Dummy tank
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A dummy tank is a type of decoy intended to fool an enemy into believing a fake tank, usually inflatable or wooden, is real. Although tanks first appeared in World War I, dummy tanks were not widely used until World War II.
[edit] World War II
In World War II, both the Allies and the Axis used dummy tanks. The British called them "spoofs,"[1] and designed them, while the Americans used them as well. Before the war began, the Wehrmacht utilized mock tanks to practice tactics and train their troops.[2][3]
One of the first uses of dummy tanks during the Second World War was in the North African Campaign. The Royal Engineers stationed there constructed two per day; between April and June 1941, they were able to build three dummy Royal Tank Regiments, and another in November that same year. These were foldable, and thus portable, however, the Royal Engineers improved them further. Jeeps were used to make the "spoofs" more realistic: a steel frame covered with canvas was placed on them, making a self-propelled dummy tank. Meanwhile, the reverse was also done, to make tanks look like trucks. A further device was put into use that both created simulated tank tracks, and erased real ones.[4]
Dummy tanks were used extensively in Operation Fortitude, prior to the landings at the Normandy Beaches. During this operation, they were used to confuse German intelligence in two ways: first, by making it seem that the Allies had more tanks than they did; and second, they were used to hide and downplay the importance of the location of their real tanks, in order to make it seem that the invasion would occur at the Pas-de-Calais rather than at Normandy.[5] Similarly, during Operation Shingle at Anzio, Italy, inflatable Sherman tanks were deployed when the real tanks were elsewhere.[6] In the Pacific Theater of Operations, the Japanese also utilized decoys; one recorded instance was during the Battle of Iwo Jima. A "tank" was surrounded by American infantry, which had been under artillery bombardment: they found it was not real, but merely a sculpture, carved out of volcanic ash.[1]
The Red Army also employed dummy tanks to increase their apparent numbers, and mask their true movements.[7]
[edit] Modern era
During the Kosovo War, the Yugoslav Army regularly placed dummy tanks in Kosovo which misled NATO forces into thinking that they were destroying far more real tanks than actually occurred.[8]
The United States Army has developed a modern dummy tank. It imitates the M1 Abrams tank not only in appearance, but also its heat signature, in order to appear real to infrared detectors. One of these decoys can take fire from the enemy and still appear to be operational, thus delaying the enemy by as much as an hour, as they are forced to destroy the decoy. These M1 decoys cost only $3,300,[9] compared to $4.35 million for a real M1.[10] The decoy is also practical: when dissassembled, it weighs only fifty pounds, and is roughly the same size as a duffel bag. Its generator—about the size of a 12 inch television—facilitates inflation, so that two men can erect the decoy in a few minutes.[9] Occasionally, real tanks carry a dummy on board, to deploy when needed.[11]
[edit] Notes
- ^ a b Wagner, Margaret E.; David M. Kennedy, Linda Barret Osborne, Susan Reyburn (2007). The Library of Congress World War II Companion. Simon and Schuster, p. 355. ISBN 0743252195.
- ^ Habeck, Mary R. (2003). Storm of Steel: The Development of Armor Doctrine in Germany and the Soviet Union, 1919-1939. Cornell University Press, p. 85. ISBN 0801440742.
- ^ McKercher, B. J. C.; Roch Legault (2001). Military Planning and the Origins of the Second World War in Europe. Greenwood Publishing Group, p. 75. ISBN 0275961583.
- ^ Holt, Thaddeus (2004). The Deceivers: Allied Military Deception in the Second World War. Simon and Schuster, p. 28. ISBN 0743250427.
- ^ Zabecki, David T. (1999). World War II in Europe: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis, p. 1118. ISBN 0824070291.
- ^ Zaloga, Steven J.; Peter Dennis (2005). Anzio 1944: The Beleaguered Beachhead. Osprey Publishing, p. 72. ISBN 1841769134.
- ^ Glantz, David M.. Soviet Military Deception in the Second World War. Routledge, p. 385. ISBN 071463347X.
- ^ BBC On The Record - Broadcast: 28.10.01
- ^ a b Dunnigan, James F. (1992). Dirty Little Secrets: Military Information You're Not Supposed to Know. HarperCollins, p. 43. ISBN 0688112706.
- ^ Lima Army Tank Plant (LATP). Globalsecurity.org. Retrieved on 2008-05-27.
- ^ Dunnigan, p. 21.