Tag Archives: munitions

Ukrainian Military Reports Intense Fighting Along Front As Putin Threatens ‘Reciprocal Action’ Against Cluster Munitions – Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty

  1. Ukrainian Military Reports Intense Fighting Along Front As Putin Threatens ‘Reciprocal Action’ Against Cluster Munitions Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  2. Russia says West is sponsoring ‘nuclear terrorism’ after Ukrainian drone strike | Russia-Ukraine War WION
  3. Ukrainian Armed Forces destroy two Russian tanks using FPV drones – video Yahoo News
  4. Outnumbered with outdated kit: a day with Ukraine’s helicopter pilots The Times
  5. Ukrainian soldiers shoot artillery at Russian military near Soledar | Russia-Ukraine war Live | WION WION
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Ukraine says cluster munitions will be ‘game changer’ against Russia – POLITICO Europe

  1. Ukraine says cluster munitions will be ‘game changer’ against Russia POLITICO Europe
  2. Bulgarian secret services contradict on Russian war’s external impact EURACTIV
  3. Zelenskiy Visits Sofia, Prague To Drive Home Messages On NATO Membership, Demand For More Arms Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  4. Zelenskiy Expected To Visit Sofia On Same Day As Parliamentary Vote On Ukraine’s Membership In NATO Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  5. Four Pakistani Soldiers Killed Amid Surge In Terror Attacks Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Depleted-uranium shells, the armour-busting munitions heading to Ukraine – FRANCE 24 English

  1. Depleted-uranium shells, the armour-busting munitions heading to Ukraine FRANCE 24 English
  2. UK to provide weapons containing depleted uranium to Ukraine: What are these? The Indian Express
  3. World at War | Britain to send deadly Depleted Uranium weapons to defeat Russia in Ukraine | WION WION
  4. U.K. Sending Depleted Uranium Shells to Ukraine Despite Russian Warning The Daily Beast
  5. Ukraine-Russia war – latest: Battle for Bakhmut ‘stabilising’ due to Kyiv’s ‘tremendous efforts’ The Independent
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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UK claps back at Putin over nuclear escalation following depleted uranium ammo pledge: ‘not nuclear munitions’ – Fox News

  1. UK claps back at Putin over nuclear escalation following depleted uranium ammo pledge: ‘not nuclear munitions’ Fox News
  2. Putin warns UK over depleted uranium weapons – BBC News BBC News
  3. Putin says Russia will “respond accordingly” if Ukraine gets depleted uranium shells from U.K., claiming they have “nuclear component” CBS News
  4. Putin says Russia will react ‘accordingly’ if West sends ammunition with depleted uranium Fox News
  5. U.S. Army sets up garrison on NATO’s east flank; Will counter Putin’s ‘aggression’ from Poland Hindustan Times
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Rheinmetall eyes boost in munitions output, HIMARS production in Germany

DUESSELDORF, Jan 29 (Reuters) – German arms-maker Rheinmetall is ready to greatly boost the output of tank and artillery munitions to satisfy strong demand in Ukraine and the West, and may start producing HIMARS multiple rocket launchers in Germany, CEO Armin Papperger told Reuters.

He spoke days before Germany’s defence industry bosses are due to meet new defence minister Boris Pistorius for the first time, though the exact date has yet to be announced.

With the meeting, Pistorius aims to kick off talks on how to speed up weapons procurement and boost ammunitions supplies in the long term after almost a year of arms donations to Ukraine has depleted the German military’s stocks.

Rheinmetall (RHMG.DE) makes a range of defence products but is probably most famous for manufacturing the 120mm gun of the Leopard 2 tank.

“We can produce 240,000 rounds of tank ammunition (120mm) per year, which is more than the entire world needs,” Papperger said in an interview with Reuters.

The capacity for the production of 155mm artillery rounds can be ramped up to 450,000 to 500,000 per year, he added, which would make Rheinmetall the biggest producer for both kinds of ammunition.

In 2022, Rheinmetall made some 60,000 to 70,000 rounds each of tank and artillery shells, according to Papperger, who said production could be boosted immediately.

Demand for these munitions has soared since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last February, not only due to their massive use on the battlefield but also as Western militaries backfill their own stocks, bracing for what they see as a heightened threat from Moscow.

Papperger said a new production line for medium calibre ammunition, used by German-built Gepard anti-aircraft tanks in Ukraine for example, would go live by mid-year.

Germany has been trying for months to find new munitions for the Gepard that its own military had decomissioned in 2010.

HIMARS PRODUCTION LINE IN GERMANY?

At the same time, Rheinmetall is in talks with Lockheed Martin(LMT.N), the U.S. company manufacturing the HIMARS (High Mobility Artillery Rocket System) multiple rocket launchers in heavy use with Ukrainian troops, Papperger said.

“At the Munich Security Conference, we aim to strike an agreement with Lockheed Martin to kick off a HIMARS production (in Germany),” he said, referring to an annual gathering of political and defence leaders in mid-February.

“We have the technology for the production of the warheads as well as for the rocket motors – and we have the trucks to mount the launchers upon,” Papperger said, adding a deal may prompt investments of several hundred million euros of which Rheinmetall would finance a major part.

Rheinmetall also eyes the operation of a new powder plant, possibly in the eastern German state of Saxony, but the investment of 700 to 800 million euros would have to be footed by the government in Berlin, he said.

“The state has to invest, and we contribute our technological know-how. In return, the state gets a share of the plant and the profits it makes,” Papperger suggested.

“This is an investment that is not feasible for the industry on its own. It is an investment into national security, and therefore we need the federal state,” he said.

The plant is needed as shortages in the production of special powders could turn out to be a bottleneck, hampering efforts to boost the output of tank and artillery shells, he noted.

A few days before the meeting with the new defence minister, Papperger pushed for an increase of Germany’s defence budget.

“The 51 billion euros in the defence budget will not suffice to purchase everything that is needed. And the money in the 100 billion euro special funds has already been earmarked – and partially been eaten up by inflation,” he said.

“100 billion euros sounds like a giant sum but we would actually need a 300 billion euro package to order everything that’s needed,” he added, noting that the 100 billion special fund does not include ammunitions purchases.

Even before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Germany was 20 billion euros short of reaching NATO’s target for ammunitions stockpiling, according to a defence source.

To plug the munitions gap alone, Papperger estimates the Bundeswehr (German armed forces) would need to invest three to four billion euros per year.

In the talks with the minister, the defence boss hopes for a turn towards a more sustainable long-term planning in German procurement, stretching several years into the future, as the industry needed to be able to make its arrangements in time.

“What we are doing at the moment is actually war stocking: Last year, we prefinanced 600 to 700 million euros for goods,” Papperger said. “We must move away from this crisis management – it is crisis management when you buy (raw materials and other things) without having a contract – and get into a regular routine.”

Reporting by Sabine Siebold, Editing by Angus MacSwan

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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US poised for slowdown in high-end munitions deliveries to Ukraine

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin signaled this week that the U.S. and its Western allies are having trouble keeping pace with Ukraine’s demand for the advanced weaponry it needs to fend off Russia’s invasion. That signal reflects dwindling supplies for Ukraine and fear in the White House of escalation that could lead to war between the U.S. and Russia.

The risk of reduced U.S. stockpiles of high-end munitions has been reported almost since the U.S. began contributing to Ukraine’s defense. Now, nearly eight months since the start of the war, experts interviewed by Fox News Digital say the U.S. is at or very near the end of its capacity to give. 

They agreed that Austin’s remarks indicate that the initial rush of high-end munitions like HIMAR rocket launchers, Javelin anti-tank missiles, anti-aircraft Stingers and M-777 Howitzers is over. These sources said there may be two factors at play that are contributing to this reality.

One factor is the issue that Austin addressed directly this week – the U.S. is running low on equipment that it can hand over to Ukraine.

RUSSIA SCRAMBLES TO REPAIR CRIMEA BRIDGE, ZELENSKYY VOWS TO ACCELERATE ‘VICTORY’

In this photo released by Ukrainian Presidential Press Office, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy leads a meeting of the National Security and Defense Council in Kyiv, Ukraine, Friday, Sept. 30, 2022.
(Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP)

At a press conference Wednesday, Austin was asked whether the U.S. and other nations are worried about running so low on domestic supplies of critical munitions that they can no longer help Ukraine. Austin dodged the question by stressing that the desire is there to get Ukraine what it needs, but he left unsaid whether Ukraine’s allies can actually deliver.

“Well, it certainly is not a question of lack of will,” Austin replied.

Austin had just concluded a meeting with officials from dozens of countries about Ukraine’s munitions needs. As he described that meeting, he again talked about willpower but hinted at strained capacity to provide more for Ukraine, which is using up munitions faster than the world can deliver them.

RUSSIA’S WAGNER GROUP MAKES ‘SOME’ ADVANCES IN DONBAS IN FIRST TACTICAL GAINS SINCE JULY: UK INTEL

“We will produce and deliver these highly effective capabilities over the course of the coming months — and in some cases years — even as we continue to meet Ukraine’s most pressing self-defense requirements in real time,” Austin said of the most recent commitment to send HIMARS, vehicles, radar systems and other equipment.

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin testifies before a House subcommittee in Washington, D.C., on May 11, 2022.
(AP/Jose Luis Magana)

Mark Cancian is a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic & International Studies who spent seven years working on DOD procurement issues for the Office of Management and Budget. His assessment based on inventory levels, industrial capacity, and information from the Biden administration is that the U.S. has “limited” supplies of HIMARs, Javelins, Stingers and M-777 Howitzers.

“There are some areas where we’re basically at the bottom of the barrel,” he told Fox News Digital.

In some cases, this means the U.S. will likely start meeting Ukraine’s request for weaponry by sending over lower-end substitutions, such as lighter Howitzers that are serviceable but not what Ukraine is after. In other cases, the U.S. may not have much to give – Cancian said that while there is talk of the U.S. providing more air defense equipment, there is not much the U.S. can give in that area.

Cancian said he reads Austin comments as a sign that the days of the U.S. giving Ukraine its best stuff are gone.

NATO HEAD WARNS RUSSIA TO AVOID ‘VERY IMPORTANT LINE’ AHEAD OF NUCLEAR TESTS

“It confirmed what I believe, that we will continue support Ukraine, but we’re going to have to do it in different ways, like providing substitutes, or we might have to buy stuff from other people, or it will take longer,” he said. “That it won’t be quite the same.”

He said this runs the risk of creating what he called a “petting zoo of NATO equipment” in Ukraine – relatively small numbers of many types of equipment that could create compatibility issues.

Some on Capitol Hill are reading Austin’s remark differently that leads to largely the same result – that the Biden administration is purposefully slowing down the transfer of critical munitions to Ukraine, because it is increasingly worried about stumbling into a direct conflict with Russia.

Photo of Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and President Biden 
(AP/Office of the President of Ukraine)

A congressional aide with working knowledge of these issues told Fox News Digital that while officials are hinting at limited supplies, there is still room to give more, and that the slowdown is because of a different calculation the Biden administration is making.

“They are afraid of escalation,” this aide said.

Just last week, President Biden openly talked about the “Armageddon” scenario that could unfold if Russia tried to win the war with a tactical nuclear strike. The congressional aide interpreted Austin’s remarks as a sign the administration is more and more worried about crossing a line that might force that outcome.

Another sign of U.S. caution, the aide said, is that the administration allowed nearly $2.8 billion in authority to supply Ukraine with weapons to expire a few weeks ago, at the end of fiscal year 2022. Some on Capitol Hill are reading that as an indication that the administration is finding its own comfort level when it comes to arming Ukraine, and that level stops short of what Congress authorized.

“Congress gave the administration more than it wanted,” the aide said. The Defense Department declined to respond to questions from Fox News Digital about the expiration of this authority.

RUSSIA USING IRANIAN-MADE ‘KAMIKAZE DRONES’ TO STRIKE AROUND KYIV

Destroyed Russian armored vehicles left behind by the Russian forces in Izium, Kharkiv, Ukraine on Oct. 2, 2022.
(Photo by Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

There is a related view within Congress that while U.S. stocks of certain munitions have clearly been reduced as the U.S. sends items to Ukraine, that reduction is not a security threat to the United States itself. The aide explained that many of these items were stockpiled largely for use in a possible conflict with Russia, and that conflict is already playing out with Ukraine in the lead.

That conflict is reducing Russia’s military capacity, which means a corresponding drop in U.S. inventories is not putting the U.S. anywhere near a stockpile crisis.

To put it another way: the Biden administration has more flexibility to give Ukraine more but is choosing not to.

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The evolving U.S. posture comes just as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is intensifying pressure on Western nations to provide more weapons. Just this week, Zelenskyy asked for air defense systems that can blunt Russia’s recent missile attacks on Ukraine’s capital.

“The 229th day of full-scale war,” he said. “On the 229th day, they are trying to destroy us and wipe us off the face of the earth.”

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Bacteria and viruses as munitions

The concept of a biological weapon is a well known one, though more likely as part of a movie plot or a television series, rather than as a real threat. What is a biological weapon in practice? Was it ever used? Did countries actually develop a warfare concept that depends on pathogens? Which diseases were considered suitable for use as biological weapons?

A biological weapon is defined as a weapon that makes use of pathogens – mainly bacteria and viruses – or toxins, which are toxic substances produced by microorganisms. The goal can be killing enemy soldiers and civilians, causing a disease that will neutralize them, or to create panic.

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IDF soldiers wearing gas masks

(Photo: Efi Sharir)

The manner of distribution can be diverse: release of pathogens from an airplane, contamination of potable water and food resources, release of infected animals that carry the pathogen and can transmit it to humans (such as mosquitoes or fleas) and more.

A biological weapon has a few key properties: first, beyond its direct effect, it has a devastating psychological effect – the damaged morale and panic that it is likely to induce in the attacked population can be just as harmful as the direct effect of the pathogen itself.

Next, unlike chemical weapons, nuclear weapons or any conventional weapons, the effects of a biological weapon can spread and can potentially be dangerous even in places distant from the attack area, through the spread of the disease.

And finally, an attack with biological weapons is very difficult to detect – it usually becomes apparent only after relatively many people become sick or die, and even then it often remains unclear how it happened and who is responsible.

Nevertheless, the use of biological weapons is traceable: first, the epidemiology of the epidemic will usually indicate that many people exhibited symptoms within a relatively short time period, in contrast to a singular or multiple separate cases, as would be expected in the case of a natural disease.

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Bacteria/ Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

Second, the symptoms caused by a biological attack are sometimes different from the symptoms caused by the same pathogens when they spread naturally, which will immediately raise suspicion of biological warfare.

Biological warfare is not necessarily aimed at humans: spreading pathogens that target agricultural crops, or livestock, is also considered biological warfare, which targets the enemy’s food supplies and economy.

Epidemics have always been a source of great fear. Since ancient times to relatively modern times, they were perceived as a divine punishment and as an evil one cannot defend oneself against. Epidemics were especially common during times of war, since such times present favorable conditions for their spread.

The causes of epidemics were usually unknown, as in many cases was also the manner by which they spread, and thus in ancient times there weren’t many cases of intentional attempts to infect enemies in order to cause a plague. Even in cases where such practices were in use, they did not include direct spread of a pathogen, but were used in a more indirect manner.

That said, some documented cases were slightly reminiscent of a deliberate use of epidemics as a form of weapon, such as: forcing patients with an infectious disease to flee to enemy territories in order to spread the disease among the enemy’s population.

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Bacteria/ Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

Most such cases were small scale events and remained relatively localized. Some such examples are historical documentations of well poisoning as well as of the placing of beehives that produced toxic honey from poisonous plants, in an attempt to poison advancing enemy troops. There were also cases of the catapulting of disease-infested corpses into besieged cities, in an attempt to spread diseases within.

The infamous “plague,” also known as the Black Death in 14th century Europe, likely began as a biological warfare of sorts. When the Tatars lay siege to the city of Kaffa (present day Feodosiya), in the Crimean peninsula, they catapulted plague-infested corpses into the besieged city and the disease spread among its inhabitants.

The corpses may have not been the main cause of the epidemic, as it could have been caused by rats that went in and out of the city freely, transporting plague-infested fleas from the Tatars. After the siege ended with the city still standing, Italian merchants who were caught in the siege returned to Italy, and brought the plague with them. From Italy it spread rapidly throughout Europe, slaying between a quarter and a third of the European population in the following years.

After the discovery of microorganisms and the understanding of their roles as disease-causing agents, many countries invested in research and often even in development of the field of biological warfare. In World War I, biological warfare was used to some extent, although it was relatively insignificant compared to chemical warfare.

A major part of such warfare was targeted against livestock, especially horses, which were still the main vehicles of warring armies. Biological warfare, as well as chemical warfare, was banned for use in 1925 by the Geneva Convention, though the convention did not stipulate active measures for monitoring and surveillance to ensure that no country ventures to develop such weapons.

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Illustration

(Photo: shutterstock)

The main large-scale use of biological warfare was made by Japan in World War II. The Japanese used biological weapons in China, mainly plague and typhus. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese, soldiers and civilians alike, died as a result, in addition to thousands of additional captive civilians and soldiers, which were subjects of experiments by the Japanese.

One of the attacks, for example, was performed by bombarding a city with plague-infested fleas. Many of the Japanese scientists who took part in the development of these awful inventions were not prosecuted for war crimes and much of the Japanese knowledge on biological warfare ended up in the United States, similar to the Nazi scientists who provided a great deal of information to the Americans.

Since World War II there has been no proven use of biological weapons by any country or on the battlefield. There have been several incidents in which claims of the use of biological weapons have been made. For example, the U.S. accused North Korea of using biological weapons during the Korean War, and similar claims were also raised during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. However, these claims have not been proven and their credibility remains unclear.

Other large countries also developed biological weapons. The United Kingdom carried out research into anthrax during World War II and kept it as an offensive plan for many years that followed. The Soviet Union had an extensive biological weapons program during the Cold War, and China also possibly operated such a program in the past, although this does not seem to be the case today. Some claims exist as to the possibility that Russia, which inherited most of the Soviet Union’s military programs, currently continues operating a biological weapons program, although publicly available information regarding this matter is scarce.

Most of these programs have been discontinued, such as the American program, that stopped developing offensive measures during the 1960’s and destroyed its stockpiles of biological weapons. Current research in this field in the United States is being carried out only for defensive purposes. The United Kingdom discontinued the development of biological weapons back in the 1950s.

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Bacteria under microscope

(Photo: Reuters)

The Biological Weapons Convention, which was signed by the vast majority of the world’s countries and has been in effect since 1975, prohibits the development of biological weapons. Currently no country publicly admits to running a biological warfare program for offensive purposes or to possessing such weapons, and only a few countries admit to having previously maintained such programs.

Nonetheless, some concerns still exist that some countries, such as Iran, Russia and North Korea, maintain illegal and covert biological weapons programs. Suspicions have been raised in the past against Israel, but no evidence regarding the existence of an offensive biological weapons program was ever made public.

Many armies around the world are still preparing for the possibility that biological weapons will be used against them. Guidelines by the NATO alliance in the event of an unconventional attack that includes biological weapons, with details of possible pathogens that constitute potentially reasonable threats, can be found in this document.

Which diseases were considered as candidates to be used as a potential biological weapon? Naturally, not every disease can be used for such a dubious purpose. It is necessary to initially define the properties that such a disease should have. For example, would we want a lethal disease, or one that would simply neutralize those infected?

From a military point of view, for example, a sick enemy soldier is preferable to a dead one – both are unable to fight, but additional resources and expenses are required for the treatment of sick people. In addition, images of hospitals overflowing with casualties may induce a psychological effect of fear of the disease and decrease the enemy’s morale.

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Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

Other relevant criteria for the party developing such a weapon are, for example: does it matter how difficult it would be to treat the people infected? Would it be wise to use a disease that spreads from person to person, or would it be wiser to spread pathogens within a certain area in which they will infect only the people present, such as soldiers on a battlefield? Is it an interest to leave the area of pathogen dispersion compromised for a long period, or would it be preferable to have it cleared in a short time in order to be able to pass through it without protective gear?

All of the mentioned criteria affect the selection of the pathogen to be used for biological warfare. A wide variety of microorganisms, mainly bacteria and viruses, were assessed throughout history by different biological weapons programs. Such programs also considered the use of toxins, which are regarded as biological weapons since they are produced by microorganisms. Toxins do not reproduce and are not infectious, and are thus more similar to chemical weapons in their manner of application.

Surprisingly, and contrary to the norms common to works of fiction, most of the diseases considered are not very deadly, especially upon treatment, nor are they particularly contagious. This allows for better control of their use and prevents outbreaks of large-scale epidemics, which could also harm the attacker.

The common scenario of a highly contagious disease with mortality rates approaching 100% and with no effective treatment, is largely fictional. The two main exceptions are smallpox and plague: both are highly dangerous without treatment and highly contagious, though it should be noted that an effective antibiotics treatment currently exists against the plague-causing bacterium.

Among the other diseases that were considered for this dubious role of being used as a biological weapon, one of the better known and studied diseases is anthrax, and therefore warrants looking into. The reason for its popularity as a biological weapon is a combination of high lethality, especially resistant bacteria and low contagion rates. Thus, it is possible to infect a certain area with bacterial spores for a long period of time, decades and even more, and cause a deadly disease in a very localized manner.

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Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

A spore is the dormant state of the bacterium, in which it remains highly resistant to conditions such as heat and drought and can survive for many years. For example, spores of Botulinum bacteria, which produce especially deadly toxins and cause food poisoning, are one of very few organisms that can survive in honey, which is why feeding honey to babies is highly discouraged, since they can develop a disease as a result of the exposure.

When the spores are exposed to suitable conditions, they return to their active state and the bacteria reproduce. Spores of certain anthrax strains can survive for decades and still cause a disease upon entering the human body.

For Anthrax bacteria, the effective form of their dispersion is by the creation of aerosol drops that can be dispersed over the attacked area. Anthrax is transmitted naturally through contact with infected animals. This disease, termed “cutaneous anthrax”, is not particularly dangerous upon treatment.

In the case of biological warfare, those inhaling the spores will likely develop “respiratory anthrax” – a form of the disease that very rarely occurs naturally, and is significantly deadlier. The emergence of multiple simultaneous cases of respiratory anthrax is a clear sign of use of biological warfare. One of the most severe cases related to the use of biological weapons during the 20th century occurred in fact as an accident, in which anthrax spores were accidentally released from a factory in the Soviet Union, which was likely producing them for biological warfare.

Although anthrax is caused by a bacteria that is usually not resistant to antibiotics, antibiotic treatment is usually ineffective, as it must be administered prior to the appearance of symptoms, which is rarely done and thus fails to save the patient.

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Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

It should be noted that the spores are extremely durable and areas that were contaminated with anthrax spores remain contaminated for a very long time. During World War II the British army bombarded the small Scottish island of Gruinard with anthrax spores as part of a biological weapons experiment, to test the effectiveness of such an attack as a biological weapon.

It quickly became apparent that such an attack would render an area uninhabitable for a long time. The island remained contaminated and dangerous for any mammal for decades, until it was cleaned during the course of a very expensive and difficult decontamination effort.

Most diseases that were assessed as biological weapons do not have an effective treatment, especially those caused by viral pathogens, although some specific vaccines have been developed. For example, following the last major outbreak of the Ebola virus in Western Africa, a few years ago, a vaccine was developed against the disease, in addition to several methods of treatment.

Ebola has been considered as a biological weapon, and is especially popular in fictional works. Since it is a disease that is not naturally common, the general population is usually not vaccinated against it. Vaccines are administered mainly at times of need or to workers at risk, in contrast to formerly common childhood diseases, such measles, against which most of the population is usually vaccinated.

For many of the diseases that have been considered as biological weapons, the type of treatment depends on the causative agent (pathogen): for bacterial diseases, such as plague and cholera, there is usually an effective antibiotic treatment, although in some cases it’s important to administer the treatment as early as possible to ensure its effectiveness, as in the case of anthrax.

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Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

It is possible that bacterial strains designed to be used as a form of biological warfare will be genetically engineered to be resistant to different types of antibiotics. In such cases, the treatment may be more difficult and less effective.

Most viral diseases have no effective treatment, although most are not lethal. Some general antiviral medications, or a specific treatment such as in the case of the Ebola virus, may ease the patient’s. Antibiotics are ineffective against toxins, since toxins are not living pathogens and therefore do not multiply. Almost all dangerous toxins have no effective treatment, except for supportive care until the poisoning passes.

It is of note that vaccines exist against most of these dangerous diseases, though these are not commonly administered to the general public, since such diseases are rare and the chance of contracting them is very low. An interesting example is smallpox, which accompanied humankind for centuries, until it was completely eradicated, about 40 years ago, due to an extensive vaccination effort.

This obviates the need for administration of smallpox vaccines to the general public, as the virus only exists in two guarded laboratories in the world, which are found in the United States and in Russia.

So far we have discussed biological weapons programs at the level of countries and politics; however, many fear that the greatest source of danger is the possibility of intentional release of pathogens by a terrorist organization, or an accidental release by a research facility, as some have unfoundedly claimed with respect to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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COVID-19

(Photo: Shutterstock)

Normally, Facilities that work with dangerous pathogens are held to very strict standards and incidents of accidental infections with deadly diseases are very rare. Nonetheless, such cases have occurred in the past, such as the aforementioned anthrax incident in the Soviet Union.

Another severe and well-known incident occurred in 1978 and resulted in the world’s last documented case of death from smallpox. Under circumstances that remain unclear to this day, a leak at a laboratory that studied the virus at the University of Birmingham Medical School resulted in the infection of Jannet Parker, a medical photographer who worked in a room above the lab.

Parker died of the disease about a month after initial symptoms appeared. A comprehensive epidemiological examination indicated that she had not infected anyone with the virus, except for her mother, who had a very mild case of the disease.

The most famous case of biological terrorism attack was undoubtedly the 2001 anthrax incident in 2001. Anonymous people sent envelopes that containing anthrax spores to tens of recipients, including journalists and American government officials. In total, 22 people were infected with anthrax, half of them with the respiratory form and half with the cutaneous form.

Of the 11 who contracted respiratory anthrax, five died. All of the victims who contracted the cutaneous form of the disease have recovered. An intensive FBI investigation led to an American scientist who had worked for decades in anthrax research for the American government. He committed suicide prior to being arrested and the investigation was formally closed.

Another incident occurred when members of the Japanese cult Aum Shinrikyo tried to release anthrax spores in Tokyo in 1993, but no one was harmed, since the anthrax strain they used does not cause disease in humans. Members of this cult appeared in the limelight again two years later, following another terrorist attack in Tokyo, in which a nerve agent was released in the subway. Thirteen people died and thousands were injured in this attack.

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Medical staff with epidemic protection gear

(Photo: MCT)

The main goal of a terrorist organization is to spread panic among the attacked population. Use of a non-contagious pathogen would likely result in a limited number of casualties, which would not exceed the number of casualties of a conventional terrorist attack, although it will have a far more extensive psychological effect, such as the panic caused in the United States by unidentified letters that followed the 2001 anthrax envelopes attacks. However, it is much more difficult to execute such an attack, due to the difficulty of obtaining pathogens, their production in sufficient amounts as well as their effective spreading.

Another fear is that terrorists will be able to genetically engineer a dangerous virus or bacterium in a laboratory. Today it is relatively simple to obtain the genetic sequences (RNA or DNA) of many dangerous disease causing agents, and the concern that terrorist organizations will be able to produce the pathogens in a laboratory with relative ease, is quite real.

A significant cause for such concerns is the smallpox virus, which, as stated, is found only in two well-guarded laboratories in the world. However, it should be noted that although producing smallpox artificially is technically possible using the right equipment, this is not an easy task and quite it is unlikely that a terrorist organization will be able to successfully achieve this using an improvised laboratory. In contrast, a country with extensive bio-technological infrastructure may very well be able to succeed in such an endeavor.

In this article we have described biological weapons and the many dangers they present, as well as mentioned some incidents in which such weapons were utilized, even as late as the 20th century. Why, then, was this type of weapon not put to a wider use?

The answer can be divided into several factors. First, it is a brutal unconventional weapon, the use of which goes against all the rules of war accepted in the world today. As mentioned, such weapons are very difficult to use discreetly and in many cases the attacker is identified, which may result in a severe reaction – both by the attacked party as well as by the international community.

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Illustration

(Photo: Shutterstock)

In addition, contrary to their popular presentation in the media, it is not so easy to use biological weapons. Most of the candidate diseases are (fortunately) not very contagious, and thus, causing a widespread epidemic is not simple and requires very effective and extensive initial dispersion of the pathogens.

Distribution via aerosol is also complicated, since it is necessary to produce droplets at the appropriate size for the aerosol to be effective – particles that are too small will not be absorbed effectively and particles that are too large will not reach the lungs and are easy to defend against. The spread of live organisms that serve as vectors of the disease, for example infected rats or fleas, is not as effective. This is probably one of the reasons why we have yet to witness a successful use of biological weapons by a terrorist organization.

Using a non-contagious disease does provide for better control of the outcome, but present multiple disadvantages. First, it must be spread extensively in the entire area of interest, which is usually not a simple task. Additionally, many pathogens, such as anthrax, contaminate the area long after their original dispersal, making them problematic, since the relevant areas cannot be populated by the attacker’s own soldiers.

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COVID vaccine

(Photo: AFP)

At the bottom line, for countries, biological weapons may fill a rather narrow niche, and in many cases conventional weapons prove far more preferable, legal and moral considerations aside. As previously stated, many countries decided to discontinue their biological weapons development programs and to focus solely on defense against them.

For terrorist organizations, biological weapons are too difficult to apply effectively, although their psychological effects could still make them attractive for such groups. Such a weapon is undoubtedly easier to obtain compared to a nuclear weapon, and thus concerns regarding such a scenario still exist.



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2 Russian villages evacuated after fire at munitions depot

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — A fire at a munitions depot near the Russian village of Timonovo has led to the evacuation of two villages in Russia’s Belgorod region on Ukraine’s northeastern border, an official said Friday. The blaze was the latest in a series of destructive incidents on Russian-occupied territory in Ukraine or inside Russia itself.

Roughly 1,100 people reside in the villages of Timonovo and Soloti, around 15 miles (25 kilometers) from the Ukrainian border. There were no casualties in the blaze late Thursday, Belgorod regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said.

The fire came days after another ammunition depot exploded on the Crimean Peninsula, a Russian-occupied territory on the Black Sea that was annexed by Moscow in 2014.

Last week, nine Russian warplanes were reported destroyed at an airbase on Crimea, demonstrating both the Russians’ vulnerability and the Ukrainians’ capacity to strike deep behind enemy lines. Ukrainian authorities have stopped short of publicly claiming responsibility.

But President Volodymyr Zelenskyy alluded to Ukrainian attacks behind enemy lines after the blasts in Crimea, which Russia has blamed on “sabotage.”

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said in televised remarks Friday that statements from Ukrainian officials about striking facilities in Crimea mark “an escalation of the conflict openly encouraged by the United States and its NATO allies.”

Ryabkov said Russian officials had warned the U.S. against such actions in phone calls with high-level members of the Biden administration, adding that “deep and open U.S. involvement” in the war in Ukraine “effectively puts the U.S. on the brink of becoming a party to the conflict.“

“We don’t want an escalation,” Ryabkov said. “We would like to avoid a situation where the U.S. becomes a party to the conflict, but so far we haven’t seen their readiness to deeply and seriously consider those warnings.”

In spite of the latest incidents, a Western official said the war is at a “near operational standstill,” with neither side able to launch major offensives.

“The whole tempo of the campaign has slowed down, partly because both sides have become more conscious that this is a marathon not a sprint and that expenditure rates and conserving their munitions is important,” said official said who spoke on condition of anonymity because he’s not authorized to discuss intelligence matters publicly.

Meanwhile, Kyiv and Moscow continued to accuse each other of shelling Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, stoking international fears of a catastrophe on the continent.

The Kremlin said Friday that Russian President Vladimir Putin told French counterpart Emmanuel Macron in their first phone conversation since May 28 that Ukrainian shelling around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant “raised the threat of a large-scale catastrophe that could lead to radioactive contamination of large territories.”

The Zaporizhzhia nuclear facility in Ukraine’s south has been controlled by Russian forces since shortly after the invasion began on Feb. 24. Ukraine has accused Russia of storing troops and weapons at the plant and using its grounds to launch strikes against Ukrainian-controlled territory. Ukrainian officials and military analysts say Moscow’s forces have cynically employed the plant as a shield, knowing that the Ukrainians would be hesitant to fire back.

Russia has denied the accusations and, in turn, accused Ukrainian forces of repeatedly shelling the plant.

The French presidency said in a statement that Macron “underlined his concerns” regarding the situation at the Zaporizhzhia plant and expressed his support for the deployment of a International Atomic Energy Agency mission to the site “as soon as possible.”

Putin agreed to the mission’s deployment under the discussed terms, according to the French statement. The Kremlin said that “the Russian side reaffirmed its readiness to offer the necessary assistance to the agency’s experts.”

Yevgeny Balitsky, the Moscow-backed chief of temporary administration for the Russia-controlled part of the Zaporizhzhia region, said Friday that an IAEA mission could approach the plant from Ukrainian-held territory, a shift in Moscow’s position which previously had suggested that the mission should travel to the plant from Crimea.

“I believe they may also come from the side of Ukraine,” Balitsky said in televised remarks. “We can safely bring them to the plant and show where the fire is coming from and who is shooting.”

Mikhail Ulyanov, the Russian envoy to international organizations in Vienna where the IAEA is based, said he believes a visit by the agency could realistically take place in early September.

Following a Thursday visit to Ukraine, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that Zelenskyy had asked him to ensure that Russia remove weapons stored at the plant as an “important step for world peace.”

“Zelenskyy asked this of us especially: that Russia remove all mines and similar (weapons) there and for the issue to rapidly cease to be frightening. Because it is a threat,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan, whose country has maintained close relations with both Ukraine and Russia, said he would discuss the issue with Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying that “Russia must do its part in this regard.”

The Turkish president made the comments to a group of Turkish journalists on his return from a visit with Zelenskyy and U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres in Ukraine late on Thursday. His comments were reported by Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency and other media on Friday.

At that meeting in the western city of Lviv, far from the front lines, the leaders discussed expanding exchanges of prisoners of war and arranging for U.N. atomic energy experts to visit and help secure the nuclear power plant.

IN OTHER DEVELOPMENTS:

— U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres visited a port in the coastal Ukrainian city of Odesa, where he praised ongoing efforts to maintain a shipping corridor on the Black Sea allowing for the export of vital Ukrainian grain shipments. Guterres said that 25 ships have departed from Odesa and other Ukrainian ports since Russia and Ukraine signed a four-month grain export deal in July. Those ships have carried over 600,000 tons of grain and other food supplies like wheat, corn, sunflower oil and soy beans, Guterres said, adding that getting more food and fertilizer out of Ukraine and Russia is crucial to further calm global commodity markets and lower prices. Gutteres also urged unimpeded access to global markets of Russian food and fertilizer, which aren’t subject to sanctions. “Without fertilizer in 2022, there may not be enough food in 2023,” he said.

— At least five people were killed and 10 others wounded by the Russian shelling of towns and villages in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, according to regional authorities. Russian shelling of the city of Kharkiv also killed at least one civilian early Friday. Russian missiles again struck port facilities and a university building in the southern port city of Mykolaiv.

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Jill Lawless in London contributed.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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Greece plane crash: Aircraft carrying military munitions comes down near Kavala, killing eight people

The plane was transporting equipment including illuminating mortar shells and training shells to Bangladesh when it crashed near Eleftheroupoli in the northeastern Kavala region, the Serbian Minister of Defense Nebojša Stefanović said, according to Reuters. He added that all eight crew members had been killed.

According to Greek public broadcaster ERT, the aircraft was carrying “dangerous cargo.” Smoke and intense heat, as well as a white substance found near the crash site, raised concerns over possible toxicity, Marios Apostolidis, a major general in the Greek fire brigade, said.

Officials urged people living near the crash site not to approach the wreckage and to keep windows closed. Locals described a scene of devastation. “The plane was already burning while it crashed. There was a big explosion, like a mushroom, like a nuclear bomb,” one unnamed male resident told ERT.

“My stomach clenched, when I saw that mushroom,” another resident said.

The Antonov 12, which was operated by Ukrainian cargo airline Meridian, crashed shortly before 11 p.m. local time (4 p.m ET) Saturday, ERT reported.

It was traveling from Serbia to Bangladesh via Jordan when it crashed, Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko said on Facebook Sunday. The cause of the accident is believed to be engine failure.

All eight crew members were Ukrainian citizens, Nikolenko added. He said an operational headquarters was set up by the Ukrainian consulate in Thessaloniki, where Ukrainian consular officers were working at the crash site with local rescue and law enforcement teams.

Following the crash, 15 firefighters with seven vehicles immediately went to the scene while additional firefighting forces followed including special units with two “special” vehicles for the collection of hazardous material, the ministry said, adding that the area of the crash was immediately cordoned off and a security perimeter was established.

There are currently 30 firefighters and “special forces” on the scene as well as police and other rescue teams, the Greek foreign ministry said in a statement.

Experts are also working to determine what the white substance is and what the scene’s toxicity is before proceeding with recovery operations. Authorities have yet to recover the plane’s flight recorder.

The Greek foreign ministry said it was “profoundly saddened” to hear there were no survivors following the crash.

“Profoundly saddened by the news of the cargo plane crash in northern Greece, near Kavala,” the foreign ministry tweeted. “We express our sincere condolences to the families of the 8 Ukrainian crew members who tragically lost their lives in the plane crash.”

Land mine clearance units of the Greek Army were on the scene and a “special” chemical defense team was on its way. The electricity was cut off in some parts in the area after the crash but the power has now been restored for the most part, the ministry added.

Talia Kayali reported from Atlanta. Chris Liakos reported from London. Teele Rebane reported from Estonia.

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Burning munitions cascade down on Ukrainian steel plant, video shows

LONDON, May 15 (Reuters) – White brightly burning munitions were shown cascading down on the Azovstal steel works in the Ukrainian port city of Mariupol in what a British military expert said looked like either an attack with phosphorus or incendiary weapons.

Reuters was not able to immediately identify the type of munitions being used or when the video was taken. It was posted on Sunday on the Telegram messaging application by Alexander Khodakovsky, a commander of the pro-Russian self-proclaimed republic of Donetsk.

“If you didn’t know what it is and for what purpose – you could say that it’s even beautiful,” Khodakovsky said in a message beside the video. Khodakovsky could not be immediately reached for comment.

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It was not immediately clear which forces had fired the munitions, or from where.

Russian forces have pummeled Mariupol for nearly two months, but some Ukrainian fighters remain holed up in the vast Soviet-era plant founded under Josef Stalin and designed with a labyrinth of bunkers and tunnels to withstand attack.

Russia has not commented on what specific weapons it has used to attack the plant. The Russian defence ministry did not reply to a written request for comment about the video.

Ukraine’s armed forces declined immediate comment.

A view of a plant of Azovstal Iron and Steel Works damaged during showers of brightly-burning munitions, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, in Mariupol, Ukraine, in this undated still image obtained from a handout video released on May 15, 2022.

White phosphorus munitions can be used on battlefields to make smoke screens, generate illumination, mark targets or burn bunkers and buildings. White phosphorus is not banned as a chemical weapon under international conventions.

Human rights groups have urged a ban on the use of phosphorus munitions because of the severe burns they cause. The United States used phosphorus munitions in the Vietnam war and the 2003-2011 Iraq war. Russia used them in the Chechen wars.

Petro Andryushchenko, an aide to Mariupol’s mayor, said that Russia had used incendiary or phosphorous bombs on Azovstal. Andryushchenko was speaking from Ukrainian-controlled territory. Reuters was unable to immediately verify his comments.

Hamish Stephen de Bretton-Gordon, a former commanding officer of Britain’s Joint Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear Regiment, said it looked very like phosphorus in the video, but only a sample could give absolute confirmation.

“It does look very much like white phosphorus rockets or artillery shells which are exploding just above the ground or upon the ground,” he told Reuters.

“It could possibly be Russian incendiary rockets as well but I have certainly seen a lot of white phosphorus in particularly Syria and it looks very much like that to me,” he said.

While some Ukrainian fighters are still in bunkers at the steel plant, civilians have been evacuated.

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Additional reporting by Tom Balmforth in Kyiv; Writing by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by David Clarke

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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