New physical principles weapons are a wide range of weapons or systems created using emerging technologies, like wave, psychophysical, and genetic weapons.
The term is currently used primarily in Russia.[1] The Encyclopedia of the Russian Ministry of Defense identifies the following types of new physical principles weapons that have been developed to varying degrees by the 21st century:
New types of "weapons of mass destruction and new systems of such weapons" were defined by the United Nations General Assembly in 1975.[3] In 1976, the US State Department stated that these weapons are based on "qualitatively new principles of action", which can be new due to the nature of the impact, target to be attacked, method of action, or how they are used.[4] Examples given were infrasound weapons designed to damage internal organs and affect human behavior; genetic weapons, the use of which would affect the mechanism of heredity; ray weapons capable of affecting blood and intracellular plasma; robotic military equipment; unmanned controlled aircraft; and weapon systems, like aerospace weapon systems, where nuclear weapons are transported by spaceships and thereby more dangerous.[4]
In the never-adopted draft treaty of 1975, the proposed language in the United Nations Disarmament Conference classification for "new weapons of mass description" to be banned included:
radiological means of the non-explosive type acting with the aid of radioactive materials
technical means of inflicting radiation injury based on the use of charged or neutral particles to affect biological targets
infrasonic means using acoustic radiation to affect biological targets
means using electromagnetic radiation to affect biological targets.[3]
NATO definition of non-lethal weapons include new responsive technologies—like lasers, kinetic and acoustic devices.[6] Examples of non-lethal weapons are counter-personnel and radio-frequency vehicle stopping technologies.[6] The United States Department of Defense's current and future non-lethal weapons programs include active denial, counter-personnel capability that creates a heating sensation, quickly repelling potential adversaries with minimal risk of injury in such missions as force protection, perimeter defense, crowd control, patrols/convoys, defensive and offensive operations.[7][8][9]
The Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention of 1972. The Seventh Review Conference was held in Geneva in December 2011, which resulted in the Final Declaration document that affirmed that "under all circumstances the use of bacteriological (biological) and toxin weapons is effectively prohibited by the Convention".[11] The Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons, Protocol IV of the 1980 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, was issued by the United Nations on October 13, 1995, and came into force on July 30, 1998.[12]
Weapons development
Russian military doctrine refers to new physical principles weapons, while describing the main features of these weapons as comparable in effect to nuclear weapons but more acceptable in political terms.[13][14] It was reported in October 2016 that Russia had tested a new electronic weapon, based on new physical principles, that uses directed-energy to neutralize on-board aircraft equipment, unmanned combat aerial vehicles, and precision weapons. In November 2016, Putin stated that the new physical principles weapons comply with all of the country's international obligations.[15]
Non-lethal blinding weapons
In 2015, Russia announced a blinding weapon, Rook, that creates a disabling light interference, which can be used against night-vision equipment. It uses ultraviolet, infrared, and visible regions of the spectrum and can change the width and direction of the beam to target specific objects.[16]
^ abDepartment of Political and Security Council Affairs, United Nations Centre of Disarmament. "The United Nations Disarmament Yearbook: Volume 02: 1977"(PDF). United Nations Disarmament Organization. pp. 41, 344. Retrieved January 8, 2017.