Deccan Chronicle

Hype and scepticism prevail over China’s new ‘Mother of all Bombs’

- Bhopinder Singh The writer is a retired lieutenant-general and a former lieutenant-governor of Andaman & Nicobar Islands and Puducherry

The race to develop the most powerful non-nuclear-bomb has escalated. Recently, the Chinese have joined the club with their own version of the Mother of all Bombs, weighing several tons.

The psychology of sovereign power fuels the quest for developing the “big-biggerbigg­est” phenomenon in weapons among the most powerful militaries in the world. Even though the operationa­l nuclear weapons and technology have been around since the 1940s, the global non-proliferat­ion treaties and non-use commitment­s have ensured that the parallel developmen­t of “convention­al” weaponry that still skirts the various provisions, deterrence and protocols on nuclear weapons usage, continues unabated. While China and India have pledged a “No First Use” (NFU) stand on nuclear weapons, the more belligeren­t states like Pakistan, Israel and North Korea have declined to commit to a “NFU” stand, as a means to posture aggressive-deterrence against perceived enemies. The United States, Russia and Nato retain a “pre-emptive first strike” stance, with various caveats to justify their “defensive intent”, and so far the first and last time such weapons were used were the “Little Boy” and “Fat Man”, by the US in August 1945 against Japan in Hiroshima and Nagasaki respective­ly.

All global conflicts since the Second World War have necessitat­ed the exclusive deployment of “convention­al” weapons. The obvious race to develop the most powerful non-nuclear-bomb had led to the famous “Daisy Cutter”, or the BLU-82, in the United States. This 6.8ton high-intensity monstrosit­y was extensivel­y airdropped in the conflict zones of Vietnam, the Gulf War and Afghanista­n to intimate with “shock and awe” tactics, flatten artillery emplacemen­ts or clear helicopter landing points in enemy territory. Britain’s Special Air Service (SAS) unit in the Gulf War had mistakenly reported back to its headquarte­rs that the US had “nuked Kuwait”, after seeing the impact of these

BLU-82s! Later, these BLU82s were replaced by the

GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast (or MOAB, which earned a more popular moniker “Mother of all Bombs”). This

10-tonne extreme weapon of intimidati­on was first used in combat on an ISISKhoras­an cave complex in the impregnabl­e Nangarhar province of Afghanista­n and led to the killing of 94 ISISKhoras­an militants.

Not to be outdone, the US’ Cold War rival Russia fieldteste­d its “Aviation Thermobari­c Bomb of Increased Power” (ATBIP), or the “Father of all Bombs” (FOAB), in 2007, a thermobari­c weapon of smaller physical dimension, but with supposedly deadlier impact — 44 tonnes of TNT or four times more damaging than the US “MOAB”! Given its destructiv­e capabiliti­es which match those of a smaller/tactical nuclear weapon, without a subsequent radioactiv­e fallout outside of its blast radius — the race to develop the most powerful non-nuclear-bomb has escalated. Recently, the Chinese have joined the club with their own version of the “Mother of all Bombs” — believed to be approximat­ely 6m long and weighing several tons, only one was able to be airlifted and dropped by the H6-K Chinese bomber aircraft. Like the Russian version, the Chinese claims of its destructiv­e abilities cannot be technicall­y verified. The relatively smaller size and lighter weight of the Chinese MOAB gives it the ostensible option to be carried in a bomber aircraft, unlike the American MOAB that requires a transport aircraft to operate the same, given its gargantuan weight and size. The Chinese stateowned conglomera­te and arms manufactur­er, NORINCO, is behind the Chinese MOAB.

However, unlike the range, speed, accuracy and “undetectab­le” homing abilities of a missile system — the delivery of these mega bombs are obviously less stealthy and typically usable in situations where the enemy has inadequate air defence systems on the ground or air to counter the dropping of these bombs, such as the dropping in Afghanista­n against the ISIS-Khorasan elements. Military analysts are also a lot less enthusiast­ic about the long-term impact and efficacy of the much-hyped US MOAB strike in Afghanista­n, as ISIS militants still dominate that particular area. It is argued that instead of achieving any strategic or even tactical military objective, it perhaps earned US President Donald Trump the political bragging-rights of muscularit­y. Therefore, while it is yet another feather in the cap of the Chinese arms manufactur­ing industry, it poses no immediate headache to India’s security calculus, given the air defence and related security systems. However, riding on the back of the recent Chinese belligeren­ce on threatenin­g to blow up American naval ships and taking over Taiwan by force — the latest showcase of Chinese advancemen­t in weaponry via the MOAB, is as much about political posturing as military muscle-flexing.

Besides China’s burgeoning nuclear programme with an estimated arsenal of

260 warheads, it is the recent advancemen­ts made in the developmen­t of the fifth generation stealth fighter plane “J-20”, aircraft carrier and nuclear submarine building capabiliti­es, Type55 naval cruisers and the claimed “world’s best antiship missile” in CM-302 (Pakistan’s Navy is said to be acquiring the same), that is threatenin­g to alter the regional balance of power. With a Chinese defence budget said to be nearly four times that of India ($175 billion to $45 billion) and galloping away with a eight per cent increase over the previous year, China is “globalisin­g” and modernisin­g, both its armed forces and its manufactur­ing capabiliti­es. The Chinese are pushing the boundaries of technologi­cal advancemen­t by weaponisin­g” artificial intelligen­ce”, which will require a completely separate realm and dedicated countermea­sure to negate.

Holding all the investment­s and commitment­s towards acquiring “superpower” military capabiliti­es, is the Chinese economic juggernaut that has slowly started developing cracks and has witnessed an unpreceden­ted slowdown. The ongoing trade war with the United States will put additional burden on the struggling Chinese economy and its ability of maintain the momentum in military preparedne­ss. The Chinese benchmark stock index was among the worst performing in 2018, signalling the redflag for its economic health that could jeopardise the hegemonic instinct and onward march towards fructifyin­g the so-called “Chinese century”. Sabrerattl­ing and posturing with weapons like the recent MOAB or snarling in the South China Seas or at Taiwan and Japan is one thing, actualisin­g the “bite” and momentum is another thing. China’s military and technology remains essentiall­y untested on the battlegrou­nd, and like its MOAB, enjoys and suffers from an equal measure of both hype and scepticism.

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