Category talk:Weapons

North Korean gas masks?
Odd story published August 27.
 * N. Korea tried to export gas masks to Syria: media – AFP, 27 August 2013 – (AFP original)


 * North Korea tried to export gas masks to Syria but they were seized in Turkey along with arms and ammunition, a Japanese daily said Tuesday.


 * A Libyan-registered vessel, identified as Al En Ti Sar, left North Korea for Syria earlier this year with the consignment, the Sankei Shimbun said, quoting unnamed sources from the US military, Japanese and South Korean intelligence.


 * The vessel sailed through Dardanelles in Turkey on April 3 and was searched shortly after by Turkish authorities, who had been tipped off by the US.


 * Turkish officials seized 1,400 rifles and pistols and some 30,000 bullets as well as gas masks apparently for chemical protection.


 * US authorities believe that the ship was intending to unload its cargo in Turkey and send it overland to President Bashar al-Assad's regime.

Spin:
 * North Korea 'Tried To Export Gas Masks And Weapons To Assad's Regime In Syria' – Charlotte Meredith, Huffington Post UK, 27/08/2013
 * U.S. intelligence alerted Turkey to ship carrying N. Korean gas masks – WorldTribune.com, September 10th, 2013 (with photo of rebel gas masks in Jobar)

Several details do not add up:
 * If the incident happened in April 2013, why is the story published now after the Ghouta chemical attack?
 * What right of piracy do the US an its lackeys have of intercepting, visiting, and searching ships on the high seas or in international waters? (which the Dardanelles is part of)
 * If the ship was coming from North Korea as claimed, why the need to sail through the Dardanelles? (More likely they picked up some North Korean cargo in some Black Sea port.)
 * Why would a (post-Gaddafi) Libyan ship be involved in this trade within the "Axis of Evil"?
 * If the cargo was intended for Syria, why did it not just dock in Syria?
 * Are there (or where in April) any open border crossings between Turkey and Syria that would allow allow any kind of "government" cargo to pass through? (I understand the one border crossing in Latakia is under nominally under government control, but even there road passes through rebel-infested areas.)
 * Is North Korea prohibited from trading in gas masks?

I find it far more likely that this was yet another shipment of old Croatian weapons with a topping of old North Korean gas masks heading for rebels via Turkey. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 05:30, 11 September 2013 (UTC)

Barrel bombs?
I wonder if the barrel bombs even exist. But off-topic, here are some real-life barrel bombs. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 16:26, 18 April 2015 (UTC)
 * Howard Zinn: You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train

Stinger missiles at Lugansk airport?

 * "STINGERS" WERE FOUND AT THE AIRPORT OF LUGANSK (VIDEO) - Alexandr Shapovalov, LNR Today, July 23, 2015
 * ''At the airport in Lugansk on the former positions of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, was found a large cache of weapons and ammunition. In the arsenal also present examples of foreign production, including heavy weapons. Currently were found American MANPADS, according to preliminary data it is a system of "Stinger". Samples of weapons were handed over for examination.


 * Original video: В аэропорту Луганска найдены "Стингеры" (оперативная съемка) / #ЛНРсегодня - lnr.today on YouTube, July 22, 2015
 * Rebels have found American Stingers in Lugansk airport

FIM-92 Stinger

 * FIM-92 Stinger - Battlefield Wiki
 * ''The FIM-92 Stinger is a man-portable infrared homing anti-aircraft missile system produced by Raytheon Missile Systems. It has a range of 4,800 meters (15,700 ft) and can hit aircraft at altitudes up to 3,800 m (12,500 ft). It has been in service since 1981 and remains in use with the United States Armed Forces and with 30 other countries.


 * STINGER HANDLING PROCEDURES - globalsecurity.org
 * ''Yellow squares, on two diagonally opposite corners on the case and yellow data markings, indicate it contains a live round.
 * ''Containers for trainers are marked with blue colored squares for the tracking head trainer (THT) and bronze for the field handling trainer (FHT). In addition, the data markings are white and these containers have the word "INERT" on the top of the case.


 * Got Your Stinger Missile Box Yet? - July 16th, 2010

Debunk

 * Ukraine: Pro-Russia separatists use fake Battlefield 3 Stinger missiles to accuse US of weapon supply - Gianluca Mezzofiore, IB Times, July 23, 2015
 * ''A video from Ukrainian pro-Russian separatists, claiming the discovery of US army Stinger missiles in a Ukrainian military airport in Lugansk, has been declared a fake as it contained spelling mistakes and a typo similar to the one from popular video game Battlefield 3.
 * ''The footage shows the rebels storming an underground compound and dusting off a wooden case with a "US army" inscription, where a the MANPADS Stinger 92 surface-to-air missile is stored.
 * ''However, bloggers were quick to notice a typo on the wooden box, which carries the word "Re usable", not hyphenated, unlike the real one which is hyphenated. There is also a misspelling of the word "loaded".
 * ''But the most significant mistake is found in the inscription on the Stinger weapon itself, which reads "tracking rainer" instead of "tracking trainer".
 * ''Video games blogger Anton Logvinov noted on his website that the same typo occurs in the EA first-person shooter game Battlefield 3, leading him to believe that the Stinger 'discovered' in Lugansk is likely fake.
 * ''Video games blogger Anton Logvinov noted on his website that the same typo occurs in the EA first-person shooter game Battlefield 3, leading him to believe that the Stinger 'discovered' in Lugansk is likely fake.


 * Pro-Tip: Don't Copy Battlefield 3 Stingers - Brian Ashcraft, 7/23/15

2017

 * '350 diplomatic flights carry weapons for terrorists' -by Gaytandzhieva, Trud (Bulgaria), 2 July, 2017--Resup (talk) 16:01, 23 August 2017 (UTC)
 * 25 Aug. 2017. It is said(quoting facebook post) that the author -Gaytandzhieva - was interrogated by Bulgarian National Security Agency about her sources, and fired from her job at 'Trud' newspaper.
 * Dilyana Gaytandzhieva gives an interview to News Front (Eng.), tells about lack of interest of security services in weapons shipments as such, only in how documents were obtained; describes lack of press freedom in (now part of the West) Bulgaria, vows to continue her investigation
 * The matter gets a bit complicated, as she was previously accused of participation in a PR type reporting advancing some Bulgarian MOI agenda. It is unclear what to make of it; that may be (1) an attack on her or overhyped; (2) actually business as usual among her colleagues (and that program was not hers alone). Whatever it was back then, she by now may have decided to be good and play it clean; or it may be some sort of yet another game, played by unknowns, for unclear reasons. --Resup (talk) 22:18, 26 August 2017 (UTC)

Swarm of drones
See Syria news, 6, 9-12 Jan. 2018. Some Western coverage e.g. here (Dave Majumdar, National interest, January 12, 2018). Although components (and GPS) are commercially available, this requires developing control software to guide drone to the target. This is a quite serious project, but once developed, can be easily reproduced and quite easily adapted. Assistance of 'a developed nation' was alleged by Russian MoD, while another version (alleged by 'developed nation(s)'?) is that rebels developed this technology themselves. Hard to know which of those two scenarios are worse (giving advanced technology to jihadis or having jihadis developing it themselves). Do not want to comment on which of those possibilities more likely; but both have serious ramifications. --Resup (talk) 22:33, 15 January 2018 (UTC)


 * Actually it's not that hard using technology available since at least 2011 - when I bought my first Adupilot and fitted it to my fixed wind drone (peaceful purposes only :-) ).
 * There is plenty of software to enter a GPS course into the pilot. The only minor thing is the bomb release but I'm sure there is a function these days that can be adapted without reprogramming the device
 * DIY Drones has plenty of resources and even a shop to buy the parts - though Hobby King is cheaper --Charles Wood (talk) 12:06, 16 January 2018 (UTC)


 * I'll just add that modern drone navigation units have most of a sophisticated inertial navigation system built in and they use sensor fusion with external GPS feeds (or Glonass or whatever) to maintain very accurate tracking. They can even fall back to older technology and carry out missions on dead-reckoning if the GPS feed is disrupted.
 * Now if the drones used optical ground tracking - visual or radar- like cruise missiles do, I'd be impressed. On the other hand it's not that hard to do these days but maybe a bit of a reach for al-Qa'ida or ISIS at the moment --Charles Wood (talk) 12:22, 16 January 2018 (UTC)


 * (I'm starting a sweepstake for just when the usual suspects write an in-depth expose on this topic with the usual lack of attribution or any actual knowledge of the subject :-) --Charles Wood (talk) 12:35, 16 January 2018 (UTC)
 * Hm, interesting. What I was saying, doing this from scratch is quite difficult. (Since they got the drone, there is most likely a way to tell an off-the shelf program from a new one)--Resup (talk) 15:19, 16 January 2018 (UTC)
 * Actually, situation is not clear. As Charles pointed out, off-the shelf software (not just hardware) is available, by market forces of capitalism, so it is not as bad as I thought. But there are still suspicious things, like near perfect overalls, including timing, new elements combined (wooden frame+ this tech), launch from Turkey-controlled area, and swarming --which is I believe is quite new (e.g. here). There may be bigger swarm one day. All of that can be not assisted, or otherwise, and I do not have full confidence that it was not assisted (with availability as an extra excuse). It should be possible having the drone to figure out--but I doubt they will do it in a public way, beyond what was said so far, possibly for audience at home, with insufficient detail for skeptics; so we will never know for sure. --Resup (talk) 20:58, 16 January 2018 (UTC)


 * I sense the term 'swarm' has entered the discourse solely because it sounds good. To actually have a swarm you need inter-aircraft communications - most likely mesh communications - and an overall algorithm to achieve the Swarm Prime Directive ( :-) ). Yes it's doable at short ranges and low cost - e.g. Zigbee - but for anything to coordinate over tens of kilometres and achieve a swarm behaviour is getting a bit difficult. Far simpler to program UAVs to attack one or more targets by slightly different routes and timings and hope to overwhelm the terminal air defences. Even more simple is a regiment of Grad launchers 40km away saturating a target area with dozens of missiles. The Israeli Tin Teapot and indeed most terminal air defence systems give up with that scale attack. It's simple, effective, destructive, and unstoppable - at least until the counter-battery fire kicks in.
 * Kata'ib Hezbollah in Iraq used the multiple (IRAM) missile technique to severely damage US facilities at the cost of losing an improvised launcher vehicle each time --Charles Wood (talk) 07:20, 17 January 2018 (UTC)
 * The issue. IMO. is whether those jihadis receive Western aid. Had an accidental chat with Israeli ex-mil telling (on issue why intifada stopped) that what an individual ideology adept can accomplish is a knife attack; something bigger than that has a backing or blessing --Resup (talk) 09:10, 17 January 2018 (UTC)