February 2000
On December 27, 1999, Interfax reported Russian forces were using
fuel-air explosive bombs in the fighting in Chechnya.(1)
The use of fuel-air explosives (FAEs), popularly known in Russia
as "vacuum bombs," represents a dangerous escalation in the Chechnya
conflict--one with important humanitarian implications. FAEs are
more powerful than conventional high-explosive munitions of comparable
size, are more likely to kill and injure people in bunkers, shelters,
and caves, and kill and injure in a particularly brutal manner over
a wide area. In urban settings it is very difficult to limit the
effect of this weapon to combatants, and the nature of FAE explosions
makes it virtually impossible for civilians to take shelter from
their destructive effect.
According to one Russian military scientist writing for the Russian
military magazine Voyennyye Znaniya (Military Knowledge),
FAE weapons are effective against exposed personnel, combat equipment,
fortified areas and individual defensive fortifications, clearing
passages in minefields, clearing landing sites for helicopters,
destroying communication centers, and neutralizing strongholds in
house-to-house fighting in a city.(2)
In addition, he stated that "fuel-air explosives are capable…of
completely destroying in a given area vegetation and agricultural
crops that have been planted." "In its destructive capability, it
is comparable to low-yield nuclear munitions."(3)
Used in large numbers, fuel-air explosives and other blast weapons
can have enormous destructive effects. When multiple FAE warheads
are exploded, the different blast waves reinforce each other, increasing
their destructive power.(4)
The effect of blast weapons is also compounded in buildings and
other enclosed spaces, and is twelve to sixteen times more destructive
than conventional high explosives against targets with large surface
areas, such as frame buildings, bunkers, and vehicle shelters.(5)
Because FAEs cover a wide area, they are prone to indiscriminate
use, especially in or near populated areas. Since this weapon is
very effective against personnel in fortifications, bunkers, and
other buildings, Russian forces may be tempted to use them in towns
and cities where Chechen fighters are dug in. In urban settings
it will be impossible for the Russians military to limit the destructive
effect of this weapon to combatants and very difficult for civilians
to take shelter from the FAE's effect.
So far, the Russian military has reportedly used FAE bombs against
the Dagestani village of Tando, in August 1999,(6)and
more recently in the southern mountains of Chechnya.(7)
How FAEs Work
A typical fuel air explosive device consists of a container of
fuel and two separate explosive charges. After the munition is dropped
or fired, the first explosive charge bursts open the container at
a predetermined height and disperses the fuel in a cloud that mixes
with atmospheric oxygen (the size of the cloud varies with the size
of the munition). The cloud of fuel flows around objects and into
structures. The second charge then detonates the cloud, creating
a massive blast wave. (For a demonstration of a FAE explosion, see
the U.S. Naval Air Warfare Center Weapons Division, China Lake,
California, page at "http://www.nawcwpns.navy.mil/clmf/faeseq.html".)
The blast wave destroys unreinforced buildings and equipment and
kills and injures personnel. The antipersonnel effect of the blast
wave is more severe in foxholes, on personnel with body armor, and
in enclosed spaces such as caves, buildings, and bunkers.
Fuel-air explosives were first developed, and used in Vietnam,
by the United States. Soviet scientists, however, quickly developed
their own FAE weapons, which were reportedly used against China
in a 1969 border conflict and in Afghanistan. Since then research
and development has continued and currently Russian forces field
a wide array of third-generation FAE warheads.
In addition to classic FAE munitions, Soviet scientists have also
developed other "enhanced-blast" munitions, particularly reactive-surround
and slurry-explosive blast warheads. Both types of warheads work
on the same principle by which the explosive is dispersed and mixed
with atmospheric oxygen before the detonation process is completed.
The destruction, death, and injury are caused by the blast wave.
Reactive-surround warheads are thin-walled containers filled with
combustible aluminum and nitrocellulose. Slurry-explosive warheads
are a mixture of a high explosive or other explosive solid mixed
with a combustible liquid.
Blast Injuries
Blast explosives kill or injure in three ways: with the blast wave;
with flying debris or by collapsing buildings; and by the blast
wind throwing bodies against the ground, equipment, structures,
and other stationary objects.
According to a 1993 study by the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency:
The [blast] kill mechanism against living targets is unique--and
unpleasant.... What kills is the pressure wave, and more importantly,
the subsequent rarefaction [vacuum], which ruptures the lungs.…
If the fuel deflagrates but does not detonate, victims will be severely
burned and will probably also inhale the burning fuel. Since the
most common FAE fuels, ethylene oxide and propylene oxide, are highly
toxic, undetonated FAE should prove as lethal to personnel caught
within the cloud as most chemical agents.(8)
According to a separate U.S. Central Intelligence Agency study,
"the effect of an FAE explosion within confined spaces is immense.
Those near the ignition point are obliterated. Those at the fringe
are likely to suffer many internal, and thus invisible injuries,
including burst eardrums and crushed inner ear organs, severe concussions,
ruptured lungs and internal organs, and possibly blindness."(9)
Another Defense Intelligence Agency document speculates that because
the "shock and pressure waves cause minimal damage to brain tissue…it
is possible that victims of FAEs are not rendered unconscious by
the blast, but instead suffer for several seconds or minutes while
they suffocate."(10)
Lung injuries are particularly difficult to diagnose and treat.
If FAEs are used in Chechnya, this would present an additional burden
on the ill-equipped and overburdened Chechen hospitals.
Known Russian FAE and Enhanced-blast Weapons
- ODAB-500PM Bomb, Fuel-air-explosive-filled bomb.
- KAB-500Kr-OD Bomb, TV guided fuel-air-explosive-filled bomb.
- ODS-OD BLU dispenser, with ODS-OD BLU cluster bombs (8 per dispenser),
Cluster bomb with fuel-air-explosive-filled cluster bomblets.
- 300 mm 12 tube rocket-launcher 9A52-2 (Smerch), Reactive-surround
warhead on a 300 mm rocket.(11)
- 220 mm 16 tube rocket-launcher 9P140 (Uragan), Reactive-surround
warhead on a 220 mm rocket(12)
- Shturm Antitank Guided Missile, Helicopter-mounted rocket with
FAE warhead.
- ATAKA Antitank Guided Missile, Helicopter-mounted rocket with
FAE warhead.
- S-8D (S-8DM) 80 mm rocket, Aircraft-mounted rocket with FAE
warhead.
- S-13D 122 mm rocket, Aircraft-mounted rocket with FAE warhead.
- TOS-1 220 mm Multiple Rocket Launcher System (Buratino, "Pinocchio"),
Reportedly fires 220 mm rocket with FAE warhead.
- Kornet-E Long Range Antitank Guided Missile System, with thermobaric
(fuel air explosive) HE warhead, Infantry antitank rocket with
FAE warhead.
- RPO-A Shmel Rocket Infantry flame-thrower. Reportedly, the lethal
and destructive effects inside a structure will cover an area
of 80 cubic meters. In an open field the lethal area reportedly
covers 50 square meters.(13)
- AS-11 and AS-12 rocket warheads. Much of the information about
these warheads is classified.(14)
FAEs are not currently banned under international humanitarian
law. However, because they are wide-area weapons, military forces
must exercise extreme caution and refrain from using them in or
near population centers.
1.
Interfax, in FBIS, "Federal Troops Use
Explosive Gas Bombs in Chechnya," December 27, 1999. This was also
reported in Simon Saradzhyan, "Russians face minefields and fierce
fire," Sunday Times (London), December 28, 1999 and Daniel
Williams, "Assault on Grozny Stalled," Washington Post, December
28, 1999. The source of the information was not identified. Colonel-General
Valery Manilov denied media reports Russian forces were using "vacuum
bombs." Pavel Korysahkin and Andrey Marychev, ITAR-TASS, in FBIS,
"Troops Confront 1,500 Grozny Rebuff," December 28, 1999. According
to the Moscow Times, Russian NTV filmed a string of "terrific fireball
explosions" in Pigorodnoye, a southeast suburb of Grozny, on December
24, 1999, that appeared "to be the work of TOS-1 [a multiple rocket
launcher with fuel-air-explosive-tipped rockets]." Pavel Felgenhauer
"Defense Dossier: From Gantamirov to TOS-1," The Moscow Times,
December 30, 1999.
2.
V. Frolov, "Fuel-Air Explosives," Voyennye
Znaniya (Moscow), in Foreign Broadcasting Information Service (FBIS),
March 20, 1996.
3.
Ibid.
4.
Defense Intelligence Agency, "Fuel-Air
and Enhanced-Blast Explosives Technology--Foreign," April 1993, p.
19. Obtained by Human Rights Watch under the U.S. Freedom of Information
Act.
5.
Defense Intelligence Agency, "Future
Threat to the Soldier System, Volume I; Dismounted Soldier--Middle
East Threat," September 1993, p. 72. Obtained by Human Rights Watch
under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.
6.
According to ITAR-TASS, Air Force Commander
Anatoly Kornukov told reporters that the air force was using "munitions
of 'higher power' including fuel-air explosive bombs" against guerrilla
groups in Dagestan. Mikhail Shetsov, ITAR-TASS, in FBIS, "Guerrillas
Damage 2 Planes in Dagestan," August 24, 1999. See also, Pavel Felgenhauer,
"Defense Dossier: Bigger Bombs on Horizon," Moscow Times,
December 2, 1999 and Sergey Ptichkin, "Nocturnal Shadows on Radar,"
Rossiyskaya gazeta (Moscow), September 3, 1999, in FBIS,
"Dagestani Rebels Face High-Tech Offensive," September 3, 1999.
7.
Simon Saradzhyan, "Russians face minefields
and fierce fire," Sunday Times, December 28, 1999 and Daniel Williams,
"Assault on Grozny Stalled," Washington Post, December 28, 1999.
8.
Defense Intelligence Agency, "Fuel-Air
and Enhanced-Blast Explosive Technology--Foreign," April 1993. Obtained
by Human Rights Watch under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.
9.
Central Intelligence Agency, "Conventional
Weapons Producing Chemical-Warfare-Agent-Like Injuries," February
1990. Unclassified document.
10.
Defense Intelligence Agency, "Future
Threat to the Soldier System, Volume I; Dismounted Soldier--Middle
East Threat," September 1993, p. 73. Obtained by Human Rights Watch
under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act.
11.
Defense Intelligence Agency. "Future
Threat to the Soldier System, Volume 2: Dismounted Soldier--Worldwide
Threat," November 1994, p. 5-13.
12.
Ibid.
13.
Terry J. Gander ed., Jane's Infantry
Weapons 1998-99 (Surrey: Jane's Information Group, 1998) p. 245.
14. Defense Intelligence
Agency, "Fuel-Air and Enhanced-Blast Explosives Technology--Foreign,"
April 1993 p. 11.
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