"If you ask any SWAT officer or military personnel, they'd say it's a tool to accomplish a mission," says Bob O'Brien, a retired Cleveland Police Department SWAT sergeant.
O'Brien participated in approximately 500 SWAT callouts a year in his time with Cleveland PD. He's seen what diversionary devices can do, and how far they've come since the early 1980s when they were first being used by American law enforcement. While the first diversionary devices were sometimes more powerful than need be and had a tendency to skip across the floor when deployed, companies have worked out the kinks since then. Now it's not a question of whether to use them, but how often and for which type of operation.
"Some teams use them all the time," says O'Brien. "If there is a danger element involved in the operation they use a flash-bang. Other teams are more selective and only use them when they think it will benefit that specific raid."
Tactical entry teams commonly use diversionary devices for hostage rescue and drug raids. But everyone has a different philosophy on their best use.
"If you ask a dozen SWAT team members, they'd probably give you a dozen different answers on how they use them and why," says O'Brien. "In law enforcement, there are different theories. The personal one I like is 'surprise, shock, and speed.' You want to surprise your adversary, shock them so they can't really react to you, and capitalize on it by attacking with speed. Where flash-bangs fit in is you're surprising and shocking them at the same time with the use of a flash-bang, and you take advantage of it with speed."