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Wire obstacle
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== History == [[Image:Junobeach_Prisoners.jpg|thumb|[[Juno Beach]] on [[D-Day]], 1944. The barbed wire fence is crude and not very high. However, when combined with the steep, curving sea wall it slows down any attacker, giving time for a nearby [[machinegun]] [[bunker]] (visible on the far left) to sweep the area with [[enfilade]] fire. Note the soldier in the background, forced to use a ladder.]] Wire obstacles were used by [[Union Army]] general [[Ambrose Burnside]] during the [[Battle of Fort Sanders]] in the [[Knoxville campaign]] of the [[American Civil War]], when [[Electrical telegraph|telegraph wire]] was strung between tree stumps 30 to 80 yards in front of one part of the Union line. The [[Royal Danish Army]] also used wire fences in front of its [[Danevirke]] fortifications during the [[Second Schleswig War]]. They first saw significant military use by [[British Empire|British]] forces during the [[Second Boer War]], and reached the pinnacle of visibility during [[World War I]] where they indirectly, together with [[machine gun]]s, were responsible for many (although not the majority of) [[Casualty (person)|casualties]] in the [[trench warfare]] that dominated that conflict. Wire obstacles served to magnify the substantial advantage that the [[repeating rifle]] and [[Quick-firing gun|rapid-firing artillery]], along with machine guns, had given to the defending side in the new era of warfare. World War I entanglements could in some places be tens of metres thick and several metres deep, with the entire space filled with a [[random]], tangled mass of [[barbed wire]]. Entanglements were often not created deliberately, but by pushing together the mess of wire formed when conventional barbed wire fences had been damaged by [[artillery]] [[shell (projectile)|shell]]s. Whenever there was time and opportunity to plan and emplace wire obstacles during [[World War I]], it was standard practice to deploy designs that would channel and concentrate attacking troops, through avenues of approach, herding them like cattle into designated [[Kill zone|killing zone]]s i.e. fixing multiple [[screw picket]]s of wire running diagonally, away from the protected zone. This meant that a belt-fed machine-gun such as the [[Maschinengewehr 08]] sited along that diagonal line had easy targets to [[enfilade]] when attacking troops were blocked from advancing by the wire and then massed together in a line. Another method was to deliberately leave attractive-looking gaps in wire obstacles to give the appearance of a weak link in the defences. Such gaps were designed to act like a funnel, luring attacking troops through the opening and straight into the concentrated direct and enfilade fire of different machine gun emplacements. Because multiple [[water-cooled]] machine-guns such as the [[Vickers gun]] were used, continuous fire could be sustained for hours at a time if required. Methods for soldiers to face this threat were a small wheeled steel plate that was slowly pushed forward in front of the soldier to shield them from bullet fire as they crawled, shielded machine gun carts, the [[MacAdam Shield Shovel]] or systems like the [[mobile personnel shield]] among others. When the obstacle was reached, access holes in the shield allowed the attacking soldier to cut away at the wire obstacle with pliers from behind the protection of the armored shield.<ref>{{Cite book |last= |first= |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HykDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA30 |title=Popular Science |date= January 1919|publisher=Bonnier Corporation |language=en}}</ref> [[Stormtroopers (Imperial Germany)|Stormtrooper]] platoons included [[ballistic shield]]s in their equipment list, as [[infiltration tactics|infiltration]] was one of their specialities. Relatively elaborate obstacles were also used in some phases of the [[Korean War]], and continue to be used on the [[Korean Demilitarized Zone]], and a few other borders. However the more fluid nature of modern war means that most obstacles used today are relatively simple, temporary barriers.{{cn|date=July 2017}} [[Tank]]s and [[Armored fighting vehicle|light armored vehicles]] can generally flatten unmined wire obstacles, although the wire can become entangled in the tracks and immobilize the vehicle. This can also occur to wheeled vehicles once the wire becomes wrapped around the axle. Wire obstacles can also be breached by intense [[artillery]] [[shell (projectile)|shelling]] or [[Bangalore torpedo]]es.{{cn|date=July 2017}}
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