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Chinese forces used “microwave” weapons to force Indian soldiers to retreat by making them seriously ill during a Himalayan conflict, a professor has claimed.
The electromagnetic weapons that cook the human tissue of enemy troops “turned the mountain tops into a microwave oven” and made Indian soldiers vomit, international studies expert Jin Canrong told his students in Beijing.
The microwave weapons heat water molecules in the same way as the kitchen utensil, aiming at water under the skin and causing the target increasing pain from a distance of up to 1 km.
Jin praised the Chinese armed forces for the “beautiful” execution of the project, with which Indian troops were evacuated without violating a ban on shooting along the disputed border.
It is the first known use of microwave weapons on a battlefield.
According to The Times, the guns were said to have been used in late August, weeks after a deadly stone and club brawl that killed at least 20 Indian soldiers and brought the two nuclear-armed powers closer to war than in 53 years at one of the highest elevations Battlefields of the world.

Images circulated earlier this year showed Indian troops being roped and tied near the controversial Himalayan border, where China allegedly used a microwave-style weapon to disperse enemy soldiers in August

China’s so-called Poly WB-1, a type of “microwave” weapon that was first exhibited at an air show in 2014

The US equivalent, the Active Denial System, was once used in Afghanistan but has apparently been withdrawn without ever being used against human targets

The controversial border area between India and China, where at least 20 soldiers were killed in a high-altitude brawl earlier this year
Jin told his students that within 15 minutes of the guns being deployed, “those who occupied the hills began to vomit.”
“They couldn’t get up and fled. That’s how we reclaimed the ground, ”he explained.
China’s armed forces decided to use the guns because the altitude was too high to fight a team of Tibetan climber specialists, Jin said.
Shooting is prohibited under an old agreement, although there were warning shots during a shootout in September accusing each other.
While the US has also developed microwave-style weapons, China’s alleged use may be the first against enemy forces around the world.
The weapon is also designed for crowd control, heating the water under the skin to painful temperatures that will force people out of the area.
The sensation was once described in a medical journal as equivalent to touching a hot light bulb. Excessive radiation exposure can also cause headaches, nausea, and vomiting.
China’s so-called Poly WB-1 was first exhibited at an air show in 2014 and is to be delivered to Chinese naval forces.
The tools are called “microwave” weapons because they have an effect similar to the oven type, although technically the radiation is in the form of millimeter waves rather than microwaves.
Similar weapons are suspected of being used against U.S. diplomatic personnel who became mysteriously ill in a number of incidents in China and Cuba starting in 2016.
America’s equivalent “heat ray”, the Active Denial System, was unveiled and dispatched to Afghanistan in 2007, but never appears to have been used against enemy forces.
The Pentagon hailed it as “the first non-lethal counter-personnel system with directed energy and an extended range greater than current non-lethal weapons”.
Fears of a political backlash were believed to have contributed to his withdrawal from Afghanistan, despite the US government declaring it complied with international law.


LIMIT TENSIONS: It is believed that they were filmed on the shores of Lake Pangong, one mile into Indian territory, in mid-May. The footage shows Indian armed forces beating a People’s Liberation Army soldier

An Indian army convoy drives a highway on the border with China in June after the deadly clash at the long-disputed border

Indian army soldiers sit in a military vehicle after the violence in June, the worst fighting on the border with China in 53 years
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