http://scroll.in/article/814259/vacuum-bombs-in-syria-the-latest-chapter-in-a-long-history-of-atrocity-from-the-skies

SYRIAN WAR

Vacuum bombs in Syria: The latest chapter in a long history of
atrocity from the skies

Critics claim that Russia and Syria are targeting civilians with
thermobaric 'vacuum' bombs.

Yesterday · 11:30 pm

Peter Lee, The Conversation

Imagine taking a deep breath then submerging yourself in water. Then
imagine having all of the oxygen forced instantaneously from your
body. Try to inhale again. But instead of cold water filling your
lungs, toxic, flammable particles start killing you from the inside
out.

Such suffering and death is distressing and inhumane. That is what is
inflicted by a thermobaric bomb, sometimes called a “vacuum bomb”.
They first appeared in modern form in the 1960s and have been refined
ever since. Russia, the US, China, India and many others have them.

Thermobaric bombs use different combinations of heat and pressure to
produce different high explosive effects. An initial explosion
produces a pressure wave powerful enough to flatten buildings or
penetrate into cave or other structures. At the same time, the
explosion will disperse highly flammable fuel particles around its
vicinity.

These, often aluminium-based, particles ignite a fraction of a second
later and burn at very high temperatures. The two blasts combine for
maximum effect. They use up all the oxygen in the surrounding air,
creating a vacuum – hence “vacuum bomb”. The resulting vacuum can be
powerful enough to rupture the lungs and eardrums of anyone nearby.

The Syrian and Russian governments have both been accused of using
thermobaric bombs against rebel forces. Compelling evidence supports
the claims of devastating consequences for nearby civilians.

It is brutally clear why Vladimir Putin and his ally Bashar al Assad
might use these weapons. Thermobaric bombs are highly destructive with
fearsome, direct physical effects. In opposition-held areas, civilians
are just as likely to be affected as combatants. The indirect effects
are also desirable from Syrian and Russian government perspectives.
Local communities are terrorised into submission or displaced, joining
the millions of refugees seeking sanctuary elsewhere.

Grim strategy

The use of aerial bombing in this manner has a long history. What we
see in Syria is just a new twist on an old theme.

In the 1920s the air warfare theorist Giulio Douhet anticipated that
aerial bombing would remove any distinction between soldiers and
civilians. Entire populations would become the focus of bombing by
explosives, incendiaries and even chemical weapons. The deliberate
targeting of civilians would force them into submission. He predicted
that the will to resist would evaporate, then people would demand that
their leaders surrender.

Paradoxically, Douhet put forward this idea for the strategic bombing
of civilians, in part, as a moral argument. Short, aggressive air
campaigns against civilians would force an early end to hostilities.
Such outcomes would be preferable to the prolonged loss of life he
witnessed in World War I.

This approach should be rejected as barbaric in the 21st century.

It is the principle that underpinned the carpet bombing of cities in
World War II. Not to mention America’s use of the atom bomb against
Japan.

Whatever qualms about fire-bombing civilians emerged after that war
were later enshrined in international humanitarian law. They state
that civilians should not be attacked. Also, the presence of fighters
or soldiers within the civilian population “does not deprive the
population of its civilian character”. However, those laws are ignored
by Assad and Putin in Syria today.

Civilian targets

The UN Human Rights Council has been highly critical of numerous uses
of lethal force in Syria. This includes the aerial bombardment by
pro-government forces of areas beyond government control. It seems
almost too obvious to state that the widespread killing of civilians
by such methods is immoral. The weapons are indiscriminate and cannot
distinguish between combatant and noncombatant. Their use against
civilians is disproportionate to any threat those civilians pose to
Assad’s rule. Further, the suffering and death they inflict is
inhumane, by any measure. Worse, any claim that only fighters are
being targeted in these bombings is dishonest and inaccurate.

Part of Douhet’s prediction from almost a century ago is coming true
before our eyes. The distinction between civilian areas and the
battlefield has disappeared in places like Aleppo. The Syrian regime
and its Russian allies have made sure of that. The failure of Douhet’s
prediction is that civilian deaths are not bringing about the end of
the fighting.

The reality that Western powers must face is that these moral
arguments are irrelevant to Assad and Putin. However, it would be
foolish to pretend that there is not a certain harsh logic to their
actions. Regime continuity and personal survival motivate Assad, while
strategic self-interest motivates Putin.

Until some form of brokered peace is achieved, with distasteful but
necessary accommodations, the suffering will continue. Right now, the
West is powerless to prevent these abhorrent Russian and Syrian
tactics. We can only stand by while their vacuum bombs literally suck
the life out of innocent civilians.

Peter Lee, Reader in Politics and Ethics, University of Portsmouth.


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