News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terrorunited-statesspace-and-tech-weapons — Viewing Item


Pentagon sonic devices inflict pain deafness { March 7 2004 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-op-arkin7mar07,1,46394.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-op-arkin7mar07,1,46394.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions

WEAPONS
The Pentagon's Secret Scream
Sonic devices that can inflict pain--or even permanent deafness--are being deployed.
By William M. Arkin
William M. Arkin is a military affairs analyst who writes regularly for Opinion. E-mail: warkin@igc.org.

March 7, 2004

SOUTH POMFRET, Vt. — Marines arriving in Iraq this month as part of a massive troop rotation will bring with them a high-tech weapon never before used in combat — or in peacekeeping. The device is a powerful megaphone the size of a satellite dish that can deliver recorded warnings in Arabic and, on command, emit a piercing tone so excruciating to humans, its boosters say, that it causes crowds to disperse, clears buildings and repels intruders.

"[For] most people, even if they plug their ears, [the device] will produce the equivalent of an instant migraine," says Woody Norris, chairman of American Technology Corp., the San Diego firm that produces the weapon. "It will knock [some people] on their knees."

American Technology says its new product "is designed to determine intent, change behavior and support various rules of engagement." The company is careful in its public relations not to refer to the megaphone as a weapon, or to dwell on the debilitating pain American forces will be able to deliver with it. The military has been equally reticent on the subject.

And that's a problem. The new sound weapon might, in some scenarios, save lives. It might provide a good alternative to lethal force in riot situations, as its proponents assert. But the U.S. is making a huge mistake by trying to quietly deploy a new pain-inducing weapon without first airing all of the legal, policy and human rights issues associated with it.

This is a weapon unlike any other used by the military, and it is certain to provoke public outcry and the conspiracy theories that often greet new U.S. military technology. If the military feels that its new-style weaponry brings something important to the battlefield, and if testing has shown it to be safe, then why not make our reasoning — and research — transparent to the world?

Nonlethal weapons have been promoted by a small circle of boosters for nearly 15 years as something increasingly necessary for the U.S. military in its growing peacekeeping, urban-combat and force-protection missions. Some of the weaponry championed by the group, like rubber bullets, flash-bang grenades and, more recently, electromuscular disruptive devices, or Tasers, has already been deployed.

But the more exotic weapons — including acoustic, laser, and high-powered microwave devices — have not until now been fielded, held up by legal and ethical questions. Despite intense lobbying, over the years the Pentagon leadership has been skeptical of such "wonder weapons." In 1995, then-Secretary of Defense William Perry decided to ban Pentagon development of nonlethal laser weapons intended to permanently blind. His decision led to a subsequent international ban.

So shouldn't we have a similar discussion about high-intensity sound, which can cause permanent hearing loss or even cellular damage? The new megaphone being deployed to Iraq can operate at 145 decibels at 300 yards, according to American Technology, well above the normal threshold for pain. The company posits a scenario in which Al Qaeda terrorists would run screaming from caves after being subjected to a blast of high-decibel sound from the devices, their hands covering their ears. But in Baghdad or other Iraqi towns, where there are crowds and buildings, the sick and elderly, as well as children, are likely to be in the weapon's range.

Proponents of nonlethal weapons argue that pain and hearing loss, if they were to occur, are certainly preferable to death, which is always possible when lethal force is applied. But this argument ignores realities on the ground. Last week, as I watched televised images of angry Iraqis pelting U.S. soldiers with rocks when they arrived to assist those injured in suicide bombings at mosques, I couldn't help but wonder whether the presence of a sound weapon to disperse those crowds would just escalate hostilities.

Last month, the Council on Foreign Relations issued a task force report on nonlethal weapons, arguing that their widespread availability might have helped in the immediate post-combat period in Iraq to reduce looting and sabotage. The council threw its weight behind greater investment in these technologies partly based on a Joint Chiefs of Staff "mission needs statement" signed last December. "U.S. military forces lack the ability to engage targets located where the application of lethal [weapon fire] would be counterproductive to overall campaign objectives," the Joint Chiefs concluded.

The Council on Foreign Relations recognized that the effect of nonlethal weapons is mostly "psychological — persuading people that they would much rather be someplace else, or on our side rather than opposing U.S. military forces." It warned that "television coverage of encounters involving [nonlethal weapons] can still be repugnant, and it would be desirable to provide reliable information to minimize unwarranted criticism."

Yet after paying lip service to the very psychological and political fallout that could result from the employment of novel technologies like acoustic weapons or high-powered microwaves, the council task force urged that prototype nonlethal weapons — that is, weapons just like American Technology's new sound weapon — "be placed with our operating forces" to test their efficacy and create greater demand among combat commanders.

Is actual combat in a foreign country the appropriate place to test a new weapon? Apparently, we are about to find out.




Air force wants bigger than moab { November 8 2004 }
Air force wants offensive space weapons { May 18 2005 }
Automated killer robots are threat to humanity { January 2008 }
Bush sets defense as space priority { October 18 2006 }
Congress backs pentagon budget heavy on future weaons { June 11 2004 }
Darpa hypersonic bomber { July 1 2003 }
Dolphins trained in attack and kill missions { September 25 2005 }
Israeli us laser downs long range missile in test
Laser beam weapon to be mounted on boeing
Laser beam weapons from space ready for battle
Military role in space set to expand { January 2006 }
Nasa scramjet soars almost 7000 mph
Nasa test of scramjet makes aviation history
New military bomb turns the enemy homosexual
New sonic weapon to iraq { March 9 2004 }
New weapon can shoot around corners { December 15 2003 }
Northrop grumman lasers to zap sams
Pentagon airborne laser weapon on schedule { March 22 2006 }
Pentagon envisioning costly internet world vision { November 13 2004 }
Pentagon project death ray bomb { August 14 2003 }
Pentagon sonic devices inflict pain deafness { March 7 2004 }
Pentagon to test space weapons { March 15 2006 }
Robocop army soldier closer to battlefield { February 16 2005 }
Robot legs [jpg]
Robot plane drops bomb in test
Robotic legs could produce super troops { March 10 2004 }
Russia urges us to avoid space arms race { May 19 2005 }
Scramjet propelled warfare to new era { March 29 2004 }
Segway human transporter robot killer
Us military takes step towards weapononizing space
US plans to build experiemental bomb { July 17 2004 }
Us secret gas { October 29 2002 }
US sends armed robots into iraq { July 2007 }
Us tests biggest bomb moab
US to defend space with military force { December 14 2006 }
Us wants space superiority { November 7 2004 }
Use of unmanned drones surges over iraq { July 5 2007 }

Files Listed: 37



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple