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FIRE AND FURRY

US military invests £40m developing LIVING weapons – including bugs to eat Kim Jong-un’s nukes

Forget tanks, warplanes and aircraft carriers, the Pentagon is planning to mobilise a mighty but minuscule war machine… so small you need a microscope to see it

The bugs are being manipulated for military use

HUGE bug armies — so tiny you cannot see them — could be mobilised by the US military to combat North Korea’s nuclear weapons arsenal.

Creepy organisms could be developed that love to gorge themselves on solid rocket fuel that propel Kim Jong-un's nuke rockets.

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The US Department of Defence is backing £40million research into so-called living weapons which can alter their genetic makeup so they morph into whatever is required.

Abundant sea organisms, like Marinobacter, are already known to change to react to certain substances left by enemy vessels, divers, or equipment — and therefore they can detect stealthy submarines which are usually invisible on sonar.

But even better are others which can altered so they can creep into caves, bunkers and missile silos.

Once inside they gravitate towards solid rocket fuel which they then feed on until weapons are neutralised, reports s. 

Battle of the bugs...will the next world war be fought using microscopic bugs?
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Battle of the bugs...will the next world war be fought using microscopic bugs?Credit: Alamy
Bugs could creep into bases and eat solid rocket fuel, rendering missiles useless
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Bugs could creep into Kim Jong-un's  bases and eat solid rocket fuel, rendering missiles uselessCredit: AP:Associated Press
They can even hunt out submarines by reacting to tell tale tracks in the water
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They can even hunt out submarines f made invisible because of special tiling - by reacting to tell tale tracks in the waterCredit: Crown Copyright

Dr Claretta Sullivan, a research scientist at the Air Force Research Laboratory’s Materials and Manufacturing Directorate, said: “There are consumer products on the market that depend on this technology.

“We’re trying to grow its use in the Department of Defence.

“Our team is looking at ways we can reprogram cells that already exist in the environment to create environmentally friendly platforms for generating molecules and materials beneficial for defence needs.”

Another use is “self-healing paint” for ships and tanks which could be used to slash the Pentagon’s £16 billion bill for treating rust.


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