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24 May 2006 |
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http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?... |
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Science fiction fans are used to dealing with extremely advanced technologies, like laser weapons, space fighters, and death rays, which are all taken for granted and even expected in the fantastic world created by the cosmic fantasizing of writers and playwrights. According to some, however, this world may be less fictional than we think. What would you say if someone told you that laser weapons do in fact exist? What would you think if someone told you the "Death Ray" actually does exist? What would you think if someone told you these weapons were used in military operations? This is what seems to emerge from an inquiry by Maurizio Torrealta and Sigfrido Ranucci, two well-known and esteemed journalists working for Italian state-run television, RAI TV. Ranucci had already exposed the use of white phosphorus by the U.S. military in Iraq during the two sieges of Fallujah but didn't stop investigating the lesser-known aspects of the counter-insurgency war. The results of the inquiry are contained in a documentary entitled "Star Wars In Iraq" and broadcast on all-news channel Rainews24. The Iraqi Violinist Majid Al Ghezali is the first person to appear in the film. He plays the violin in the Baghdad orchestra and is a respected member of the community. The
account he gives of what he saw at the time of the battle to take Baghdad airport in 2003 sounds terrible and unbelievable: "They [the Americans] shot the bus...We saw the bus...like wet
clothes...it seemed like a [small coach] Volkswagen...a big bus suddenly like a Volkswagen." Saad Al Falluji, chief surgeon at Hilla's General Hospital near the archaeological site of Babylon, talks about events occurring at nearly the same time as those in Baghdad. His gruesome
testimony was reported by a Belgian volunteer in another video, "Twenty-six in the bus...about twenty of them...some of them have no head...some of them arms, legs...the only one uninjured
was the driver...really I don't know how he reached our hospital...very miserable…." Do laser weapons exist? It seems so. In America, there are a number of ordnance industries producing a new generation of weapons, not based on kinetic energy like common firearms hitting a target with some type of projectile, but based on light radiation and microwaves, called DEW-Directed Energy Weapons.
According to Rainews24, one of them is THEL, the Tactical High Energy Laser, developed by Northrop-Grumman. Using a high-power laser beam, the primary purpose of this weapon is air
defense and has been tested against bullets and missiles in flight.
Similar in purposes and effects is ADT-Active Denial Technology-based on microwaves. Mounted on Humvees, for example, this weapon can generate an invisible beam that, if used against
humans, produces an intense pain, supposedly making people flee and desist from hostile actions. There is no record of its actual utilization in combat operations, but according to Defense
Industry Daily, as mentioned by Rainews24, three "Sheriff" vehicles equipped with ADT produced by Raytheon, have been ordered. General James Huggings, Chief of Staff of the multinational
force in Iraq, is said to have asked for 14 more vehicles to be provided. According to William Arkin, former analyst at the Pentagon, and now a journalist for the Washington Post, the U.S. spends about half a billion dollars per year on Directed Energy Weapons. |
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