Animal-borne bomb attacks

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 and set off in a crowd.

Contents

Incidents

Afghanistan

In 2009, the Taliban strapped an improvised explosive device to a donkey. The gate guard noticed something suspicious when a group of men let the donkey go a short way from the camp and then hurried off. The donkey was stopped with a rifle shot. One soldier set fire to the hay with a flare provoking a "considerable explosion" [1][2]

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.[3] In 2004 a donkey in Ramadi was loaded with explosives and set off towards a US-run checkpoint. It exploded before it was able to injure or kill anyone but itself. The incident, along with a number of similar incidents involving dogs, fueled fears of terrorist practices of using living animals as weapons, a change from an older practice of using the bodies of dead animals to hold explosives.[4] The use of improvised explosive devices concealed in animal's carcasses was also a common practice among the Iraqi Insurgency.[5]

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.[6] She claimed that she had been recruited and dispatched by Syrian Brigadier-General Ghazi Kanaan who supplied the explosives and instructions on how the attack was to be carried out from his headquarters in the town of Anjer in the Bekaa Valley. [6]

United States

In the Wall Street bombing of 1920, one of the 1919 United States anarchist bombings, anarchists used a bomb carried by horse-drawn cart.

West Bank and Gaza Strip

Military

During World War II the U.S. investigated the use of "bat bombs", or bats carrying small incendiary bombs,[15]. 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.[16][17] At the same time the Soviet Union developed the "anti-tank dog" for use against German tanks.[18] Other attempts have included the attempt by Iran to develop kamikaze dolphins, intended to seek out and destroy submarines and enemy warships.[19]

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ [2]"Donkey ‘suicide’ bombing is latest tactic against patrols, Michael Evans, April 30, 2009, The Times of London.
  3. ^ Rockets slam into Iraq's Oil Ministry, two hotels Associated Press, 21 November 2011
  4. ^ Dogs of war can be friend or foe August 12, 2005. The Standard (originally from The Los Angeles Times)
  5. ^ Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) - Iraq GlobalSecurity.org
  6. ^ a b [3] "Syria and Terrorism, Boaz Ganor, 15 November 1991, JCPA.
  7. ^ Suicide bomber explodes donkey cart near Khan Yunis, 3 soldiers hurt, Jerusalem Post 26-06-1995
  8. ^ Fragile Mideast cease-fire endures another day, CNN 17-06-2001
  9. ^ 'We're stunt queens. We have to be', The Guardian 24-02-2006
  10. ^ Mother nature (part one), The Guardian 22-06-2003
  11. ^ Militants, bomb-laden horses die in Gaza clash, AP 08-06-2009
  12. ^ Gaza gunmen use booby-trapped horses against IDF, Ynet News 08-06-2009
  13. ^ Donkey bomb claims only the donkey, AP 25-05-2010
  14. ^ http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3893975,00.html, Ynet News 25-05-2010
  15. ^ The Bat Bombers, C. V. Glines, Journal of the Airforce Association, October 1990, Vol. 73, No. 10 (accessed November 17 2006)
  16. ^ 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.
  17. ^ Described throughout Skinner, B. F. (1979). The shaping of a behaviorist: Part two of an autobiography. New York: Knopf.
  18. ^ Dog Anti-Tank Mine, Soviet-Empire.com (accessed November 17 2006)
  19. ^ Iran buys kamikaze dolphins, BBC News, Wednesday, 8 March, 2000, 16:45 GMT