That looks very bright and sensible. /me applauses


Tornadoes to drop 'concrete bombs'
By Mark Nicholls
With the RAF at the Ali Al Salem airbase in northern Kuwait

Tornado jets are poised to use yet another different weapon in the war
against Iraq ... concrete bombs.

The jets, normally based at RAF Marham in Norfolk, have already used
high-tech weaponry such as the "bunker busting" cruise missile Storm
Shadow, which cost �750,000 apiece and can pierce several feet of
concrete.

But now the crews operating over Iraq from the Ali Al Salem airbase in
northern Kuwait are about to go to the opposite extreme and use "inert
bombs".

These are basically blocks of concrete shaped as bombs and painted blue
to identify them as non-explosive if they are discovered still intact
after the war.

Great accuracy

But they will be laser-guided 1,000lb blocks of concrete, capable of
destroying a tank or artillery piece, but without causing a devastating
explosion that would put civilians at risk and shatter surrounding
buildings.

Tornado Detachment commander, Group Captain Simon Dobb, said: "We have
the option of using these inert bombs.

"They still have the guidance and steering methods of other high
explosive weapons but the risk of causing civilian casualties is greatly
reduced."

There is the impact, without a massive explosive effect.  Group Captain
Simon Dobb The weapons, dropped from height and with great accuracy, can
destroy a tank without affecting surrounding buildings.

The weapon is on standby if Saddam Hussein moves his tanks and artillery
pieces further into Baghdad, hiding them in areas of dense population.

It means the Tornados can still destroy them but leave civilian
buildings intact and the population unscathed.

He said: "There is the impact, without a massive explosive effect.

"It's all about proportionality."

Coloured blue

The Tornado already has a wide arsenal: from air-to-air Sidewinder
missiles; laser- and GPS-guided Paveway bombs; dumb bombs; Storm Shadow
and ALARM anti-radiation missiles.

It has dropped controversial cluster bombs during this war, though only
on specific targets of troops concentrations and military vehicles.

The Tornados have continued to fly missions offering close air support
to ground forces as they advance on Baghdad and are now ready to play a
role if the war moves into the streets of the Iraqi capital.

Plans are already in hand for post-war Iraq, though the role of the
Tornados in that is still undecided.

They may have a presence during the reconstruction of Iraq, maintaining
security in Iraqi air space, particularly as humanitarian aid is flown
in.

They may maintain a presence in Iraq until the country achieves a
stability and has a stable government, and is able to defend its
territorial boundaries by itself.

There has been speculation the Tornados may move to bases within Iraq,
though that is unlikely at this stage.

But that may change in coming weeks or months.

This is pooled copy from Mark Nicholls, of the Eastern Daily Press, with
the RAF at the Ali Al Salem airbase in northern Kuwait.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/2919249.stm

Published: 2003/04/04 22:05:54

� BBC MMIII -- Jean-Marc
_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to