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"Paul J. Adam" wrote in message ...
In message , Fred the Red Shirt writes (BUFDRVR) wrote in message ... Wrong. The French were using larger than .50 calibre weapons against troops in SE Asia a decade before Ed began straffing troops there. I'll take your word for that. What ammo was used? 20mm HE from Bearcats, at the very least. Explosive rounds with a [explosive, FF] mass under a certain limit (Hague or St. Petersburg, can't recall offhand): technical war crime. St Petersburg was the first such prohibition though the US Army decided, as a matter of policy, to eschew them as well for the same reasons, they exacerbated the injuries to men who would have been disabled by the plain ammunition of the day. The mass limit was 400 gms, approximately the mass of a 37 mm cannon. http://www.lib.byu.edu/~rdh/wwi/1914m/gene68.html My previous statement about the St Pete not being reciprocal was incorrect, though there is a tendency for alleged crimes to be tried according to the laws of the nations holding the trial, regardless of what laws were accepted by the defendant's nation. Entirely justified, IMHO, so long as it is the decision makers and not the soldiers in the field who are on trial. (One of those ignored issues because everyone found 20mm+ cannon so useful for shooting at "stuff" and therefore also fired them at people _outside_ trucks, trains, cars, tanks, ships etc.) It appears that the Prohibition was observed without controversy from 1868 until WWI when the British began using incindiery (also banned) ammunition in their aircraft. The Germans protested, but then withdrew their protest apparently decided they preferred to use the same themselves. It would seem that tracers are also banned, but it is hard to imagine a .50 cal tracer exacerbating injuries to a person, compared to .50 cal hardball. Is there a difference, historically, between ammuniton designated as tracer and that designated as incindiery? ... It appears to have been gently allowed to fall into abeyance, like only-recently-rescinded laws about it being legal to shoot Welshmen with bow and arrow in certain British towns after the hours of darkness, when everyone discovered how useful 20mm cannon were. So the British have discovered that the 20mm is useful for shooting Welshmen after dark? But more relevant, there is no reason at all why firing ball rounds from a .50 machine gun at enemy combatants should be less than lawful. There's a persistent myth that it's illegal to fire .50" at people, and it just isn't true. Agreed. The only basis I can find for that myth is the St Petersburg (and subsequent) declarations, coupled with the assumption that the ammunition is incindiery or explosive. I found one Usenet article by a Norwegian named Per who said the standard ammuniton for a 12.7 mm HMG in Norway was HE, and intended for use against helicopters. It might be possible to claim that firing 'explosive bullets' of under the proscribed weight is a war crime, which would make every 20mm strafing run an atrocity: but by the time of Vietnam this fell into "long-accepted custom" with every nation that could strafe troops having done so with 20-23mm cannon. IMHO the prohibition became unworkable as soon as it became lawful to issue weapons with the previously proscribed ammunition for any purpose. You simply cannot expect a soldier in combat to decline to use any weapon at his disposal. .... Mr Rasimus, in another ng, says that he is unaware that explosive ammunition has ever been used in .50 cal. Here and there over the years I have seen references to explosive .50 cal or 12.7 mm ammuntion. What is the history here? -- FF |
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