Animal-borne bomb attacks

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Animal-borne bomb attacks are the use of animals as delivery systems for explosives. The explosives are strapped to a pack animal such as a horse, mule or donkey. The pack animal may be set off in a crowd.

Projects of bat bombs, dog bombs, and pigeon bombs have also been studied.

Incidents

Afghanistan

In 2009, Taliban insurgents strapped an improvised explosive device to a donkey and let the donkey loose a short way from a camp of the British Armed Forces in Helmand Province.[1][2]

In April 2013, in Kabul, a bomb attached to a donkey blew up in front of a police security post, killing a policeman and wounding three civilians. A government spokesman claimed insurgents were challenging the competence of the Afghan government prior to the 2014 withdrawal of the U.S. military.[3]

Iraq

On 21 November 2003, eight rockets were fired from donkey carts at the Iraqi oil ministry and two hotels in downtown Baghdad, injuring one man and causing some damage.[4] In 2004, a donkey in

Iraqi Insurgency.[6]

Lebanon

Malia Sufangi, a young Lebanese woman, was caught in the Security Zone in November 1985 with an explosive device mounted on a donkey with which she had failed to carry out an attack.

United States

In 1862, during the

New Mexico Campaign of the American Civil War a Confederate force approached the ford at Valverde, six miles north of Fort Craig, hoping to cut Union communications between the fort and their headquarters in Santa Fe. When it was nearly midnight, Union Captain James Craydon tried to blow up some rebel picket posts by sending mules loaded with barrels of fused gunpowder into the Confederate lines; however, the mules went back toward the Union camp and detonated there. Although the only casualties were two mules, the explosions stampeded a herd of Confederate beef cattle and horses into the Union's lines, so depriving the Confederate troops of some much-needed provisions and horses.[8]

In the

anarchists
used a bomb carried by horse-drawn cart.

West Bank and Gaza Strip

Military

During

incendiary bombs.[18] During the same war, Project Pigeon (later Project Orcon, for "organic control") was American behaviorist B. F. Skinner's attempt to develop a pigeon-guided missile. The project was barely funded and was cancelled on the 8th of October 1944.[19][20] They had also used incendiary bat bombs that were largely ineffective. At the same time the Soviet Union developed the "anti-tank dog" for use against German tanks.[21] The anti-tank dog project mostly failed, as the dogs would be spooked by the noises and gunfire, as well as running under Russian tanks due to the dogs being trained with diesel tanks, as opposed to the German tanks, which ran on petrol. The Imperial Japanese Army had used dogs and other animals strapped with bombs to run into American lines during Iwo Jima and Okinawa
. More recently, Iran purchased several dolphins, some of which were former Soviet military dolphins, along with other sea mammals and birds, in what some have alleged to be an attempt by

See also

References

  1. ^ Lester, Haines. "Taliban attack Brit troops with explosive donkey". The Register.
  2. ^ [1]"Donkey ‘suicide’ bombing is latest tactic against patrols, Michael Evans, April 30, 2009, The Times of London.
  3. ^ [2] Bomb attached to donkey kills policeman in eastern Afghanistan, April 5, 2013, Fox News / Associated Press.
  4. ^ Rockets slam into Iraq's Oil Ministry, two hotels Associated Press, 21 November 2011
  5. ^ Dogs of war can be friend or foe Archived 2009-05-04 at the Wayback Machine August 12, 2005. The Standard (originally from Los Angeles Times)
  6. ^ Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) – Iraq GlobalSecurity.org
  7. ^ a b [3] "Syria and Terrorism, Boaz Ganor, 15 November 1991, JCPA.
  8. ^ Kerby 1995, pp. 66–67.
  9. ^ Suicide bomber explodes donkey cart near Khan Yunis, 3 soldiers hurt, Jerusalem Post 26-06-1995
  10. ^ Fragile Mideast cease-fire endures another day, CNN 17-06-2001
  11. ^ 'We're stunt queens. We have to be', The Guardian 24-02-2006
  12. ^ Mother nature (part one), The Guardian 22-06-2003
  13. ^ Militants, bomb-laden horses die in Gaza clash, AP 08-06-2009
  14. ^ Gaza gunmen use booby-trapped horses against IDF, Ynet News 08-06-2009
  15. ^ Donkey bomb claims only the donkey, AP 25-05-2010
  16. ^ http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3893975,00.html, Ynet News 25-05-2010
  17. ^ "Gaza terrorists attempt to attack IDF forces with explosives-laden donkey". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. 19 July 2014.
  18. ^ The Bat Bombers Archived 2006-12-06 at the Wayback Machine, C. V. Glines, Journal of the Airforce Association, October 1990, Vol. 73, No. 10 (accessed November 17, 2006)
  19. ^ Skinner, B. F. (1960). Pigeons in a pelican. American Psychologist, 15, 28–37. Reprinted in: Skinner, B. F. (1972). Cumulative record (3rd ed.). New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts, pp. 574–591.
  20. ^ Described throughout Skinner, B. F. (1979). The shaping of a behaviorist: Part two of an autobiography. New York: Knopf.
  21. ^ Dog Anti-Tank Mine Archived 2019-07-08 at the Wayback Machine, Soviet-Empire.com (accessed November 17, 2006)
  22. ^ Iran buys kamikaze dolphins, BBC News, Wednesday, 8 March 2000, 16:45 GMT
  23. ^ Ryan (March 15, 2015). "Take a Look Inside These Abandoned Submarines & Bases". History in Orbit website. pp. 24–6. Archived from the original on September 19, 2018. Retrieved July 6, 2018.

Sources

  • Kerby, Robert L. (1995) [1958]. The Confederate Invasion of New Mexico and Arizona, 1861–1862. Tucson, AZ: Westernlore Press. .