Modeling of the potential hazard caused by destruction of Bunker 73 indicates that an area around the bunker at least 2 km in all directions and 4 km downwind could have been contaminated at or above the level for causing acute symptoms including runny nose, headache, and miosis. An area up to 25 km downwind and 8 km wide could have been contaminated at or above the much lower general population dosage limit.(3) From wind models and observations of a video of destruction activity at Khamisiyah, we determined that the downwind direction was northeast to east.
Modeling Assumptions About Bunker 73
Some of the following modeling assumptions were based on data from US testing in 1966 that involved destruction of a bunker filled with 1,850 GB rockets with maximum range similar to that of Iraqi rockets found in Bunker 73:
- 1,060 rockets as indicated by Iraq.
- Rockets filled with 8 kg of a 2:1 ratio of GB to GF (contents assumed to be 100 percent agent) based on UNSCOM information and sampling from the pit.
- Ten percent of rockets ejected from the bunker, half of which randomly fall within a 200-meter circle, the other half falling within a 2-km circle based on US testing.(a)
- Ejected rockets released agents on impact.
- A 15-meter mean agent release height was chosen to be conservative when determining ground hazard.
- All but 2.5 percent of agent in the bunker degraded by heat from explosion and motor/crate burning based on US tests.
- Winds slow to the northeast to east, based on modeling and analysis of a videotape of the destruction activity at Khamisiyah.
- Our models do not include the effect of the reported 32 to 37 conventional ordnance bunkers detonating and burning simultaneously with the chemical bunker. The added thermal energy created by explosions and fires in the other bunkers and solar heating caused by the increased amounts of smoke would tend to degrade agent as well as more quickly disperse the agent between the ground up to the maximum altitude of 800 to 1,200 meters.(b) This more rapid vertical spreading would tend to lower ground contamination in the area.
(a) DOD documents and multiple veterans reported that munition "cook-offs"--munitions that ignite and are ejected from their storage due to the demolition fire--sent ordnance as far as 10 km or more from the bunker facility. Nonetheless, we did not model this phenomena because we have been unable to determine whether any of the cook-offs involved chemical rockets, and if so, the number of rockets and how far they went.
(b) This altitude represents the estimated height of the mixing layer--the lower turbulent part of the atmosphere above which agent transport is inhibited due to a laminar boundary layer. This layer can often be seen from aircraft while landing in cities with polluted air.