- Refrain from using or transferring out-of-date types of cluster munitions in an effort to "clean the closet" of stockpiles;
- Record, report, track and mark known or suspected cluster munition strike areas;
- Preserve this information so it can be disseminated quickly in clearance efforts.
Human Rights Watch's 2003 briefing paper on cluster munitions in Iraq is
available online at:
http://www.hrw.org/backgrounder/arms/cluster031803.htm
For more information on cluster bombs please refer to the Arms
Division's web site on cluster bombs:
http://www.hrw.org/arms/clusterbombs.php
For more information on landmines please refer to Human Rights Watch
documents on Landmines available online at:
http://www.hrw.org/campaigns/iraq/iraqmines1212.htm
http://www.icbl.org/lm/2002/iraq.html
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The danger of unexploded munitions cannot be stressed enough. If you see any ordinance assume it is dangerous and let a proper
authority know where you have located it immediately. Photos for this article are from the Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Yuma Joint Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit (JEODU). The JEODU is composed of EOD Marines from Headquarters and Headquarters Squadron and from Marine
Wing Support Squadron-371. Marine Corps Air Station - Yuma, Arizona.
Michael Hess is the Editor of BBSNews in Charlotte, NC. Write to the editor here. Not all submissions are published. Or visit the completely new BBSNews Blog and Forum on our front page - Please Participate in BBSNews!
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