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Hydraulic warfare

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hydraulic warfare (HW) is the use of surface water from reservoirs, rivers, canals and other waterbodies as a mass destruction/area denial weapon against the operations of an opposing force during a military conflict. This may involve breaching dams and rerouting watercourses to flood and drown the enemy-held regions of the battlefield,[1] and can be used as a measure of area denial to impede the advance of an attacking ground force, or to reduce the logistic resources and tactical options for fortified defenders. The technique has been used throughout history to create "devastating floods, isolate troops, cut off supply lines, hinder river crossings, and disrupt military timetables".[2]

History

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Hydraulic warfare had been used numerous times in Ancient China at least as early as late Spring and Autumn period (770 BC – c. 481 BC), typically as a form of siege warfare against heavy fortifications or in annihilation battles against enemy forces in depressed locations.

In 1938 during the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Nationalist Government of the Republic of China breached the dikes of the Yellow River at Huayuankou, Henan in a desperate act of scorched earth defense to slow down the advance of the invading Imperial Japanese Army. The subsequent flood, which collaterally killed between 400,000 and 500,000 civilians downstream via drowning, displacement, famine and plague, became known as the largest such act in history.[1]

Between the years 1500 and 2000, some 1/3 of floods in the Netherlands southwest were deliberately caused during wartime. The tactic was typically ineffective, and had damaged the land and local population.[1]

HW was used by Finland and the USSR during World War II.[1] British forces destroyed the Moehne and Edersee Dams in Western Germany to cut off the supply of water, power, river navigation, and flood protection to the Nazi regime. The breach of the Moehne dam unleashed a flood of 310,000 cfs, costing 1,200 lives. Bridges were washed out for 30 miles below the dam, and two power plants were submerged. The destruction of the Edersse dam produced similar flows and damaged infrastructure all the way to the Mittelland canal. Navigation was also disrupted as no water was available to stabilize the level of water in the river. Germany struck again by flooding the Pontine marshes in Italy, slowing the advance of Allied forces. Germany flooded the Ay and Ill rivers in France and the Rur river in Germany,[2] also flooded the Liri, Garigliano and Rapido Rivers in Italy in early 1944. The Garigliano flood disrupted a British crossing, with knock-on effects on the Battle of Monte Cassino. Conversely, the Germans dammed up the Rapido river below an attempted crossing, creating a quagmire and delaying the operation. During the Normandy campaign, the Allied forces attacking Utah Beach suffered significant setbacks due to the Germans deliberately flooded seawater into the fields up to 2 miles (3.2 km) from the coast, forcing Allied vehicles to be funnelled onto the few remaining dry causeways that were specifically targeted by German artilleries.[4]

The term originated in the 1950s, with the US Army Corps of Engineers.[2]

In 2022 and 2023, the appearance of flooded areas indicated the use of HW during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[1][5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Thebault, Reis; Moriarty, Dylan (March 9, 2022). "Satellite images show flooding north of Kyiv in possible sign of 'hydraulic warfare'". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  2. ^ a b c Army Corps of Engineers (June 1957). "Applications of hydrology" (PDF).
  3. ^ Li & Zheng 2001, p. 187.
  4. ^ Whitmarsh 2009, p. 49.
  5. ^ Beehner, Lionel; Collins, Liam; Spencer, John (2023-06-14). "Hydraulic warfare is here to stay. NATO should plan for it". Defense News. Retrieved 2024-02-28.

Sources

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  • Li, Bo; Zheng, Yin (2001), 《中华五千年》 [5000 years of Chinese History] (in Chinese), Inner Mongolian People's publishing, ISBN 7-204-04420-7
  • Whitmarsh, Andrew (2009). D-Day in Photographs. Stroud: History Press. ISBN 978-0-7524-5095-7.
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