Military
vehicles
Throughout U.S. history, advances in military
capability have been fueled by innovation. All branches of the military
consistently have managed to use technology in new and creative ways to gain an
edge over the enemy.
The wars of the past decade exposed an
“innovation gap” that forced the U.S. military to play catch up, and react to
enemy tactics — such as roadside bombs and sniper attacks — rather than
anticipating them. The Defense Department’s research-and-development apparatus
was slow to respond with new and improved weapons based on changing threats.
Critics have called for the Pentagon to stop wasting money on science projects
that target undefined hypothetical future wars, focus on systems that they know
deployed forces need, and to move them to the field in weeks or months, not
years or decades. Innovation is not helpful if it’s not assisting troops at
war. As many senior Pentagon officials have noted, an 80-percent solution that
can be available in months is better than a perfect outcome that could take
years or decades to achieve.
In this special report, National Defense
identifies 10 key technologies that U.S. forces likely will need to fight the
next war. Regardless of where or when that conflict might be, there is
widespread consensus that advances in certain key areas would benefit U.S.
forces.
Examples are faster and quieter helicopters,
advanced crowd-control weapons, lighter infantry equipment that doesn’t
overburden troops, ultra-light trucks and better battlefield communications. In
the maritime realm, Navy leaders have for years been seeking stealthy
mini-submarines that can be remotely operated, and fast bulletproof power boats
for anti-piracy and coastal security operations.
Accurate intelligence about the enemy is always
on the military’s wish list, and success in future conflicts will require
technologies that can perform persistent surveillance to help identify enemies
and friendly forces. Robots that can operate autonomously also will be essential
tools of war, not necessarily to fire weapons, but to conduct mundane tasks
such as delivering cargo.
This is what I agree with and what I like and
interest me about military vehicles.
Website:http://www.nationaldefensemagazine.org/archive/2011/November/Pages/10TechnologiestheUSMilitaryWillNeedFortheNextWar.aspx
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