(Bomb technician counts down; three...two...one...)
[Sounds of explosions in the distance]
Narrator
More than 200 FBI bomb technicians and weapons of mass destruction
coordinators converged on Nellis Air Force Base in Nevada this
spring for a crash course on improvised explosive devices.
The four-day training in March was part a national initiative
by the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security to train bomb
squads and emergency responders on emerging explosive threats.
A demonstration—opened to the media—showed the various
materials that are used to make improvised explosive devices, or
IEDs, and their effects when they detonate.
Bomb Technician (demonstrating dynamite)
...You'll notice the end of it is what is called a rosette crimp.
Narrator
As cameras trained on the distant desert scrub, agents blew up
small objects using plastic explosives, dynamite and a novel
type of explosive material called Detasheet, which looks like
rubbery linoleum but packs a wallop.
Bomb Technician (demonstrating Detasheet plastic
explosive, and C4)
...This is military Detasheet, this is much less
quantity of explosive
than you've been hearing so far, but this is really hot stuff!
This
is the way military C4 comes, if you've never seen it before
now you have,
and I'll pass this around... Narrator
The demonstration progressed to larger explosions using an ammonium
nitrate, fuel-oil mixture—the same materials used to blow
up the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City.
As media watched from a distance, agents detonated 50 pounds of
ammonium nitrate mixture to destroy a car.
[Sounds of explosions in the distance]
Another car was blown up with 100 pounds of ammonium nitrate.
Then agents detonated a van with 250 pounds of the explosives.
The blast sent a plume into the air and left behind a massive crater
and wide field of burning debris.
The FBI’s Assistant Director of the Weapons of Mass Destruction
Directorate, Vahid Majidi, has called the training initiative a
force-multiplier in the FBI’s efforts to train bomb squads.
The hope is that more emergency responders—and sellers of
materials that can go into making bombs—will better understand
how terrorists might use IEDs in an attack.
Bomb Technician
...so we were essentially able using home-made parts to manufacture
the kind of improvised shape charge for use in an anti-personnel
situation
the way we'd see used against our troops.
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