1 kg
Elektron incendiary bomb Incendiary bombs were used extensively in
World War II as an effective bombing weapon, often in a conjunction with high-explosive bombs. Probably the most famous incendiary attacks are the
bombing of Dresden and the
bombing of Tokyo on 10 March 1945. Many different configurations of incendiary bombs and a wide range of filling materials such as isobutyl methacrylate (IM) polymer,
napalm, and similar jellied-petroleum formulas were used, many of them developed by the US
Chemical Warfare Service. Different methods of delivery, e.g. small bombs, bomblet clusters and large bombs, were tested and implemented. For example, a large bomb casing was filled with small sticks of incendiary (
bomblets); the casing was designed to open at altitude, scattering the bomblets in order to cover a wide area. An explosive charge would then ignite the incendiary material, often starting a raging fire. The fire would burn at extreme temperatures that could destroy most buildings made of wood or other combustible materials (buildings constructed of stone tend to resist incendiary destruction unless they are first blown open by high explosives). , as a result of incendiary bombing by the German
Luftwaffe The German
Luftwaffe started the war using the 1918-designed one-kilogram magnesium alloy B-1E
Elektronbrandbombe; later modifications included the addition of a small explosive charge intended to penetrate the roof of any building which it landed on. Racks holding 36 of these bombs were developed, four of which could, in turn, be fitted to an electrically triggered dispenser so that a single
He 111 bomber could carry 1,152 incendiary bombs, or more usually a mixed load. Less successful was the
Flammenbombe, a 250 kg or 500 kg high explosive bomb case filled with an inflammable oil mixture, which often failed to detonate and was withdrawn in January 1941. time delay incendiary device manual. In World War II, incendiaries were principally developed in order to destroy the many small, decentralised war industries located (often intentionally) throughout vast tracts of city land in an effort to escape destruction by conventionally aimed high-explosive bombs. Nevertheless, the civilian destruction caused by such weapons quickly earned them a reputation as terror weapons with the targeted populations.
Nazi Germany began the campaign of
incendiary bombings at the start of World War II with the
bombing of Warsaw, and continued with the
London Blitz and the bombing of Moscow, among other cities. Later, an extensive
reprisal was enacted by the
Allies in the
strategic bombing campaign that led to the near-annihilation of many German cities. In the
Pacific War, during the last seven months of strategic bombing by
B-29 Superfortresses in
the air war against Japan, a change to firebombing tactics resulted in the death of 500,000 Japanese and the homelessness of five million more. Sixty-seven Japanese cities lost significant areas to incendiary attacks. The most deadly single bombing raid in history was
Operation Meetinghouse, an incendiary attack that killed some 100,000 Tokyo residents in one night. dropped 80 million of these 4 lb incendiary bombs during World War II. The 4 lb bomb was also used by the US as the "AN-M50". The incendiary bomb, developed by
ICI, was the standard light incendiary bomb used by
RAF Bomber Command in very large numbers, declining slightly in 1944 to 35.8 million bombs produced (the decline being due to more bombs arriving from the United States). It was the weapon of choice for the
British "dehousing" plan. The bomb consisted of a hollow body made from aluminium-
magnesium alloy with a cast iron/steel nose, and filled with
thermite incendiary pellets. It was capable of burning for up to ten minutes. There was also a high explosive version and delayed high explosive versions (2–4 minutes) which were designed to kill rescuers and firefighters. It was normal for a proportion of high explosive bombs to be dropped during incendiary attacks in order to expose combustible material and to fill the streets with craters and rubble, hindering rescue services. bomb bay showing later mix of
4,000-pound "Cookie" blast bomb and 12 small bomb containers each containing 236 4 lb incendiaries. Towards the end of World War Two, the British introduced a much improved incendiary bomb, whose fall was retarded by a small parachute and on impact sent out an extremely hot flame for ; This, the "Incendiary Bomb, 30-lb., Type J, Mk I", Around fifty-five million incendiary bombs were dropped on Germany by
Avro Lancasters alone. Many incendiary weapons developed and deployed during World War II were in the form of bombs and shells whose main incendiary component is
white phosphorus (WP), and can be used in an offensive anti-personnel role against enemy troop concentrations, but WP is also used for signalling,
smoke screens, and target-marking purposes. The U.S. Army and marines used WP extensively in World War II and
Korea for all three purposes, frequently using WP shells in large 4.2-inch chemical mortars. WP was widely credited by many Allied soldiers for breaking up numerous German infantry attacks and creating havoc among enemy troop concentrations during the latter part of World War II. In both World War II and Korea, WP was found particularly useful in overcoming enemy
human wave attacks. ==Incendiary weapons after World War II==