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Iraq Gun Credit - UNSMC
| Orbital launch
vehicle. Year: 1979. Family: Gun-launched.
Country: Iraq. Status: Development 1990. Other
Designations: Baby Babylon. Manufacturer's Designation: PC-2.
From March of 1988 until the invasion of Kuwait in 1990, Iraq
contracted with Gerard Bull to build three superguns: two full sized
'Project Babylon' 1000 mm guns and one 'Baby Babylon' 350 mm prototype.
Nine tonnes of special supergun propellant could fire a 600 kg projectile
over a range of 1,000 kilometres, or a 2,000 kg rocket-assisted
projectile. The 2,000 kg projectile would place a net payload of about 200
kg into orbit at a cost of $ 600 per kg. The 1000 mm guns were never
completed. After the war UN teams destroyed the guns and gun components in
Iraqi possession.
Gerard Bull was first contracted by the Iraqi government in 1981. They
desperately needed artillery to out-range the enemy in the protracted
Iran-Iraq War. The association allowed Bull to yet again seek sponsorship
of a space-launch supergun. Sadam Hussein liked the idea, and Project
Babylon was born. Throughout the 1980's Bull's dealings with Iraq had the
covert approval of Western governments, who saw Iraq as a counterweight to
revolutionary Iran.
In March of 1988, Bull received a contract to build two full sized
'Project Babylon' 1000 mm superguns and one 'Baby Babylon' 350 mm
prototype for a total of $25 million. The project was given the cover
designation 'PC-2' (Petrochemical Complex-2). British engineer Christopher
Cowley was the project manager.
The Project Babylon gun would have a barrel 156 meters long with a one
meter bore. The launch tube would be 30 cm thick at the breech, tapering
to 6.5 cm at the exit. Like the V-3 the gun would be built in segments. 26
six-meter-long sections would make up the barrel, totalling 1510 tonnes.
Added to this would be four 220 tonne recoil cylinders, and the 165 tonne
breech. The recoil force of the gun would be 27,000 tonnes - equivalent to
a nuclear bomb and sufficient to register as a major seismic event all
around the world. Nine tonnes of special supergun propellant would fire a
600 kg projectile over a range of 1,000 kilometres, or a 2,000 kg
rocket-assisted projectile. The 2,000 kg projectile would place a net
payload of about 200 kg into orbit at a cost of $ 600 per kg.
In May of 1989 the Baby Babylon was completed at Jabal Hamrayn, 145 km
north of Baghdad. The horizontally-mounted gun was 45-m long with a 350 mm
barrel, and had a total mass of 102 tonnes. Following tests using lead
projectiles the gun was reassembled on a hillside at a 45 degree angle. It
was expected to achieve a range of 750 km. An Iraqi defector revealed
later that the gun was to be used for several missions:
- Long-range attack using chemical, biological, or nuclear warheads.
However since the weapon was fixed, it could only be fired in one
direction, and like the V-3 would be easily identified and neutralised
by the targeted country. For this reason the Israelis did not consider
it much of a threat.
- As an anti-satellite weapon. It would launch a special shell in
space that would explode near the target satellite, covering it with
sticky material and blinding it.
Production of components for the Babylon gun began in Britain with the
knowledge of British and US intelligence services. These were officially
'oil pipeline segments' for the 'PC-2' petrochemical refinery.
On 22 March 1990 Bull was assassinated and the project quickly
unravelled. It is commonly thought that he was killed by the Israelis,
concerned not so much by the supergun work but rather dynamics research
Bull was doing to improve Iraqi ballistic missiles. Three weeks later
British Customs seized the final eight sections of the Babylon Gun. On
August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait, precipitating the Gulf War. This
ended Western covert sponsorship of Iraq.
After the war UN teams destroyed the Baby Babylon 350 mm gun,
components of the two Project Babylon 1000 mm guns (44 gun sections, four
recoil cylinders), and one tonne of supergun propellant (the Iraqis
destroyed the remaining 11 tonnes). Only seven slugs for the 350 mm gun
were recovered and destroyed. Iraq claimed never to have received any
design, assistance, materials or equipment for the planned rocket-assisted
projectiles. At the end of September 1995 UNSCOM obtained information on
an indigenous 600 mm indigenous Iraqi supergun design - evidence that the
project had not died with Bull.
Manufacturer: Bull. LEO Payload: 200 kg (440 lb).
to: 180 km Orbit. at: 33.00 degrees. Payload: 600 kg
(1,320 lb). to a: 500 km altitude suborbital trajectory.
Associated Spacecraft: Gun-Launched
ASAT. Total Mass: 2,000 kg (4,400 lb). Core Diameter:
1.00 m (3.20 ft). Launch Price $: 0.120 million. in: 1990
price dollars. Total Development Built: 25.
Babylon Gun Chronology
1980 - Launch Vehicle: Babylon Gun.
- From March of 1988 until the invasion of Kuwait
in 1990, Iraq contracted with Gerard Bull to build three superguns: two
full sized 'Project Babylon' 1000 mm guns and one 'Baby Babylon' 350 mm
prototyp Nation: Iraq. Gerard Bull
was first contracted by the Iraqi government in 1981. They desperately
needed artillery to out-range the enemy in the protracted Iran-Iraq War.
The association allowed Bull to yet again seek sponsorship of a
space-launch supergun. Sadam Hussein liked the idea, and Project Babylon
was born. Throughout the 1980's Bull's dealings with Iraq had the covert
approval of Western governments, who saw Iraq as a counterweight to
revolutionary Iran.
In March of 1988, Bull received a contract to build two full sized
'Project Babylon' 1000 mm superguns and one 'Baby Babylon' 350 mm
prototype for a total of $25 million. The project was given the cover
designation 'PC-2' (Petrochemical Complex-2). British engineer
Christopher Cowley was the project manager.
The Project Babylon gun would have a barrel 156 meters long with a
one meter bore. The launch tube would be 30 cm thick at the breech,
tapering to 6.5 cm at the exit. Like the V-3 the gun would be built in
segments. 26 six-meter-long sections would make up the barrel, totalling
1510 tonnes. Added to this would be four 220 tonne recoil cylinders, and
the 165 tonne breech. The recoil force of the gun would be 27,000 tonnes
- equivalent to a nuclear bomb and sufficient to register as a major
seismic event all around the world. Nine tonnes of special supergun
propellant would fire a 600 kg projectile over a range of 1,000
kilometres, or a 2,000 kg rocket-assisted projectile. The 2,000 kg
projectile would place a net payload of about 200 kg into orbit at a
cost of $ 600 per kg.
In May of 1989 the Baby Babylon was completed at Jabal Hamrayn, 145
km north of Baghdad. The horizontally-mounted gun was 45-m long with a
350 mm barrel, and had a total mass of 102 tonnes. Following tests using
lead projectiles the gun was reassembled on a hillside at a 45 degree
angle. It was expected to achieve a range of 750 km. An Iraqi defector
revealed later that the gun was to be used for several missions:
- Long-range attack using chemical, biological, or nuclear warheads.
However since the weapon was fixed, it could only be fired in one
direction, and like the V-3 would be easily identified and neutralised
by the targeted country. For this reason the Israelis did not consider
it much of a threat.
- As an anti-satellite weapon. It would launch a special shell in
space that would explode near the target satellite, covering it with
sticky material and blinding it.
Production of components for the Babylon gun began in Britain with
the knowledge of British and US intelligence services. These were
officially 'oil pipeline segments' for the 'PC-2' petrochemical
refinery.
On 22 March 1990 Bull was assassinated and the project quickly
unravelled. It is commonly thought that he was killed by the Israelis,
concerned not so much by the supergun work but rather dynamics research
Bull was doing to improve Iraqi ballistic missiles. Three weeks later
British Customs seized the final eight sections of the Babylon Gun. On
August 2, 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait, precipitating the Gulf War. This
ended Western covert sponsorship of Iraq.
After the war UN teams destroyed the Baby Babylon 350 mm gun,
components of the two Project Babylon 1000 mm guns (44 gun sections,
four recoil cylinders), and one tonne of supergun propellant (the Iraqis
destroyed the remaining 11 tonnes). Only seven slugs for the 350 mm gun
were recovered and destroyed. Iraq claimed never to have received any
design, assistance, materials or equipment for the planned
rocket-assisted projectiles. At the end of September 1995 UNSCOM
obtained information on an indigenous 600 mm indigenous Iraqi supergun
design - evidence that the project had not died with Bull.
1981 - Launch Vehicle: Babylon Gun.
- Gerard Bull was first contracted by the Iraqi
government Nation: Iraq.
1988 March - Launch Vehicle: Babylon Gun.
- Iraq contracts with Gerard Bull for a
space-launch supergun. Nation: Iraq. Bull
received a contract to build two full sized 'Project Babylon' 1000 mm
superguns and one 'Baby Babylon' 350 mm prototype for a total of $25
million. The project was given the cover designation 'PC-2'
(Petrochemical Complex-2). British engineer Christopher Cowley was the
project manager.
1989 May - Launch
Vehicle: Babylon
Gun.
- Baby Babylon Supergun completed
Nation: Iraq. The Baby
Babylon was completed at Jabal Hamrayn, 145 km north of Baghdad. The
horizontally-mounted gun was 45-m long with a 350 mm barrel, and had a
total mass of 102 tonnes. Following tests using lead projectiles the gun
was reassembled on a hillside at a 45 degree angle. It was expected to
achieve a range of 750 km. One of the planned missions for the prototype
gun was as an anti-satellite weapon. It would launch a special shell in
space that would explode near the target satellite, covering it with
sticky material and blinding it.
1990 March
22 - Launch Vehicle: Babylon Gun, Tamouz.
- Gerard Bull assassinated, ending the Tamouz and
supergun projects. Nation: Iraq. It is
commonly thought that he was killed by the Israelis, concerned not so
much by the supergun work but rather dynamics research Bull was doing to
improve Iraqi ballistic missiles. Three weeks later British Customs
seized the final eight sections of the Babylon Gun.
1990 August 2 - Launch Vehicle: Babylon Gun.
- Iraq invades Kuwait. Nation: Iraq.
Summary: Iraq invaded Kuwait, precipitating the Gulf War. This
ended Western covert sponsorship of Iraqi supergun, space launch, and
long-range missile projects.
Bibliography and Further Reading
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