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Cluster Bombs: “With Liberty and Justice for All”

By Sara Khorshid

06/05/2003

Iraqis examine cluster bombed used in “Iraqi Freedom”

On April 1, 2003, Human Rights Watch reported that US ground forces in Iraq were using cluster munitions with a high failure rate creating immediate and long-term dangers for civilians and friendly soldiers. On April 2, the US military officially acknowledged for the first time that cluster bombs were being deployed in Iraq. American military officials said that US B-52 bombers had dropped CBU-105 bombs - guided 500kg cluster bombs - on Iraqi tanks defending Baghdad. Moreover, the British Ministry of Defense publicly admitted that Israeli-manufactured cluster shells had been fired by the Royal Artillery's long-range howitzers around Basra.

“Let's be very clear, weapons are designed for war. There is no weapon that doesn't cause harm except for the leaflets we have been dropping for the past month,” said US Navy Captain Frank Thorp, a Central Command spokesman, as he confirmed his country’s usage of cluster bombs in Iraq. The Anglo-American philosophy behind the war has been clear from the very beginning: war is inevitable for the “liberation” of Iraq. Weapons are designed to be used in wars, and cluster bombs are just weapons; so they are expected to cause harm. Yet, it is important to note that the harm caused by cluster bombs is extraordinarly grave.

What Are Cluster Bombs?

A cluster bomb is a canister that can be dropped from an aircraft, rocket, or artillery projectile, that opens to release a number of 200-700 small fragmentation explosives (bomblets) and scatter them over a wide area. When each bomblet explodes it breaks into hundreds of shreds of jagged steel. 

Cluster bombs have a wide dispersal pattern and cannot be used for precise targeting as they have no exact aim points, something that makes them especially dangerous when used near civilian areas. They are particularly risky for their high “dud rate”. With a 5-10% dud rate, there is a high probability that the submunitions inside cluster bombs fail to explode and become hazardous anti-personnel landmines that remain live and unexploded for a long time, until they blast upon contact. Once someone stumbles on an unexploded bomblet, the munition blows up to splinter into dozens of fiery material fragments, slicing and burning into human flesh.

Types of Cluster Bombs

BLU97 bomblet

Cluster bombs, alternatively known as Cluster Bomb Units (CBUs), have many varieties (US Air Force Online Encyclopedia):

  • BLU97 A/B

Each BLU97 canister contains 202 small bomblets the size of a soft drink can. The cluster bomblets scatter over a large area — approximately the size of two football fields. On average, 3-5% of the bomblets do not explode on impact.

Many of the cluster bombs reportedly dropped from the air by US forces on civilian areas during “Operation Iraqi Freedom” were of the type BLU-97 A.

  • CBU-105

The CBU-105 releases 10 bombs. Each bomb fires four armor-penetrating or house-penetrating warheads. Using infrared targeting, the warheads lock onto cars, buses or human bodies within a 30-acre radius.

  • CBU-52B

CBU-52B holds 220 bomblets, each of which is softball-sized and can shred and dismember soft-skinned targets, including both people and light-skinned vehicles.

  • CBU-58A/B

This cluster bomb is also used against light skinned objects. The dispenser holds 650 baseball-sized bomblets to be dispersed over a wide area.

  • MK-20 Rockeye

The Rockeye is a clamshell-shaped dispenser holding 247 dart-shaped bomblets. These bomblets free fall and can cover a 3,300 square yard area.

  • CBU-59B Rockeye II

A newer version of the MK-20 Rockeye cluster bomb, the CBU 59B is used against both modern armor and human bodies. Rockeye II and the older Rockeye I are dart shaped bomblets with a small fuze in the pointed end of each bomblet. The CBU-59B dispenser holds about 700 bomblets.

  • CBU-71/B

The CBU-71/B is very similar to the CBU-58, carrying 650 baseball-sized bomblets. The CBU-71 bomblets have “a random delay fusing option.” They are used as landmines, set to explode at a variety of times after hitting the ground.

  • CBU-72 Fuel-Air Explosive

This cluster bomb is different from all the others. It’s an extremely destructive incendiary bomb, rather than a shrapnel bomb.

  • CBU-87 CEM Combined Effects Munition

The CEM dispenses 202 bomblets, each of which is capable of penetrating up to 177 mm (seven inches) of armor and has fire-starting capabilities as well. They dispense over an area patch of 800 feet by 400 feet. It is an area denial cluster weapon. It is optimized against both lightly armored vehicles and personnel. The CBU-87 was used extensively for interdiction during Desert Storm.

  • CBU-89 (GATOR)

The dispenser holds 72 anti-armor mines and 22 anti-personnel mines. It has a magnetic influence fuze to sense armor; it also has deployed trip wires that activate when personnel walk on or disturb it. Another feature of the GATOR is the random delay function detonating over several days for highly effective area denial and harassment operations.

  • CBU-97 Sensor Fused Weapon

CBU-97 combines 10 submunitions with 4 skeet type warheads. After release, a fuze causes the dispenser to disperse the 10 submunitions, each stabilized by a parachute. This weapon is good against armor and soft skinned targets, covering a 4,800 square yard area.

  • RBL-755 (British Cluster Bombs)

Each RBL-755 weighs 600 lb and breaks up in the air releasing 147 bomblets, each of which has the explosive power to destroy a tank as it explodes into approximately 2000 metal fragments. About the size of a soft-drink can, parachutes slow the bomblets’ fall. RBLs are dropped from a high altitude, something which acutely decreases the degree of accuracy in the delivery process.

The Price of Democracy

Amnesty International (AI) has recently released a document entitled, “Iraq: Civilians Under Fire”, in which it expressed its concerns about the mounting toll of civilian casualties in Iraq and the reported use of cluster bombs by Anglo-American forces in heavily populated areas.

The US and UK authorities had repeatedly promised that they would do everything possible to protect the Iraqi people during the war. However, the US has showered heavily populated residential areas with deadly cluster shells, and Iraq’s hospitals are filled with bodies of men, women and children.

Cluster bombs didn’t only harm the Iraqis during the war, but they will also continue to be, in effect, hidden landmines for years to come. According to Human Rights Watch, cluster munitions dropped in the 1991 Gulf war were to blame for the deaths or injuries of more than 4,000 civilians after the fighting ended.

Nader may never see again with his right eye

Five-year-old Nader stepped on one of the dozens of bomblets scattered around the city of Hilla. Nader may not be able to see again with his right eye.

"What did these little children do to the Americans? What did they do to [U.S. President George W.] Bush?...May God avenge these children by sending Bush a cluster bomb," Nader’s mother shouted.

Two-year-old Hussein Ali Abed has a frightening fixed gaze.

"Since the bombing, he has been like this…His mother, my wife, died in the bombing when several bomblets landed on us during the night. So I really do not know what to do to get him out of the shock," said his father.

For the Iraqis to be “liberated”, they had to pay the price. They should bear the pain caused by shrapnel of cluster bombs penetrating their bodies. Later on, they will forget all the pain and enjoy living in a “free” democracy.

Sources: 

Sara Khorshid is a staff writer for IslamOnline. She holds a BA in Political Science from Cairo University and is currently studying for an MA in Political Theory. You can reach her at sarakhorshid@islam-online.net .

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