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Technology

U.S. Air Force Developing Microwave Weapon 677

Makarand writes "A weapon that uses an intense microwave pulse to fry electronics in computers and communication systems is being developed by the US Air Force according to this BBC News article. This weapon is totally harmless to people and could be used in situations where hitting targets could result in civilian casualties. This weapon could be carried by an unmanned drone or a cruise missile." EMP weapons have, in general, been under discussion and research for a very long time.
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U.S. Air Force Developing Microwave Weapon

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  • Advantage.. (Score:3, Funny)

    by Chicane-UK ( 455253 ) <chicane-ukNO@SPAMntlworld.com> on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:23AM (#5134145) Homepage
    At least when the army are out on maneuvers, they can cook up their own rations with it :)
    • by smallfries ( 601545 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:57AM (#5134292) Homepage
      ... indicate that the chinese have already been experimenting with defenses against microwave weapons. So far the most reliable is a metal spoon ...
    • Re:Advantage.. (Score:2, Informative)

      by Sven-Erik ( 177541 )

      If the weapon is not dangerous for people, it would also mean that it is unusable to cook food with...

      The microwaves in microwaveovens has a frequency that energizes water-molecules. And it has the same effect in live tissue as it has on dead. So if it is unharmfull to people, it should not energize watermolecules...

      • No, I think that the idea is to use the magnetic component of the electromagnetic wave to produce eddy currents electric circuits. The short duration of the pulse means that the voltage spike is too brief to produce heating, but is big enough to blow transistors etc.

        Just my 2c of freshman college physics.
    • by le_jfs ( 627582 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:32AM (#5134470) Journal
      Someday we'll be able to use such devices to fry the RFID tags in our tires.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:25AM (#5134150)
    How is disabling electronics completely safe for civillians?

    Just imagine this being used near a busy traffic intersection, or near a hospital.
    • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:09AM (#5134352) Journal
      It isn't completely safe. Even the example from the article about zapping a chemical plant without releasing toxins isn't entirely accurate. Chemical processes don't just stop if the control systems conk out all at once, there might well be a catastrophic reaction.

      But in most cases it's safer than conventional weapons: disabling electronics in a hospital, on an intersection or at a chemical plant is better than just pelt those targets with bombs.
    • Anyone who expects the military to produce a device that is 100% safe for humans, or safe from unintended results is fooling themselves.
    • by analog_line ( 465182 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:39AM (#5134515)
      I'd say it's a hell of a lot closer to "completely safe" than a 2000 pound bomb or a cruise missile or, the gods help us all, cluster munitions.
    • Blame the enemy... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by telstar ( 236404 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @10:14AM (#5134738)
      "How is disabling electronics completely safe for civilians?"
      • If their military chooses to put their military targets among their civilian population, then it's not safe for civilians. If their civilian population chooses to allow their military to be there ... then they should accept the risks. If the civilians have no choice, then we're there for the right reasons.
      • by nuxx ( 10153 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @11:50AM (#5135465) Homepage
        I take it that you either forget or don't know about the US government putting nuclear missle launch sites hidden in rather urban areas? In fact, from where I sit right now (Auburn Hills, MI, a fairly commercial area) there are old launch silos in the wooded parts of the campus of Oakland University, right next door. (See http://members.tripod.com/nikehercules/d-97.html [tripod.com] for more information.

        So while I believe you are correct in theory, in practice sometimes the public isn't quite aware.
    • by overunderunderdone ( 521462 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @10:22AM (#5134800)
      How is disabling electronics completely safe for civillians?
      Just imagine this being used near a busy traffic intersection, or near a hospital.


      You've obviously never driven or been to a hospital in the third world. In the first case nobody pays much attention to the lights (if they exist or work) in the second electricity is unreliable even without the occasional attack by an EMP weapon.

      However, I'll grant it's not *completely* safe but it certainly beats the alternative. Take the example of a battery of SAMS in downtown Bagdad. In the not-so-distant past we would bombed the neighborhood killing hundreds of innocent civilians*, With current technology we would try to take it out with a "smart" bomb maybe killing two or three innocent civilians, unless we miss in which case we may kill a few dozen innocent civillians. With this new technology we blast it with an EMP pulse and everybody's lights go out - not a big deal in most of the third world.

      * in the example of bombing the neighborhood to get at those SAMS and killing hundreds (or even thousands) of innocent civilians. It's quit possible that there would be a war crime involved in this scenario, but NOT on the part of the USA. Putting military assets in civilian areas to sheild them from attack is a war crime. Legally the existance of the military assets removes any immunity that target would otherwise have had. A Mosque, church, hospital, orphanage, etc with a SAM battery or Radar installation on the roof is a legitimate target and legally (and morally IMO) the guilt for those innocent deaths is on the heads of the person that made it a legitimate target. The attacker in this situation does still have a general responsiblity to minimise civilian deaths - now that we have precision bombs it would be a war crime to use dumb ones in such a situation but prior to their invention such bombings did occur.
  • by Danta ( 2241 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:26AM (#5134155) Homepage
    This must be the perfect tool for disabling those pesky RFID tags as discussed earlier.
  • Missile Shield (Score:5, Interesting)

    by nick255 ( 139962 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:27AM (#5134158)
    I was thinking. Wouldn't it make alot of sense to use these things in the defence shield the US is building? They seem to be having a lot of problems hitting the incoming missile with a convential exploding warheads, but something which could kill the electronics in the missile from within 300m could work better. (I must admit I don't know what sort of radius the convential warheads can destroy missiles over)
    • Re:Missile Shield (Score:5, Informative)

      by salesgeek ( 263995 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:41AM (#5134221) Homepage
      Even if you fry the electronics at 300M out, that doesn't guarantee the missile will miss... A balistic weapon traveling at 4,600 MPH can't change direction much in 300M... for that matter, a cruise missle traveling at 560MPH can't turn much either. BTW - the millitary has had microwave weapons for some time... Since the '50s - I can't remember the name of the weapon system, but they used to have a device that used microwaves to explode artillery in the air. The shrapnel generated was a problem, but it was better than taking a direct hit...

      $G
      • by caveat ( 26803 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:12AM (#5134366)
        A balistic weapon traveling at 4,600 MPH can't change direction much in 300M

        No, a ballistic weapon can't change direction at all once it's fired. That's what separates a ballistic weapon (bullet, shell, dumb bomb) from a 'smart' weapon (guided missile, smart bomb); the guided weapons are just that, while a ballistic weapon relies soley on it's own momentum from firing and gravity to put it on target (remember projectile motion from Phys101?). 'ballistic missiles' aren't technically truly ballistic, with final-stage guidance on the MIRVs, but the launch to suborbit is.
    • Up to date there hasn't been a successful test of an energy weapon interception of incoming missiles. Pretty much this is what Bush wants to push research on despite the fact that the US has signed treaties to prevent such research cause if someone believed that they can indeed survive a MAD scenario they may actually push the button.
      • Re:Missile Shield (Score:4, Insightful)

        by overunderunderdone ( 521462 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @11:18AM (#5135191)
        despite the fact that the US has signed treaties

        That treaty had an exit clause that we chose to excercise. You can disagree with the policy but we are not doing anything "despite signing a treaty" nor are we "breaking a treaty." We have fulfilled every requirement of the treaty. In either event the treaty did not bar research only deployment in more than one location. (We never deployed any ABM systems despite being allowed by the treaty to do so in one location - IN SOVIET RUSSIA they chose to protect Moscow with an ABM system)

        ...cause if someone believed that they can indeed survive a MAD scenario they may actually push the button.

        Even before the proliferation of nuclear weapons to many more unstable and unpredictable countries there was a good argument for ABM systems to *preserve* MAD. Prior to the development of precision guidance systems you could nuke your enemies missle silos but the weapons were so imprecise and the silos so well protected that even with nuclear warheads you were unlikely to destroy them. That all changed when the USA and much later the Soviets developed dependable precision warheads. A preemptive attack could have (for the most part) worked. We could have nuked them or vise versa and had a good chance of getting their weapons on the ground - the stability of mutual suicide was already being undermined. ABM would have restored it - nobody thinks or claims it would have been 100% effective but it would have made a preemptive strike infeasible.

        In todays world things are different - we are worried about a handful of countries with only a handful of nukes each - There is no MAD balance of power between us and Korea, Pakistan, India, (Iran - soon)(Iraq - fairly soon if not prevented) or even China (for the moment, they're bulking up fast) A preemptive strike on our part against any of these countries would be effective. Right now it would be our only defense against being nuked by them if a crisis turns really ugly. If you don't think our military planning regarding Korea during this current crisis doesn't include nuking the location of the one or two nukes (assuming the CIA knows their location) as a last resort during a war you are naive. And if you don't think that this president (or ANY president) wouldn't use that option if he *thought* the likely alternative was several thousand American and several million South Koreans being reduced to glowing cinders you are very much mistaken. The absense of another alternative is much likely to cause us to rush into using an nightmare option which can only work if we beat them to the punch. Our options in a really nasty crisis with a minor nuclear power could narrow down very quickly to "nuke them... it's the only way to be sure". In the next decade we have no idea what kinds of crises we may be involved in. China is very close to invading Taiwan (which is certainly advanced enough and desperate to have their own nuclear program), A nuclear war between Pakistan and India is frighteningly likely. A preemptive strike by Isreal against Iran or Iraq (whichever gets nukes first) or vise versa will be a real possiblity by the end of the decade. How will we be involved, at what risk to our troops or our mainland (China can already hit us, N. Korean missile development which they will sell to the highest bidder is getting very advanced). I for one would rather we have options other than either rolling over to who knows what nightmares or unleashing a nightmare ourselves.
        • Re:Missile Shield (Score:5, Informative)

          by mikerich ( 120257 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @12:41PM (#5135903)
          That treaty had an exit clause that we chose to excercise. You can disagree with the policy but we are not doing anything "despite signing a treaty" nor are we "breaking a treaty." We have fulfilled every requirement of the treaty. In either event the treaty did not bar research only deployment in more than one location. (We never deployed any ABM systems despite being allowed by the treaty to do so in one location - IN SOVIET RUSSIA they chose to protect Moscow with an ABM system)

          Sigh, yes you did deploy a system. It was called Safeguard, started in 1969 at two sites, one in Montana one at Grand Forks in North Dakota. Additional sites were planned in Wyoming and to protect Washington DC.

          The signing of the ABM agreement in 1972 limited the USSR and USA to two sites for ABM systems and a total of 100 missiles. The US abandoned plans for Safeguard in Wyoming and Washington DC. Shortly afterwards, the USSR and the USA agreed a further codex to the ABM Treaty limiting themselves to a single site, either around the nation's capital or around a ICBM site.

          The Soviet Union chose to protect Moscow with the GALOSH system. The US chose Grand Rapids and abandoned all work on other sites.

          Safeguard was declared operational in early 1975 and reached its full deployment of 100 missiles later that year.

          In October 1975, Congress declined to continue to pay for the upkeep of Safeguard and the project was dismantled from 1976 onwards.

          Your argument about MAD is weak in that you seem to assume that all of the nuclear powers out there, with the exception of the United States are much more willing to use these weapons, whilst on historical grounds it has been the United States military which has countenanced the use of nuclear weapons in a series of conflicts. Richard Rhodes' 'Dark Sun' gives a whole series of deliberately provocative actions by American forces during the Cold War that very nearly ended in disaster.

          All of the countries out there know what the use of nuclear weapons means. None of them are so stupid as to threaten the United States with the handful of weapons that they possess. Any American retaliation would mean annihilation. Yes North Korea is run by an evil man - but he's not insane enough to fire a missile at America.

          Those countries faced with any ABM system have one easy remedy. Assuming that few, if any countries out there can defeat America technologically, the only solution is to build more nuclear missiles with multiple warheads. History will repeat itself, except it won't be the US versus the Soviet Union, it will be dozens of countries proliferating advanced weapons like crazy.

          Then I'd argue with your claim that the system would decrease the chance of nuclear conflict. The US and UK have already said that they would use nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear opponent that they believed was going to use chemical or biological weapons. We have already lowered the threshold for our countries exploding nuclear warheads. President Bush has approved money to the Department of Defense and Department of Energy for the development of 'bunker buster' nuclear warheads - to be used to destroy hardened underground bunkers in an otherwise non-nuclear war. We are already foreseeing new uses for nuclear weapons, they are no longer being seen as the ultimate protection against attack.

          And as the Devil's Advocate in Chief here, I have to ask - why shouldn't other countries have the right to the ultimate protection? We seem to need it to uphold our national interests, why should Iran and Iraq be denied the same choice. Its quite clear that North Korea can feel completely justified in its development of nuclear weapons - the West has excluded any attack on the country and chooses a diplomatic solution. Saddam Hussein must be kicking himself that he didn't wait a couple of years before invading Kuwait under the protection of a nuclear bomb.

          Finally, we have to consider the (hopefully remote) possibility of an American government that is belligerant, that chooses to threaten other countries with nuclear conflict in the knowledge that it has a working ABM system. Let's hope it never happens, but ABM can be seen as part of an offensive capability.

          But let's be honest, NMD is just a Bush pork-barrel pay-back to the defence contractors who poured so much money into his election campaign. At the end of the day I doubt they care very much whether it works on not, just as long as the money keeps pouring in.

          Best wishes,
          Mike.

          • Re:Missile Shield (Score:4, Insightful)

            by overunderunderdone ( 521462 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @03:18PM (#5137195)
            Sigh, you're right about deploying a system and I actually knew that and wasn't thinking of it (From what I understand my father actually did some work on this system). To be fair though a system that was deployed and abandoned the same year doesn't really seem worth much consideration.

            All of the countries out there know what the use of nuclear weapons means. None of them are so stupid as to threaten the United States with the handful of weapons that they possess. Any American retaliation would mean annihilation. Yes North Korea is run by an evil man - but he's not insane enough to fire a missile at America.

            Many of the nations we are talking about are not exactly the most stable, In North Koreas case neither is the individual in charge. Sure none would intentionally precipitate a crisis that leads to a nuclear exchange but it is naive to suppose that they wouldn't under any circumstances or to suppose that they have the wisdom to avoid those circumstances. Take North Korea for one example - the population is starving off by the hundreds of thousands, China has seen a sharp increase in the number of refugees despite the fact they are repatriated as a matter of course and usually killed or tortured & put into concentration camps. The regime is strong but brittle and has never shown any concern for the deaths of millions - what desperate risks might such a regime be willing to take to preserve itself? A war might be good for moral, a successful invasion of the south might change the situation on the ground in the north? With the US and South Koreas technological superiority such a move would probably be doomed but maybe they figure sheer numbers, suprise and speed could effect a fait accompli before the US could intervene? When their strategem's flaws are revealed with a massive counter attack would they stay their hand or attempt to cauterise the invasion route with a nuclear attack? Would we be so fearful of that possiblity that we preempt? The world is not a stable place, things change in unpredictable ways - history is NOT over no matter what Franicis Fukuyama says. It's getting interesting and that is a very bad thing.

            And as the Devil's Advocate in Chief here, I have to ask - why shouldn't other countries have the right to the ultimate protection?

            In short, because if they get them they might nuke us, our allies or each other. As a moral issue? As an issue of "rights"? or "fairness"? Since when has international politics dealt with such issues? I'm not really so concerned about being fair to North Korea or Sadaam Hussein who don't seem to hold morality, fairness or rights in very high esteem when dealing with their own people or their neighbors. I suppose it's only "fair" that when dealing with those regimes those pleasant concepts that don't trouble their thinking don't trouble ours either.

            I have a foster brother from Cambodia. He was a young teen when he escaped the killing fields - his experiences make me less sanguine about insane Maoists getting the bomb as being "only fair" and I am a little less tolerant of the moral equivalence and lack of seriousnes about the risks involved that underlay such "fair minded" reasoning.

            Another argument is that many of the countries that are currently developing this technology don't have the social or political maturity to have developed it on their own without the seepage of technological advancement beyond their native capabilities from countries that ARE more socially and politically advanced. (I may be accused of racism for this argument but it is really culturalism (if there is such a term)) The technological explosion in the west that produces such weapons is made possible by social and cultural and political forces and structures that have other advantages that mitagate against the use and abuse of such weapons. If you don't believe me try having a peace march protesting government policin downtown Bagdad or Pyongyang - try casting a vote against the chosen policy in either of their parliments etc. or just try opening a business without masses of money to bribe local officials. The ideas that the law is superior to the ruler, that government is accountable to the governed, that individuals are accountable to a law superior to clan kinship, the dictates of honor or loyalty to the "supreme leader" are all ideas that on rare occasions are imperfectly realized here but are *completely* alien in some of the nations striving to master a very dangerous technology their culture could never have developed on it's own. Think of it as the "prime directive" arrogant - damn straight, but also prudent and less likely for everybody to end up glowing in the dark.

            It seems sometimes that those "against" nuclear ware (as though anyone is FOR it) aren't really against it as such - they seem perfectly fine with nuclear weapons in the hands of anyone other than the western powers - especially the USA. I am deeply worried about our policy towards Iraq but it ultimately is a very aggresive policy of non-prolifieration. Our more tender non-prolifieration policy towards N. Korea obviously didn't work and our more tender non-prolifieration policy towards N. Korea now is the result of the earlier policy not working.

            The USA is not the only actor on the world stage - nations are not developing Nukes just because of us but because of their own squabbles and rivalries. China developed nukes and that made it imperitive for India to have nukes which made it imperitive for Pakistan to have nukes. North Korea has nukes and if we listen to the pacifist left and isolationist right we will pull out of South Korea, without the security guarantee of a few thousand US troops on a "tripwire" and a Nuclear opponent South Korea will be tempted to develop nukes, Japan too will be tempted all of which will lead China to enlarge their stockpile. Iran is on a crash program to develop nukes. How long would it take various Arab nations to respons in kind to the shia Persian threat? What are they already doing about the more real Isreali threat" Iraq is likely doing *something* would the Saudi's sit out? Would Egypt? Regardless of what we do proliferation will increase exponentially as various rivals pop up with the nuclear option. Right now some of the most advanced nations aren't bothering because of the USA's conventional security guarantees but will that be enough now that our slaveish desire to avoid offending Pyonyang reveals such guaranatees as toothless in the face of a nuclear opponent? As proliferation increases and various complex "balances of power" are established and increasingly unstable, incompetant, corrupt regimes are involved I think it is very likely that we will see nuclear war in our lifetimes. Hopefully, it will not involve us but that is a real possiblity and one we should be prepared for.
  • by RMH101 ( 636144 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:29AM (#5134165)
    Anyone want to bet how high a percentage of ordinance dropped on Iraq is going to be good old-fashioned, dumb heavy lumps of metal filled with explosives? This and other media fluff about smart weaponry seems to be designed to present war as a videogame...
    • by glesga_kiss ( 596639 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:03AM (#5134318)
      This and other media fluff about smart weaponry seems to be designed to present war as a videogame...

      Yup. The news media can be explained simply in one word. Ratings.

      People like smart weapons, so the media shows them. People like watching disasters and war, so the media shows them. Best personal analogy is slowing down to take a nosy at a car wreck.

      If television news is your primary source of "news", then you simply don't have a clue.

    • by Boiotos ( 139179 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:07AM (#5134340) Homepage
      Precision-guided bombs made up nine per cent of the weapons dropped in the Gulf War. This time, the figure would be well in excess of 60 per cent, allowing more effective bombing with fewer total aircraft, officials say.

      Taken from a useful set of articles over at CBC News [cbc.ca], including one on new weapons [cbc.ca] which mentions the microwave bomb. CBC's reporting tends to be less enthusiastic about things military.

    • In the last Gulf War, this percentage was very high (IIRC, 90% were dumb). But in the conflicts since then, the percentage of smart vs dumb bombs has increased steadily. In Afghanistan 60% of bombs were smart.

      The cost of 'smart' weapons (mainly GPS-guided bombs) has come down (thanks to Moore's law) significantly. Also, many weapons that were still experimental in Gulf War I, are now in production.

    • by moc.tfosorcimgllib ( 602636 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:14AM (#5134381) Journal
      How many casualties have you actually seen in the news these days? From afghanistan or elsewhere?
      Watch for casualty pictures in the news during the next gulf war (I hope not, but I'm a pessimist these days). Chances are, you might hear about casualties, but look for any actual dead bodies. They will not show them, because then it makes the war "real", and dirty, and unpopular.
      • Actually, have you read Time magazine lately? Every article reporting back on the Israel situation (another suicide bombing, another army incursion, etc) is peppered with images of destroyed homes, dead bodies, body parts, etc. Not pretty stuff.
    • by SkyTech12 ( 591773 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:17AM (#5134390)
      Actually according to this article in the Daily Standard.

      "After watching dozens of such slam-cam clips, most observers thought precision munitions were the go-to weapon during the Gulf War, but during Operation Desert Storm, of all the bombs dropped over Iraq, only 20 percent were "smart." And in fact many of those missed their targets because of weather problems or malfunctions. Saddam's destruction of Kuwaiti oil fields late in the war foiled the laser guidance systems of many because the smoke deflected the laser energy the bombs homed in on.

      But if America goes to war again in Iraq, close to 100 percent of its bombing sorties will be conducted using smart bombs. And this time, they'll be smarter. Advances in laser technology, targeting systems, and the now ubiquitous global positioning satellite system have revolutionized how America conducts war from the air--and, in many cases, the ground.

      During the Gulf War, pilots had to calmly keep a laser trained on their target and wait for another plane's bombs to follow the beam to the bull's eye. Today, targeting pods attached to an aircraft's wings can keep their eyes on the target while a pilot zigs and zags his way out of trouble. A laser-guided bomb dropped on Baghdad during this war will reach its target even during the most severe defensive maneuverings.

      However, it's the GPS-guided bomb that has truly changed the face of air-to-ground warfare. An inexpensive retrofit to existing "dumb" bombs, the Joint Direct Attack Munition, or JDAM, literally screws onto the tail and around the belly of a conventional 1,000 or 2,000 pound unguided bomb, making it in many cases more precise than a laser-guided bomb. The pilot simply programs in the GPS coordinates of a target, sometimes broadcast to air crews from ground forces by radio, and the bomb glides its way to the target, day or night, in clear skies and stormy weather. There are no laser beams to bend or bounce, just the steady signals of America's GPS constellation beaming their coordinates from space.

      So apparently we will be using smart tails strapped to dumb bombs, it works for me.

  • Didn't we already know [hamjudo.com] how to do this?

    Oh, sophisticated computer components.

  • by tolan-b ( 230077 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:31AM (#5134178)
    people with pacemakers, or anyone nearby on life support or similar would still be affected.
    • Agreed. Even if the EMP does not affect flesh it's very dangerous. Normal life is based on a big lot of electronic devices. Cars have electronic injection and steering correction, you cellphone will burn a hole in your pocket and I do not even want to think about what this does to hospitals.

      Anyway I wish the US luck with the development of such weaponry. You have the biggest cities and most electronic equipment. Looks a little suicidal to me.

  • Coldbringer? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by OldStash ( 630985 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:32AM (#5134184)
    This weapon is totally harmless to people and could be used in situations where hitting targets could result in civilian casualties

    I don't think any army has ever been overly concerned with civilian casualties. The real boon for this is that it leaves strategic buildings intact for use by the bomb's owner.
    • by assaultriflesforfree ( 635986 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:37AM (#5134208)
      Righto. My guess is that, if this thing ever comes to be reality, they'll start using it on the military targets and save the bombs for the hospitals, schools, trains, and Fox.
    • Armies are generally concerned with civilian casualties. If the choice is victory or civilians; they'll choose victory. If the choice is civvie lives or the lives of one's own soldiers, the choice again is clear. But if the army already has the upper hand and their own lives are not much at risk, they might take civilian casualties seriously and try to minimise them. I'd reverse your statement: armies are generally not overly concerned for leaving buildings intact. (Bridges might be are another matter)

      Oh... their motives might not be entirely clean. It might just be propaganda for the bleeding hearts back home... But come on, what is the US army going to do with a bunch of intact buildings in Iraq?
  • ...not so good against the USA's actual enemies, i.e. 20 beardy guys with assault rifles in a cave. Still, if war ever breaks out with Taiwan or Belgium or somewhere, these things will rock!

    On the other hand, the scary robot plane in the picture is COOL.

    • ...not so good against the USA's actual enemies, i.e. 20 beardy guys with assault rifles in a cave. ...
      Nah, for them all you need to do is just drop a few tons of high explosive from a great height. Works every time. Um, provided the cave isn't really deep. Or, um, not on your target list because it's, um, too well hidden. Or empty because the beardy guys were passing the hookah around one evening, as you tend to do when you're holed up in a cave with no TV to denounce as an instrument of the infidels, and they wondered, hey, what would The Great Satan do, and top of the list was that he'd probably drop a few tons of explosive on them from a great height, so they decided that sitting out the campaign in neighboring Pakistan had a lot to recommend it.

      I'm not trawling for +1 funny points here, nor indulging in knee-jerk anti-US sentiment: successfully taking the fight to a group as amorphous as, for example, Al-Qaida which has no intention of cooperating with your preferred choice of battleground is hard. I just wish I could be more confident that the activities and emphasis that have been made public so far aren't the whole of it.

  • Soviet EMP Devices (Score:4, Interesting)

    by fuzzybunny ( 112938 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:34AM (#5134193) Homepage Journal

    I seem to remember reading about a Soviet 50 megaton nuke. A warhead of that size wouldn't be usable against ground targets, as the force of the blast would cause it to bury itself and reduce the actual damage--or something. I'm no physicist.

    Anyway, the upshot was that these things would be far less economical in terms of distributed damage than lots of small MIRV'ed warheads.

    Instead, supposedly, a Soviet nuclear attack would have been designed to blanket the US with a nationwide series of mega-EMP pulses prior to actual ground target attacks.

    I couldn't find a good link, but a description of some Russian/Soviet delivery vehicles is here [cdi.org]

    • Over 1MT is wasted (Score:5, Informative)

      by dmaxwell ( 43234 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:38AM (#5134506)
      There is a one megaton threshold of "usefulness" for nuclear weapons. In a surface detonation, the blast from a thermonuclear is powerful enough to send some of the atmosphere above ground zero into space. Once 1MT is crossed it seems that most of the excess force powers this effect leaving less energy for the blast wave and radiation to destroy things OUTWARD of the blast. It isn't as counterintuitive as it seems. Most of the energy output of a bomb is X-rays and gamma radiation. A bomb going off in space is little more than a bright flash and a little puff of gas from vaporized bomb components (It still sucks to be anywhere in the vicinity.).

      The devasting effects we associate with nukes comes from the effects this radiation flux has on the atmosphere. It's like a vastly oversized thunderclap. The radiation instantly heats up a large amount of atmosphere and this is what creates the blast wave and starts a lot of the fires. Of course, there's lots of radiation left over to flash fry things further out. Heat a quantity of atmosphere up enough and it's going straight up in a hurry.

      That isn't to say that there are NO noticable effects of making the bomb bigger but from a military point of view the law of diminishing returns kicks in with a vengence. There is another threshold around a gigaton or so that makes a bomb a planetary threat with some different effects involved (similar to a large asteroid collision) but who wants to set a Backyard Bomb off? It's called a Backyard Bomb because it doesn't NEED a delivery system. You set it off in your backyard and it fries your enemies anyway.

      The 50MT Soviet bomb was the biggest public relations stunt in history. Khruschev literally told Sakarov to make something to "scare the ^$#@ out of the Americans" in time for a conference. It also came from a touch of Texas in the Russian mentality. The worlds biggest church bell sits on the ground somewhere in Russia because no one wanted to build the matching bell tower. It is Tsar Bell (the King of Bells). It is an impressive gesture that is practically useless. Tsar Bomba is same thing: a militarily useless ridiculously oversized weapon intended only as a gesture.
  • by sboyko ( 537649 )

    Much of the work into developing this next-generation weapon is being done at the High Energy Research and Technology Facility.

    The $9m lab is located in a canyon in the Manzano Mountains, part of the remote Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico.

    I wish they would check their figures before releasing stories. Could you possibly build a lab like this for 9 million dollars?

  • Not quite EMP (Score:5, Informative)

    by creepery2kplus ( 625293 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:35AM (#5134199)
    This not quite an EMP weapon which usually destroys by causing induction and other similar effects. It's more of a maser (m(icrowave) a(mplification by) s(timulated) e(mission of) r(adiation)) which is tuned to silicon instead of water (microwave oven at home). The implied precision that is needed again indicate more in the nature of a uni-directional energy weapon (laser, pulse laser and ilk) rather than a pulse surge weapon system (HERF gun, e bomb, nuclear EMP warheads, dazzlers).
  • by hopbine ( 618442 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:36AM (#5134203)
    Surely some form of tempest hardening - shielding the equipment in a faraday cage - would effectively protect the equipment (and cats). The article points out a microwave oven, thats just doing the reverse, putting the energy inside a faraday cage. I know that some buildings are shielded in Ottawa, but that has more to do with spying than than anything else.
    • Yes but... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by CharlieO ( 572028 )
      The problem is the level of shielding needed to protect against low level radiation leaking out of a building is very different from that required to protect sensitive electronics from very high energy radiation.

      The other problem becomes apparent when you think of what tactical targets this may be used against.

      The first stage of any modern war is to blind your enemy and disrupt thier communications - this means they cannot effectively detect your invasion and coordinate a counter attack.

      Currently this is done by an initial attack wave - use radar seaking missiles to destroy air surveilance equipment, cruise/smart bomb/iron bomb to take out communication centers like radio realays and phone exchanges. Maybe use special forces to ensure destruction or imparement of key facilities.

      The problem with all of these is you have to physically destroy the equipment - and this means any person near it.

      Now if you could use an EMP pulse to destroy electronics then you could argue that that presents a lower risk to humans in the target areas.

      The reason that you can't shield this stuff is that radar needs its scanner unshielded to hear its return pulses, radios need unshielded antenna to work, telephone exchanges need miles of unshielded phone cable.

      The way to defend against this is to have backup systems in shielded enclosures that are safe from the initial attack, and then connect and use them after it has passed. This is what was done for the civil defence bunkers in the UK - and I presume elsewhere. If it works anything running or connected at the time is toast.

      So this is where tactically these weapons can be used - unmanned drones can sneak into the terrotary and destroy comms and survielence systems.

      I don't think you could easily get this into a cruise missile - you are going to need a lot of power, probably stored in a capacitor bank to generate a high energy short duration pulse from a directional maser system. Something like the Golden Hawk may do as you have capacity and a large jet turbin to tap for power.

      One thing I don't agree with is that these are 'safe' weapons - no weapon is 'safe' it depends on its tactical use. As outlined above it could be used very effecticely - and of course another attraction is that its multi use rather than trhowing away cruise missiles at half a million dollars a shot.

      One thing I disagree with in the report (and I'm in the UK) is that it would be good for taking out chemical weapon facilities. No its not.

      For a start small scale clandestine chemical weapon manufacture could be carried in small labs by hand - destroying a few PCs, telephones and multimeters doesn't win you anything.

      If you target a large automated plant (if the chemical agents are being made in secret at some generally normal chemcial plant) then you had better hope the control systems are totally failsafe, other wise you are going to release those agents, and other noxious substances, in potentially massive quantities.

      I mean, look at it this way - would you believe that a safe way of disabling a nuclear power station would be to instantly and simultaneously switch off every control system, every safety system, every hardwired multiple backup system - because that is what a weapon like this will do if it works.

      The Russians tried something like that at Cherynobyl - and I think we learned something there.
  • High power radio frequency emissions, especially at microwave frequencies, equals heat in flesh. Especially since it has water and that heats up, a lot.

    Don't beleive me? Stick a slab of bacon in your microwave. That's likely 500 - 2000 Watts.

    EMP weapons are typically hundreds of megawatts (million watts), and the high end ones are in the gigawatt range (billion watts). Throw in that they'll be using an extremely directional antenna, and the effective radiated power could start at hundreds of megawatts into even the low terrawatts (trillions of watts).

    You can take a common fighter aircraft's radar, aim it a nearby bird and in a few seconds it will fall out of the sky, dead. And that's 5 - 40 KWatts, effective is of course more.

    Harmless to humans. Yeah, okay. Go ahead and stand near one of these, go for it! Be a gerbil.

    OOPS! That's what the US government uses the military for! Couldn't forget about that, could we?
    • by Anonymous Coward
      My father repaired aircraft during the Vietnam War. There was once an accident on his base involving one of the recon aircraft (do not recall its name at the moment). It seems the high-powered microwave transmitters had been left operational when a technician went to service the plane, and he was badly injured (burned) as a result of stepping to close to the underside of the plane.

      So even if the microwaves are supposedly tuned to silicon instead of water, I am highly sceptical of any focused microwave energy being 'mostly harmless.'
    • by dmaxwell ( 43234 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:40AM (#5134522)
      A microwave oven is tuned to the resonant frequency of water molecules. This government weapon will be tuned to the frequency of silicon atoms. It'll burn people up close I suppose but be mostly harmless to flesh further out while still frying transistors.
  • Collateral Damage (Score:2, Insightful)

    by jonhuang ( 598538 )
    Despite the emphasis on "totally harmless to people", it should be obvious that this isn't a true smart weapon either--imagine an accidental flyby over a hospital, airport, pacemaker, or computerized traffic light.

    Still, this is a valuable weapon, and better than carpet bombing. I just don't want to see it (like sanctions) become a supposedly "bloodless" way to achieve foriegn policy goals.
  • Oh no! how long before the Hilary Rosen from the RIAA starts developing weapons like this to use against evil music pirates...
  • by Noryungi ( 70322 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:40AM (#5134218) Homepage Journal
    The article itself is very light on information and does not offer anything other than pure speculation: "A micro-wave weapon may be under development... This weapon may be completely harmless to humans", yadda, yadda, yadda.

    I think the United States are kind of pushing up one notch the "psychological warfare" and disinformation on Iraq.

    This is not a troll: if you were going to launch a war soon, you'd want your enemies to believe you have several new, exotic and deadly weapons in your arsenal.

    In the first Gulf War, Some Iraqi soldiers surrendered as soon as they saw unarmed drones. Drones are now armed, and dangerous, and some Yemenis terrorists learned this the hard way (meaning they were blown to smithereens by a Predator-launched missile.

    Add some rumors -- before the conflict -- on how some drones may now carry some super duper microwave weapons and watch even more Iraqi soldiers surrender real quick when a drone flies over them...
  • by PFactor ( 135319 )
    The next generation of battlefield will be one where each side tries to take out their guidance systems, command and control systems, game boys, etc. The victor in such a battlefield will be the boys with the best toys, which is the point of development programs like the one in this article.

    However, military planners should remember places like Afghanistan (vs USSR) and Vietnam (vs USA), where superior technology didn't mean certain victory. In fact, guerrilla operations by the natives of those contries killed and maimed a great many young men from the "2 world powers". The natives were armed with nothing more than assault rifles, low yield explosives, a few RPG's, and ALOT of desire to succeed.

    When you build a system like this, it had better be protected on the back end, or some 17 yr old enemy sapper with a death wish will blow your control systems to hell. Also, you run the risk of thinking that your enemy thinks about these systems the same way you do. Maybe he builds these systems knowing you'll attack them, so he lays a trap.

    And, while you are busy figuring out why that command center was undefended, you have a couple thousand guerrilla fighters rush your base of operations. Checkmate.
  • ...must remember to leave the door open on the microwave and see how my food's doing ;-)
  • I would imagine these things could change the face of conventional warfare. Imagine as a squadron of enemy fighters or bombers is heading your way - launch one of those things at them and watch them drop from the sky like lame ducks.

    Of course, if the other side had them then maybe we effectively return to the days of WWI combat technology.
    • And in WWI (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MosesJones ( 55544 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:00AM (#5134303) Homepage
      Thousands of people died in a day.

      In ONE battle (the Somme) 60,000 Allied forces died on the first day. This doesn't include the numbers that the Axis lost.

      Part of the point of weapons such as this is to disable the military and reduce the number of dead, this leads to a less pissed off defeated nation than one that has just seen a large portion of its population killed.

      Of course given that Iraq use Scuds which have bugger all electronics in them, and North Korea still appear to be point and fire propulsion rockets this would be really effective against the British and the French should they decide to attack the US.

      Sort of like the Stealth Fighter, Iraq has bugger all radar that is any good but Stealth Fighters and Bombers still fly at 30,000 feet because Iraqi air defences don't reach that high. But to the British Navy's Radar a golf ball flying at 30,000 feet and 500mph is still at target that can be blown out of the sky.
      • Re:And in WWI (Score:3, Interesting)

        by wazzzup ( 172351 )
        Exactly! I hope it didn't appear that the implication of my post was that it would be desireable to go back to WWI type fighting. It was meant to point out a very undesireable scenario to anybody that knew any history about WWI. WWI was the most miserable war ever fought, rampant disease from laying in trenches months at a time, chemical weapons, massive daily death tolls - that's why it was termed "the war to end all wars".

        I understand you're point about the British and French attacking the U.S. but there is plenty of modern-enough Soviet hardware floating around out there for HMP to still be an effective weapon. Also consider that someday, these nations/organizations will have access to technology that the wealthy Western nations possess today so development of these weapons is still a worthy endeavor.

        Interesting point about military destruction without death toll results in a less pissed off nation in defeat. This may end up being true but the first thing I thought of was what led to the rise of Hitler and the introduction of WWII - an economy in shambles and a people that felt humiliated about their defeat in WWI and the resulting terms of surrender they were forced into by the Allies. What I envision is a scenario where, sure there were less casualties in the war but now they are left to repair a nation in defeat and no modern day machinery and electronics to rebuild or restart a peacetime economy. The end result to a war fought with these weapons may end up being quite similar to one that was fought with conventional weapons.
  • by AppyPappy ( 64817 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:46AM (#5134240)
    Everyone has heard of "Bunker Busters". Imagine if terrorists cooked off one of these on Wall St. Of course, making a nuke is probably much easier than building one of these but it could have a devastating impact without the messy media images of fried bodies.

    I hope we havn't invented the means of our own destruction.
    • by ianscot ( 591483 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:04AM (#5134326)
      without the messy media images of fried bodies.

      To observe the obvious: the terrorists involved in 9/11 have no objection to "messy" images. They did target the WTC as a symbol of the US's economic hegemony, and the Pentagon as a symbol of the military -- but their specific targets had everything to do with inflicting lots of casualties in a "spectacular" way, too. "Terror" has a lot to do with bodies.

      Forgive the lack of a clever twist on this post, but there it is.

  • oooh, scary (Score:5, Funny)

    by new death barbie ( 240326 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:47AM (#5134242)
    Imagine the damage this weapon could inflict on the enemy when all of their popcorn pops at once.

    • by sczimme ( 603413 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:05AM (#5134338)

      Imagine the damage this weapon could inflict on the enemy when all of their popcorn pops at once.

      Well, if that 80s vintage documentary [imdb.com]showed me anything, it's that...

      the house will rapidly fill up with popcorn

      the windows will break outward, followed by popped corn pouring out of said windows

      the front door will burst open in slow motion, and one of the more annoying antagonists will be engulfed in a mass of kernels as he is propelled down the front steps

      eventually part of the foundation will collapse, and the house will list about 15 degrees to port

      local townsfolk will rejoice in the corny goodness (also in slow motion)

      Terrifying stuff, that is.

  • &nbsp

    ... intelligence reports that the Chinese are developing a new, high tech armor code-named "Redenbaucher"

  • I want one to fry the engine management in the cars that keep screaming past my house.
  • by Moderation abuser ( 184013 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @08:51AM (#5134261)

    EMP "rifle"

    http://www.plans-kits.com/

    Know all those speed cameras? Congestion charging cameras? CCTV cameras? Whap, they don't work anymore.

  • NOT so Harmless (Score:2, Informative)

    by dark-br ( 473115 )
    Exposure to microwaves is dangerous mainly when high densities of microwave radiation are involved, as with masers. They can cause burns, cataracts, damage to the nervous system, and sterility. However, the possible danger of long-term exposure to low-level microwaves is not yet well known. In general, the U.S. government limits the exposure level to 10 milliwatts per square centimeter.

    I bet that stuff is away above the 10 milliwatts!

  • I'm calling my lawyer the second the popcorn in my pantry starts to pop.
  • Is this like earlier war days. Before planes were equpt with weapons, pilots would wave at each other. Eventually, they actually started throwing things at each other, ultimately, granades. This was of course, before they figured out how to put guns on them.

    So are we now throwing microwaves? In Russia, Microwaves attack you?

  • Scary Threat (Score:3, Interesting)

    by tourettes ( 97445 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:02AM (#5134316)
    For about 55 to 60 years now, one of the biggest threats in the world was the threat of a nuclear attact. One bomb that could wipe out a city in one shot. Just imagine the impact of a wide-spread EMP attack. Obviously it doesn't come close to the devestation of a nuclear weapon, but how much would our lives change? I'm not up much on the technicals of EMPs, but, would this basically wipe out almost any magnetic storage medium we use for computers? Imagine an entire city, like Washington for example, wiped clean of all it's data, this could set back a country during war-time a lot.
  • by dfj225 ( 587560 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:05AM (#5134337) Homepage Journal
    that the article mentioned that we could use these weapons in the war on Iraq...I didn't realize that we are at war with Iraq yet...
  • "Good" weapon? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by sm.arson ( 559130 )
    I'm generally opposed to murder in all it's forms (death penalty, war; holy, political or both) so it's good to see people spending time on weapons that essentially don't hurt anyone.

    I'd much rather live in a future where police are armed with neutralizing weapons a la Minority Report, rather than walking around with god damned AK-47s like the police in many countries do today.

    If I had to choose, I'd rather be made to puke with a vomit stick by accident than be shot through the heart over a simple Halloween misunderstanding...
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:09AM (#5134353)
  • Nicola Tesla (Score:2, Interesting)

    by little1973 ( 467075 )
    AFAIK, Tesla was the first to think about EMP as a weapon (I think he called it Death Ray). He even came up with the idea of an EM shield which act as an impenetrable wall against any kind of attack.
  • by Helmholtz Coil ( 581131 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:11AM (#5134363) Journal
    The interesting thing is that to make it harmful all you have to do is boost its power. This new weapon is essentially the same as the microwave crowd control devices that've been in the news for a couple of years now, the only difference being power levels and how the microwaves are projected.

    Basically in both cases the default configuration is to be nonlethal, but it wouldn't take a whole lot to change that in a hurry.

  • pre-war propaganda? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Goose Bump ( 454208 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:40AM (#5134520)
    it's not very difficult to shield against the effects of this weapon.

    Just for a rough sanity check...

    Decent rigid coaxial cable offers about 100dB of shielding
    . One-million watts = 90dBm, so that would drop it down to -10dBm interference in a shielded signal. Not enough to damage anything, but definately enough to interfere. Bluetooth and 802.11b run at a max of 20dBm and no cars crash outside when I key up the old bit blaster.

    The absorbtion of the radiated power is also an issue. Different circuits absorb different frequencies better than others. If this was a fairly narrowband emission, it would wreak havoc on some things (soft tissue maybe) but not others. If it is very wide band, then you have to jack up your total power so that many different freuquencies have a potent allotment of power.

    It would just be a lot easier to interfere (jam) with guidance systems and radar. And GPS is easy jam. At least that was the FCC's standpoint with respect to UWB. But that's another thread...
  • by iainl ( 136759 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:42AM (#5134536)
    1) Every description so far makes it sound like its just a case of stockpiling Faraday cages. Surely it can't be that simple to protect against?

    2) If a high power EMP device is as simple to make as several /. posters suggest, and a simple bit of work with some metal in (1) doesn't protect against them, how powerful a battery-powered one can you fit in a 40ft container on the back of a lorry on Wall Street, in the centre of London, or even, say, a suburb of Redmond as an example? This strikes me as a far more useful weapon of Terror than those messy chemicals and biological agents that Frys or Radio Shack wouldn't sell you.
  • by presearch ( 214913 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:54AM (#5134607)
    From the article: ..useful in a wide variety of missions where avoiding civilian casualties is a major concern.

    One would think that with the US being the "Good Guys" that avoiding civilian casualties would be a goal of all missions.

    It's more than likely an effective way of preserving the real estate.
    A neutron bomb without the residual radiation problems and nuke escalation issues.

    Megawatts of microwaves?
    It would be too awful to brag about their new weapon in terms of frying people like a hot dog in the radarrange
    but I'm sure that's what Gen. Amana has in mind. How could they resist?
  • by tkrotchko ( 124118 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @09:54AM (#5134608) Homepage
    It my understanding that modern thermonuclear devices are designed in such a way to make them difficult to "explode".

    I don't have the links around any more, but there is a fascinating discussion of nuclear triggers that shows how this is done and why.

    Anyway, the point being, if you had a directed EMP type device and you saw an incoming ballistic missle, wouldn't it be easy to fry the electronics of the missle so the thermonuclear device wouldn't detonate? Sure, you'd have a lot of destructive problems with the missle itself, but I think it would preferrable to have a 10 ton hunk of aluminum dropped on a city than a 10 megaton H-bomb, right?

  • by watzinaneihm ( 627119 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @10:17AM (#5134766) Journal
    From the article
    The technology behind HPM is based on that used in household microwave ovens

    Now even if the microwave rays are many times stronger and even if you use a directional antenna shouldnt it be easy to stop the rays?
    From a google search i got http://www.provincia.venezia.it/comenius/eu_oven2. htm which says There is a metallic net either inside the plastic panel or inside the glass panel, because the holes of the net are smaller than the length wave of microwave frequencies of about 12,5 cm at 2.5 Ghz. the glass panel is essentially opaque to the microwaves so all the energy of the microwaves is reflected inside the cavity of the oven.

    Or I think you can just use an aluminum foil wrapper around your computer to temporarily stop the rays (atleast till the aluminium starts burning, and then you can have fun) , Anyway how long is a drone going to be able to produce some millions of watts of power ? (746 watts =1 horsepower, I think?)
  • by jhines0042 ( 184217 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @11:38AM (#5135377) Journal
    This is precisely why I'm glad I know how to fish, start a fire without matches, and otherwise generally survive in the wild.

    Imagine if you will your world with no electronic devices. Not a lack of electricity, just a lack of devices that are working currently. No computers, no internet, no car, no stop lights, no elevators, no microwave ovens, no pizza deliver, nothing that requires electronic components.

    Could you live in that world were you suddenly thrown into it?

    The super market wouldn't have food for very long and of course everyone instantly becomes a looter.

    Luckily buildings would still be standing. But could you heat and cool your home?
  • Really bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)

    by linux2000 ( 23448 ) on Wednesday January 22, 2003 @12:40PM (#5135895) Homepage Journal
    The United States developing this weapon is really, really stupid. We've seen our own weapons, and soviet weapons, in the hands of enemy nations before. Our enemies are usually 3rd world nations who could never develop such a thing themselves. India has nukes, Pakistan has nukes, North Korea has nukes, and now we're worried about Iraq having nukes - but who invented nuclear technology to begin with?

    The U.S. Army doesn't "build" such weapons anyway, government contractors do, which are ordinary corporations whose goal is to make and sell products to make a profit and stay afloat. Any old customer will do, so they sell some of these weapons to other friendly nations. Those nations turn around and sell them to somewhat questionable nations. Those turn around and sell them to nations that we would never sell to, such as Iraq (for a huge sum, probably).

    So, now, if we and our enemies both have such a weapon, who will sustain the most damage from its use? The U.S. of course! We are more dependent on electronics guidance systems and computers and radios than any 3rd world nation!

    Iraq/Palestine/Al Qaeda are probably jumping for joy at this news. Dammit.

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