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Shaped Charges IED
in the Middle East
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Page 3 of 4 pages > |
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Shaped
charge IEDs are not new in the Middle East insurgency wars. The IDF
Bomb Disposal crews have uncovered, what they designate as Kela
type IEDs, in Lebanon and in Gaza. Activated through catapulted
triggering devices, the weapon uses an improvised chemical shaped
charge type, between 10-50kg and can be launched from stand-off or
electrical fuze from several meters distance. The initial types have
been relatively ineffective against armored vehicles, but the
heavier versions have caused catastrophic results in softer or
lightly armored vehicles.
Other
types of IED used by Hamas and Hezbollah are super-heavy "belly"
explosive devices, also frequently packing some special types of
shaped charge explosives to penetrate AFV hulls from the vulnerable
bottom. Penetration by chemical jet stream into the fighting
compartment activated catastrophic secondary explosions in
unprotected internal tank ammunition stores. Israeli experts assumed
that the know-how about the preparation and use of such devices was
imported from Iranian demolition experts.
Accordingly, latest IDF versions of (Low
Intensive Combat) LIC Merkava tanks have been fitted with armored
steel base-plates, which can absorb the blast. US experts consider a
similar trend to take place in Iraq, as know-how is transferred to
Iraqi insurgents by Hezbollah and their Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps sabotage instructors. Iraqi insurgents have already adopted
such tactics utilizing a variety of shaped charges. Some have been
hung from overpasses others planted on roadsides, One of the
heaviest IEDs used so far contained 600 pounds of explosives placed
in an under devastated an Amphibious armored vehicle killing four
marines. Another ambush which used four stacked mines buried in a
road, destroyed another amphibious carrier and killed 14 marines.
Other methods of operations call for placement of heavy IEDs in road
underpasses, and most lately - mounted in suicide vehicles.
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