US officials have been forced to admit
using the MK-77 incendiary, a modern form of napalm, at least during
the initial fighting stage of the war. A fire bomb is a thin-skinned
container of fuel gel. It ignites on impact, spreading the burning gel
over a wide area. The composition of the fuel gel has evolved over the
years: World War II: gasoline plus naphthenic and palmitic acids,
Vietnam & Korea: gasoline, benzene and polystyrene, Iraq (MK-77 Mod
5): kerosene-based jet fuel and polystyrene. In the past, incendiaries
were most notoriously used in the 1945 fire-bombing of Dresden, and by
the US in Vietnam. The 1972 photograph of the child Kim Phuc running
from her napalmed village with her naked body burning was a defining
moment in worldwide opposition to the Vietnam War. The US military has
in its current arsenal a modern form of napalm. Known as the MK-77 Mod
5, the bombs are dropped from aircraft and ignite on impact. They
contain a lethal mixture of aircraft fuel and polystyrene, which forms
a sticky, flammable gel. As it burns, the gel sticks to structures and
to the bodies of its victims. The light aluminium containers lack
stabilising fins, making them far from precision weapons. The MK-77 is
the only incendiary now in use by the US military. It is an evolution
of the napalm bombs M-47 and M-74 that were used in Vietnam and Korea.[more]
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