Spider hole

 In military slang, a spider hole is a type of camouflaged one-man foxhole, used for observation.[1]

Illustration of a spider hole

EtymologyEdit

The term is usually understood to be an allusion to the camouflaged hole constructed by the trapdoor spider.

According to United States Marine Corpshistorian Major Chuck Melson, the term originated in the American Civil War, when it meant a hastily dug foxhole.[citation needed]

The American columnist William Safireclaimed in the December 15, 2003, issue of the New York Times that the term originated in the Vietnam War.[2] According to Safire, one of the characteristics of these holes was that they held a "clay pot large enough to hold a crouching man." If the pot broke, the soldier was exposed to attack from snakes or spiders, hence the name "spider hole".

DesignEdit

A spider hole is typically a shoulder-deep, protective, round hole, often covered by a camouflaged lid, in which a soldier can stand and fire a weapon. A spider hole differs from a typical foxhole in that a foxhole is usually deeper and designed to emphasize cover rather than concealment.

UseEdit

Spider holes were used during World War II by Japanese forces on many Pacific battlefields, including Leyte in the Philippines and Iwo Jima.[3] They called them "octopus pots" (蛸壺takotsubo) for a fancied resemblance to the pots used to catch octopuses in Japan.[4]

Spider holes were also used by fighters of the Viet Cong and soldiers of the People's Army of Vietnam during the Vietnam War as both defensive and offensive fortifications, where VC/PAVN fighters could either seek shelter from combat with ARVN, US or other alliedforces, or could conceal themselves in preparation for a surprise attack.

On December 13, 2003, during the Iraq War, American forces in Operation Red Dawncaptured Iraqi president Saddam Husseinhiding in what was characterized as a "spider hole" outside an Ad-Dawr farmhouse (near his hometown of Tikrit).[5]

Note

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
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