I have a simple question. Is weaponizing a sonobuoy legal in terms of international law and have any such instances taken place in the past?
Eg. booby-trapping the sonobuoy.
It would be useless - dangerous for fishermen and civilians, creating additional risk for your own personnel, but it would not stop the other guy military engineers from disabling the booby traps and learning everything you wanted to hide from them.Eg. booby-trapping the sonobuoy.
Yeah. Most of my work is on submarine sonar but I have spent some time in the surveillance and sonobuoy labs and honestly... there isn't really anything particularly spicy (ie of real intelligence value) to them. They're pretty dumb and all the secret sauce is running in the receiving platforms...It would be useless - dangerous for fishermen and civilians, creating additional risk for your own personnel, but it would not stop the other guy military engineers from disabling the booby traps and learning everything you wanted to hide from them.
They usually have a scuttle or destruct mechanism anyway.
There were numerous instances in the past worldwide when sonobuoys washed ashore or were found in fishing nets.
How powerful is the mechanism that you pointed to and can it be accidentally triggered by unaware civilians who found the sonobuoy?
Yeah, it's out of my wheelhouse so I'm not entirely certain how the scuttling mechanism works--but I can't imagine it's terribly destructive or else you wouldn't want to be packing your aircraft full of them...Sometimes it's just a dissolving plug that is supposed to melt away and allow water into a sealed chamber, causing the device to sink. Others might be a small squib, a few grains of explosive like in an airbag or similar device.
Sometimes it's just a dissolving plug that is supposed to melt away and allow water into a sealed chamber, causing the device to sink. Others might be a small squib, a few grains of explosive like in an airbag or similar device.
Not too eco-friendly WEEE. Marine ecologists, if they learn, would be upset.