Tunnel warfare

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Tunnel warfare is a type of warfare that occurs in tunnels. It can be sometimes linked with urban warfare, as tunnels are often found in urban area and cities, although urban warfare as a whole usually dominates any tunnel considerations. Tunnels can be used to undermine fortifications and slip into territory, while it can strengthen a defense by creating the possibility of ambush, counterattack and the ability to transfer troops from one portion of the battleground to another unseen and protected.

Tunnels, due to their nature, restrict fields of fire and thus... any troops in a tunnel usually only have a few areas exposed to fire or sight at any one particular time. Also they can be part of an extensive labyrinth and have cul-de-sacs as well as reduced lighting that can create a closed-in night environment.

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[edit] Tunnel wars in ancient warfare

Tunneling for mining enemy fortresses and making the walls crumble is an ancient military art that has been put in use all over the world. A famous mine made the walls of Kazan crumble, allowing the Russians to take it. The only countermeasure was to dig down, intercept the mine, and fight the advancing enemy soldiers underground. Sometimes the tunnels collapsed during the fighting, and both sides were buried alive.

The oldest known sources about employing tunnels and trenches for guerilla-like warfare are Roman. After the uprising in Germania the insurgent tribes soon started to change defence from only local strongholds into using advantages of larger terrains. Hidden trenches to assemble for surprise attacks were dug, connected via tunnels for secure fallback.[1] In action often barriers were used to enable the enemy from formation. Roman legions entering the country soon learned to fear this warfare, the ambushing of marching columns demanded high casualties. Therefore they approached possibly fortified areas very carefully, giving time to evacuate, assemble troops and organize them. When the Romans were themselves on the defensive the large underground aqueduct system was utilised in the defense of Rome, as well as to evacuate fleeing leaders.

[edit] Medieval Warfare

Throughout the Middle Ages kilometers of tunnels were dug all across the world. Often they connected fortifications, towns, villages, religious and political buildings. They were used for supply, communication and as escape routes.

A particular use of tunneling was in mining, where tunnels, braced with timber supports, were dug under the fortifications of besieged castles or towns, which when fired would collapse, bringing down the overying wall.

[edit] Modern warfare

Red Army soldiers storm the Berlin metro in the Battle of Berlin. Metros in cities create tunnel warfare environments within urban warfare.
Red Army soldiers storm the Berlin metro in the Battle of Berlin. Metros in cities create tunnel warfare environments within urban warfare.

Increased firepower that came with the use of gunpowder, cordite and dynamite made above ground fortifications very expensive if they should withstand any attack. Fortifications were covered with earth and finally they were built totally underground to protect crews and ammunition. For the purpose of firing, artillery and machine gun emplacements had loopholes. Such a tunnel fortress was difficult to enter and inside there was no room for the attackers to hide from gunfire and explosives. On the other hand poison gas proved to have a devastating effect.

In trench warfare with heavily fortified strongholds, the tactic of digging and mining the enemy positions was used in the American Civil War during the Siege of Petersburg and the Russo-Japanese War during the Siege of Port Arthur. Extensive mining warfare was conducted by German, French, British and Australian troops on the Western Front during World War I, where the largely static frontlines created favourable conditions for mining. The largest mining operations were conducted in the Battle of Messines, where 19 mines were exploded under the German lines killing about 10,000 German soldiers. Underground attacks especially broke the morale of the enemy if he was surprised in his secure positions. However, the huge craters that are the results of mining enemy positions can be obstacles during an advance, as was found at Petersburg Battle of the Crater and the Somme. Tunnels built to secure frontline supply were built in several places on the Western Front. On the Eastern Front, the successful Brusilov Offensive employed tunnel/trenches to allow the Russian troops to start the initial assault very close to the Austrian trenches. During World War II, the rapid transit systems that existed in many cities became another military consideration.

The lessons of these battles led to the construction of even bigger systems of defence underground, like the Maginot line or the Westwall with their own infrastructures.

North Korea, it has been claimed, has prepared several transport tunnels with a capacity 10,000 troops per hour for a possible invasion of South Korea. This melds the defensive tunnel warfare with mobile warfare.

The term tunnel war or tunnel warfare (地道战) was first used for the guerilla tactic employed by the Chinese in the Second Sino-Japanese War. The tunnel systems were fast and easy to construct and enabled a small force to successfully fight superior enemies.

[edit] Tunnel war usage during Sino-Japanese war

During the Second Sino-Japanese war, the Chinese Communist forces or local peasant resistance used tunnel war tactics against the Japanese (and later Kuomingtang during Chinese Civil War). The tunnels were dug beneath the earth to cover the battlefield with numerous hidden gun holes to make a surprise attack. The holes and entrance usually were hidden beneath a straw mat inside a house, or down a well. This allowed flexible manoeuver or exit.

However, the main disadvantages of tunnel war is that usually the Japanese could fill up the holes or pour water in to suffocate the resistance fighter inside the tunnels. This proved to be a major problem but was later solved by installing filters that will consume the water and poisonous gases. It is said that there were even women and children who voluntarily fought in the tunnels.

[edit] Later usage of tunnel war

The first to copy tunnel warfare were the Japanese themselves. In the battles of the Western Pacific they would maximise their capabilities by establishing a strong point defense, utilizing cave warfare. The first encounter of the US Marines with this new tactic was the island of Peleliu. The invading marines suffered twice as many casualties as on Tarawa, where the old Japanese tactic of defending the beach had been employed.

In the Korean War the tactic of tunnel warfare was employed by the PRC voluntary forces themselves. "The Chinese resort to tunnel warfare, and the devastating losses to American soldiers, led to the sealing of tunnel entraces by United Nations Command. According to latter prisoner of war interrogations, Chinese officers had killed a number of their own soldiers in the tunnels, because the latter had wished to dig their way out and surrender to the United Nations Command." (Major Allen D.Reece)

Viet Cong copied the tactic during the Vietnam War against the US and their Southern Vietnamese allies and added some new developments. Systems of tunnels were not occupied temporarily for military purpose, but began to contain whole villages of people living permanently underground. An infrastructure of communication, supplylines, hospitals and for manoeuvering was established. These tactics were even applied against the Chinese during the Sino-Vietnamese War.

[edit] Tunnel war in Israel

Sometimes the ongoing conflict between Israeli Army and smugglers under the border of Gaza is called tunnel war. Reports state that in the Palestinian camps tunnels are used to sneak into areas the Israeli Army has already secured.

[edit] Famous tunnel war victories

[edit] References and footnotes

  1. ^ Sextus Julius Frontinus; Strategemata: De Constituendo Statu Belli III./10

[edit] See also

[edit] External links