TheE14 munition was a cardboardsub-munition (air-dropped or ground-launched munitions that eject smaller submunitions) developed by theUnited States biological weapons program as an anti-crop weapon. In a series of field tests in 1955, the E14 was loaded with fleas and air-dropped.
The E14 munition was developed by the United States for use in its offensivebiological warfare arsenal as an anti-crop weapon.[1] After theKorean War U.S. interest in large-scaleentomological warfare increased.[1] The E14 was one of two sub-munitions used in large-scale testing aimed at learning the feasibility and result of an air-dropped insect attack.[2]
In September 1954, atDugway Proving Ground in Utah, the E14 was again used in a series of tests known as "Operation Big Itch".[2] During Big Itch, uninfectedrat fleas[3] (Xenopsylla cheopis) were loaded into the E14 and air-dropped over the proving ground.[2]
The E14 used cardboard and sponge inserts to hold the fleas inside the cardboard container.[2] With the sponge inserts in place, the E14 could hold about 100,000 fleas.[1] Eighty cardboard inserts, or "loop tubes", could be carried in the E14 as well. The munition could hold 80 loop tubes, each one capable of holding 3,000 fleas.[1] The testing in Utah was ultimately successful.[1][2]
In May 1955 the U.S. utilized the E14 in field test, this time in the U.S. state of Georgia.[2] The E14 was packed with "aircomb waffles" or loop tubes, instead of fleas these tests used uninfected yellow fever mosquitoes[4] (Aedes aegypti). The successful Georgia trials were known as "Operation Big Buzz".[2]
The E14 munition was asub-munition that can be clustered in theE86 cluster bomb.[1] It was a9+3⁄4-inch (248 mm) long, 13-inch (330 mm) wide cardboard container.[1] Internally the bomb contained anactuator powered by pressurized carbon dioxide, apiston that would expel the bomb's contents, and a small parachute, to be deployed when the weapon was dropped from the E86 cluster bomb.[1] The weapons were designed to release their payload ofbiological agent, be it avector or anti-crop agent, at 1,000–2,000 feet (300–610 m) above the ground, after it was released from the cluster munition.[1]