Bengaluru bomb blast: What are improvised explosive devices, or IEDs?
- March 2, 2024
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Bengaluru bomb blast: What are improvised explosive devices, or IEDs?
Subject: Science and tech
Section: Msc
Context:
- At least nine people were injured after an explosion at the bustling Rameshwaram Cafe in Bengaluru’s Whitefield area on March 1, possibly by an improvised explosive device (IED).
More on news:
- Some notable instances of IEDs being used in the past include the 1993 Mumbai serial blasts, the 2008 Jaipur blasts, the 2006 Jama Masjid bombings, and the 2013 Bodh Gaya bombings. IEDs have also been commonly used by Maoist insurgents, and Kashmiri militants.
What are IEDs?
- The term “IED” first entered common usage during the United States’ Iraq invasion (beginning in 2003), where such bombs were commonly used against US forces.
- An IED is basically a home-made bomb.
- IEDs can come in many forms, ranging from a small pipe bomb to a sophisticated device capable of causing massive damage and loss of life.
- IEDs can be deployed using a vehicle, carried, placed, or thrown by a person, delivered in a package, or concealed on the roadside.
Components of an IED:
- Each IED comprises a few basic components, which can come in various forms, depending on resources available to the bomb-maker.
- These include an initiator or a triggering mechanism, (which sets the explosion off), a switch (which arms the explosive), a main charge (which causes the explosion), a power source (since most IEDs contain an electric initiator, they require an electronic power source), and a container.
- Additionally, IEDs may be packed with additional materials or “enhancements” such as nails, glass, or metal fragments designed to increase the amount of shrapnel released by the explosion — and thus the damage it causes.
- Enhancement may also include hazardous materials such as toxic chemicals, or radio-active circumstances — an IED packed with, say, depleted Uranium will be colloquially called a “dirty bomb”.
- Some common materials used to build IEDs include fertilizers such as ammonium nitrate and urea nitrate, gunpowder, and hydrogen peroxide.
- The reasons why passengers are not allowed to carry beyond a certain quantity of liquids aboard commercial aircraft is the possibility of creating IEDs on site by mixing some commonly available liquids.
Damage caused by IEDs:
- IEDs are not simply used to kill and injure — they have often, especially in active war zones, been used as distractions.
- The extent of damage caused by an IED depends on its size, construction, and placement, and whether it incorporates a high explosive or propellant.
- Typically, IEDs come with a very clear trade-off.
- While smaller bombs are easier to hide, carry, and deploy, they are also generally much less damaging than larger ones, especially ones deployed using vehicles.