Military dummy

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Inflatable S-300 missile system
F-16 mockups on a fake taxiway at Spangdahlem Air Base, 1985.
Dummy replica aircraft used by US Navy to train aircraft ordnance technicians during World War II.

Dummies and decoys are fake military equipment that are intended to deceive the enemy. Dummies and decoys are only one aspect of military deception.

Examples[]

During World War II, dummy airfields and even towns were used in England to divert German bombers from the real targets.[1] At the Battle of La Ciotat in 1944, American aircraft dropped hundreds of dummy paratroopers (Paradummies) just north of La Ciotat, France. The goal of this operation was to divert German troops away from the main landing zones of Operation Dragoon. Additionally, during World War II, Operation Quicksilver was an attempt to mislead the Germans as to the location of the D-Day invasion using dummy military equipment.[2][3]

A naval example was the British battleship HMS Centurion. Obsolete and disarmed by World War II, she spent two years in the Mediterranean fitted with wooden guns, to make British naval forces in the area seem stronger than they were. Likewise, Fleet tender was the codename for a number of British merchant ships that fitted with dummy structures to resemble warships.

In Russia, a former hot air balloon factory has continued in the 2010s to make dummy tanks, aircraft, missile launch pads, radar stations, and rocket launchers. The inflatable dummies are designed to present a realistic image to enemy radar and thermal imaging.[4]

An intercontinental ballistic missile may release decoys in addition to one or more warheads.

Military aircraft on SEAD missions may carry decoy missiles such as the MALD which can create aircraft-like return signals on enemy radars.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-02-06. Retrieved 2012-03-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ Popular Science. Bonnier Corporation. February 1946. p. 126.
  3. ^ "TarIdeal". Friday, 4 January 2019
  4. ^ "Russia inflates its military with blow-up weapons". BBC News. 11 October 2010.
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