Road Bomb âJammersâ Being Used in Iraq
U.S. soldiers riding in convoys in Iraq are relying on electronic "jammers" to help protect against the roadside bombs insurgents have used to deadly effect.
Go ahead. Tell all the Bad Guys about it. Dumbasses. | The anti-bomb technology isnât perfect, however. In some cases it only delays a bomb from detonating, so it can still explode and kill bystanders.
Obviously we wouldn't want krazed killers bumping off innocent bystanders, so I guess we should just not use them and take the hit, and that way any innocent bystanders will be... ummm... killed with our guys. I guess that makes sense. Not a lot of sense, but sense. | Itâs unclear how widely the jammers - the same technology that saved Pakistanâs leader from a recent assassination attempt - are being used in Iraq.
That explains a lot
Gen. Peter J. Schoomaker, the Armyâs chief of staff, acknowledged their use in testimony this week before the House Armed Services Committee, but he declined to discuss the bomb defenses in detail.
That's a good indication he hasn't recently been dropped on his head... | The military does not want to provide useful information to Iraqi insurgents, officials say.
Just admitting to their existence is saying too much... | Rep. Gene Taylor, D-Miss., suggested few are being used. "The Iraqis have figured out if they hit that detonator enough times, theyâre going to kill a vehicle that does not have a jammer," Taylor told Schoomaker. "The percentage of vehicles that have some form of electronic jammer - it is minuscule, and I know it, you know it, and the Iraq insurgents know it."
I imagine the use is going to grow, though. And that transmitters will become more powerful. It's going to lend an entire new dimension to the concept of "hot pants" in some areas. Like Paleostine. | But Schoomaker said protection doesnât depend on universal use. "Every vehicle doesnât have to be equipped," he said. "You have to have groups of vehicles that have that kind of capability, under an umbrella."
Radio signals aren't confined to a single truck. | The jammers work by preventing a remotely transmitted signal - say, rigged from a cell phone - from detonating an explosive when the bomber presses the button. Depending on the distance, power and design of the jammer, some might prevent the bomb from going off. Others might instead set it off before or after the convoy passes - potentially wreaking havoc on bystanders.
Y'mean all those people who came out to watch the show Cousin Mahmoud was going to put on? | Roadside bombs have been primary killers of U.S. troops in Iraq. Many go off under passing convoys, killing or injuring the occupants of one of the vehicles. But in some cases, they have gone off only after a convoy has passed. That can be a sign that a jammer on one of the vehicles did its job, said James Atkinson, head of the Granite Island Group, a Gloucester, Mass.-based security and counterespionage firm. Anti-bomb jammers have been in use since the early 1980s, Atkinson said. Military aircraft have used them for decades, and versions of anti-jamming technology are advertised on the Internet. Itâs unclear if those versions are effective, however.
Same chance you take when you buy generic Vi@gra, I guess. Only you could end up shredded... | Depending on their sophistication, jammers can cost from hundreds to millions of dollars. Most can be powered by a car engine. Some work by transmitting on frequencies that bombers are known to use. Guerrillas frequently rig remote-controlled detonators out of garage door openers, car alarm remotes or cellular phones, Atkinson said.
Wireless doorbells work, too... | Others, called barrage jammers, put out signals on a wide range of frequencies, he said. These will knock cellular phones and CB radios off the air in a given area.
"Can you [boom!] me now?" | Both kinds can cause a premature or late detonation of a bomb, or prevent it from going off entirely. "When you see a car bomb that goes off several blocks away from its intended target, itâs usually a dead giveaway it was jammed," Atkinson said.
Or that Mom called Mahmoud to ask him to pick up some groceries on the way home from the attack... | Jamming devices carried in the motorcade of Pakistanâs President Pervez Musharraf delayed the detonation of a huge bomb that exploded moments after his limousine passed over a bridge near the capital Dec. 14, Pakistani intelligence has said. Since then, Pakistan has imported more jamming devices for security of VIPs, a senior government official told The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity Thursday.
Does he want to be anonymous Friday, too? Or only on Thursdays? | He refused to give further details, including where the devices were imported from, citing security reasons.
Wouldn't want to suport Zionism or something, y'know... | In Israel, a special unit in the Ministry of Defense developed jamming technology in the early 1990s and used it extensively in southern Lebanon in the mid- to late 1990s in an effort to neutralize roadside charges placed by Hezbollah. It is unclear what defenses exist against other kinds of bombs, such as those that rely on timers or are hard-wired to a switch. Pakistani officials claimed their jamming devices also interrupted a timer.
I tend not to believe them... | In Iraq, employing the jammers is one of a number of steps the military is taking to protect vehicles and soldiers. Others include deploying a more heavily armored Humvee and giving soldiers improved body armor. "Weâve taken some major moves there that are paying off, in my view." Schoomaker said. In Baghdad, a military official said the Iraqi bombs have varied widely in sophistication. "Our soldiers have become ... very adept at noticing, observing," said Brig. Gen. Vincent Boles, commander of the 3rd Corps Support Command. "Weâre discovering more than are exploding."
Posted by: tipper 2004-01-31 |