68 Science & technology TheEconomistMarch12th 2022
cup to the end of its barrel. Then pull the
pin from a conventional hand grenade and
tuck it inside the cup, so that the cup’s wall
holds the grenade’s handle in place. Last,
load the gun with a cartridge from which
the pellets have been removed.
When you pull the trigger, the blast pro
pels both grenade and cup into the air,
ejecting the grenade from the cup. That re
leases the handle and starts the count
down. Though such contraptions are not
exactly safe to fire, they can perform well,
for they have a range of about the length of
a football pitch. According to Nic Jenzen
Jones, boss of Armament Research Servic
es, a consultancy in Perth, Australia, their
use in Ukraine is spreading quickly.
As for the profusion of Molotov cock
tails, Ukrainian mixologists are testing a
variety of recipes and designs. Some have a
divider separating two stages, one filled
with kerosene and the other with home
made napalm. And Molotovs are not mere
ly handthrown weapons. One Ukrainian
army colonel in Kyiv, who requested an
onymity, has a photograph of a Molotov
launching crossbow, fashioned from scrap
steel and a bed spring.
With or without such improvised
launchers, Molotovs can be extremely ef
fective in urban combat. In particular, they
make invaders chary of passing within a
bottle’s throw of upstairs windows. That is
both a constraint on movement and a call
on attention that might make a soldier vul
nerable to attack from another direction.
And makeshift arms which are the fruit of
greater technical expertise than that need
ed to fill a bottle with liquid are also crop
ping up in Ukraine. These “craftproduced
weapons”, as experts call them, are mostly
modifications of things that go boom. In
Mr JenzenJones’s view two, in particular,
stand out in the fighting in Ukraine.
Battle stations
One is a modification of Russianmade
rpg7s. These are rugged and inexpensive
shoulderfired launchers of unguided
rocketpropelled grenades. But the gre
nades’ warheads are designed to pierce ar
mour, so are ill suited to attacking infantry.
To remedy this, irregular forces on both
sides of the conflict in eastern Ukraine,
which began in 2014 and thus longpre
dates the recent Russian invasion, have re
configured rpg7s to fire 82mm mortar
rounds with a fragmentation warhead.
The other concoctions noted by Mr Jen
zenJones are called Khattabka, after Ibn
alKhattab, a Saudi jihadist who fought in
Afghanistan, Chechnya, Dagestan and Ta
jikistan. These are hand grenades adapted
from rounds intended for a conventional
grenade launcher. They are made by re
moving the impact fuse and replacing it
with a pinoperated countdown fuse of the
sort employed in a conventional hand gre
nade. Since,inthefogofwar,itisnotun
known forunitstobeinpossessionoffus
es withoutconventionalhandgrenadesto
fit them to,thatisa usefulinnovation.
Moreover,handgrenades,whethercon
ventionalorimprovised,neednolongerbe
thrown byhand.Smallcommercialdrones
such as theAutelEvoII,a popularmodelof
quadcopter,canalsobeemployedforthe
task. Thesedronescanberiggedeitherto
drop a grenadeoncommandortoflytothe
target anddetonatethepayloadonarrival.
Antitankhandgrenades,suchasthe
Sovieterarkg3,arebeingmodified for
usewithdronesaswell.Suchmunitions
havedrogueparachutesthatcausethem,
after beingthrown, to fall moreor less
straightdownontopofa tank,wherethe
armour is thinnest. These parachutes,
however,makethemhardto dropaccu
rately from adrone, soan arms maker
called Ukroboronprom is removing the
’chutesandaddingtailfins,instead.
Droneshaveotheruses,too.Ukraine’s
defenceministryhasbeenurgingpeople
toflythemto spotRussianforces.They
constantlyreporttheirgpscoordinates,
sopinpointing thewhereaboutsofwhat
theyseeiseasy.StoresinKyivhavereport
edlyrunoutofsupplies,andvolunteers
aretryingtobringmoreinfromabroad.
Ifthewargrinds onandfewership
mentsofconventionalarmsandammuni
tionreachbesiegedcities,theroleofim
proviseddefenceswillsurelygrow.That
hashappenedinotherwars—forexample,
inSyria, where improvisedartillery has
evolved fromslingshots employing sili
conetubesaselasticto“hellcannons”that
launchgascylinderspackedwithexplo
sivesandshrapnel.Warisa dirtybusiness.
Butnecessityisthemotherofinvention.n
Communicationsina warzone
Skywavesandsatellites
I
ncommunistEasternEuropeashort
waveradiowasa vitalpieceofequipment
foranyonewantingtostayaheadofthe
censors.StationssuchasthebbcWorld
Service,RadioFree EuropeandVoiceof
America broadcast news, entertainment
androckandrollacrosstheIronCurtain.
Afterthe cold war ended, shortwave
radiosgavewaytotelevisionandtheinter
net,andthebroadcastswerewounddown.
ButonMarch3rd,intheaftermathofRus
sia’s invasion of Ukraine, the bbc an
nouncedtheirreturn.TheWorldService
has begunnightly newsbroadcasts into
UkraineandpartsofRussia(seemap).
Radioisanearly20thcenturytechnol
ogy.Butthebbchopesitcanstillbeuseful
intheinternetagebecauseitishardto
stop.Shortwavesignalsbounceofftheion
osphere,a layerofchargedparticleshigh
in the atmosphere. The resulting “sky
wave”travelsforthousandsofkilometres,
meaning broadcasterscan sit safely be
yondthereachofcensors,secretpolice
men—andinvadingarmies.AndinUkrai
niancitieslikeMariupol,wheredaysof
shellinghavelefttheplacewithoutelec
tricity,batterypoweredradios stillwork
whentheinternetandtelevisiondonot.
Ukraine’sgovernmentdoesrelyonthe
internetwhereitcan,though,tofightthe
publicrelationswarandtokeepcommu
nicationwiththeoutsideworldalive.In
thepastfewdays,forexample,Volodymyr
Zelensky, the president, has addressed
America’sCongress,theEuropeanParlia
mentandBritain’sHouseofCommonsvia
a videolink.
WithRussiantroopsmassingnearKyiv,
groundbasedinternetlinksareunlikelyto
last.But,onFebruary28th,MykhailoFedo
rov, Ukraine’s viceprime minister,
thankedElonMusk,anAmerican entre
preneur,fora deliveryof“Starlink”satel
liteinternet dishes. These can provide
highspeed,lowlatencyaccesstothein
ternetviaa networkoflowflyingsatellites
runbySpaceX,oneofMrMusk’scompa
nies.A fewdayslaterMrMusksaidSpaceX
hadmodifiedthedishes’softwaretoallow
them tobe poweredby acar’scigarette
lighter. That could prove useful if and
whenthesiegeofKyivbeginsinearnest. n
TechnologiesoldandnewmayhelpkeepUkrainiansintouchwiththeworld
Kyiv
Mariupol
Kherson
Odessa
Dnipro
Lviv Kharkiv
BlackSea
Crimea
UKRAINE
BELARUS
POLAND
HUNGARY
SLOVAKIA
ROMANIA
BULGARIA
SERBIA
MOLDOVA
RUSSIA
250 km
Reach of BBC Ukraine shortwave service*
Source:BBC *Fourhoursa day since March 4th 222
Very good service Good service