IDF commander: We fired more than a million cluster bombs in Lebanon
By Meron Rappaport
Haaretz, 12.09.2006
"What we did was insane and monstrous, we covered entire towns in
cluster bombs," the head of an IDF rocket unit in Lebanon said
regarding the use of cluster bombs and phosphorous shells during the
war.
Quoting his battalion commander, the rocket unit head stated that the
IDF fired around 1,800 cluster bombs, containing over 1.2 million
cluster bomblets.
In addition, soldiers in IDF artillery units testified that the army
used phosphorous shells during the war, widely forbidden by
international law. According to their claims, the vast majority of said
explosive ordinance was fired in the final 10 days of the war.
The rocket unit commander stated that Multiple Launch Rocket System
(MLRS) platforms were heavily used in spite of the fact that they were
known to be highly inaccurate.
MLRS is a track or tire carried mobile rocket launching platform,
capable of firing a very high volume of mostly unguided munitions. The
basic rocket fired by the platform is unguided and imprecise, with a
range of about 32 kilometers. The rockets are designed to burst into
sub-munitions at a planned altitude in order to blanket enemy army and
personnel on the ground with smaller explosive rounds.
The use of such weaponry is controversial mainly due to its inaccuracy
and ability to wreak great havoc against indeterminate targets over
large areas of territory, with a margin of error of as much as 1,200
meters from the intended target to the area hit.
The cluster rounds which don't detonate on impact, believed by the
United Nations to be around 40% of those fired by the IDF in Lebanon,
remain on the ground as unexploded munitions, effectively littering the
landscape with thousands of land mines which will continue to claim
victims long after the war has ended.
Because of their high level of failure to detonate, it is believed that
there are around 500,000 unexploded munitions on the ground in Lebanon.
To date 12 Lebanese civilians have been killed by these mines since the
end of the war.
According to the commander, in order to compensate for the inaccuracy
of the rockets and the inability to strike individual targets
precisely, units would "flood" the battlefield with munitions,
accounting for the littered and explosive landscape of post-war Lebanon.
When his reserve duty came to a close, the commander in question sent a
letter to Defense Minister Amir Peretz outlining the use of cluster
munitions, a letter which has remained unanswered.
'Excessive injury and unnecessary suffering'
It has come to light that IDF soldiers fired phosphorous rounds in
order to cause fires in Lebanon. An artillery commander has admitted to
seeing trucks loaded with phosphorous rounds on their way to artillery
crews in the north of Israel.
A direct hit from a phosphorous shell typically causes severe burns and
a slow, painful death.
International law forbids the use of weapons that cause "excessive
injury and unnecessary suffering", and many experts are of the opinion
that phosphorous rounds fall directly in that category.
The International Red Cross has determined that international law
forbids the use of phosphorous and other types of flammable rounds
against personnel, both civilian and military.
IDF: No violation of international law
In response, the IDF Spokesman's Office stated that "International law
does not include a sweeping prohibition of the use of cluster bombs.
The convention on conventional weaponry does not declare a prohibition
on [phosphorous weapons], rather, on principles regulating the use of
such weapons. "For understandable operational reasons, the IDF does not
respond to [accounts of] details of weaponry in its possession.
"The IDF makes use only of methods and weaponry which are permissible
under international law. Artillery fire in general, including MLRS
fire, were used in response solely to firing on the state of Israel."
The Defense Minister's office said it had not received messages
regarding cluster bomb fire.