Mystery bomblets. Courtesy of Guy Marot
The mystery of the unidentified cluster munitions found last year in Libya has deepened as the days have passed. More and more specialists have been in touch with the blog, by e-mail and a few by phone. The short of it is this: they have not seen this weapon before, and it does not appear to be in the various databases and identification books used by explosive ordnance disposal experts in the field.
Let’s catch up. On Feb. 1, this blog asked readers for help, and to take on a challenge: to try to identify an unusual so-called cluster bomb that was found in Libya in 2011. The submunition in question was of a class known as a Dual Purpose Improved Conventional Munition, or DPICM, that is released from cargo canisters in the air and distributed to the targeted area below. Each bomblet carries a small shaped charge designed to penetrate light armor and to blast small metal fragments intended to wound people – thus that blandly euphemistic “dual purpose” label.
Various specialists had confirmed what this DPICM was not, but no one knew exactly what it was. (Many readers suggested that the submunitions were a variant of the American-made M77, but while they do fall within the same general family as the M77 they are quite a different weapon.)