U.S. military sees more use of laser,
microwave weapons
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[July 29, 2015]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. military
has made strides in developing lasers, microwaves and other directed
energy weapons, and could soon use them more widely, top armed forces
officials and U.S. lawmakers told an industry conference on Tuesday.
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The officials described weapons that are in various stages of
development and testing by the U.S. Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force
and Army, but said more work was needed to scale up the technology
for larger weapons, develop tactics for their use, and ensure
sufficient funding.
"Directed energy brings the dawn of an entirely new era in defense,"
Lieutenant General William Etter, Commander, Continental U.S. North
American Aerospace Defense Command Region, told a conference hosted
by Booz Allen Hamilton and the Center for Strategic and Budgetary
Assessment.
Directed energy refers to weapons that emit focused energy in the
form of lasers, microwaves, electromagnetic radiation, radio waves,
sound or particle beams. Lasers are already widely use to guide
bombs to their target, but the next step would be to use the lasers
as weapons themselves.
The military has been working on such weapons for decades, but says
many technology challenges have finally been addressed.
Etter and other officials said such weapons could lower the cost of
current weapons, speed up responses to enemy attacks and cut deaths
of civilians in the battlefield.
Defense Undersecretary Frank Kendall, the top U.S. arms buyer, said
Pentagon funding for directed energy programs would remain steady at
about $300 million a year for now, with larger-scale demonstrations
to start in about five years.
Kendall said directed energy offered a less expensive way to counter
ballistic and cruise missile threats than the expensive interceptors
used now, and urged industry to focus development efforts on those
threats.
Navy Secretary Ray Mabus told the conference the Navy was encouraged
by testing of a laser deployed on the USS Ponce in the Gulf, which
can destroy small boats and unmanned aerial vehicles, and can also
be used as a telescope.
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Mabus said the Navy was extending deployment of the laser on the
Ponce, and using lessons learned to help produce a 100-150 kilowatt
laser prototype for testing at sea in 2018 or sooner.
He said a powerful new railgun that could hit targets 100 miles away
would also be tested at sea next year. A railgun is an electrically
powered electromagnetic projectile launcher.
He said the Navy would release a comprehensive road map for these
sort of weapons this fall and could initiate a full-scale
acquisition program in fiscal 2018.
Mabus said Iran and other countries were already using lasers to
target ships and commercial airliners, and the U.S. military needed
to accelerate often cumbersome acquisition processes to ensure that
it stayed ahead of potential foes.
Major General Jerry Harris, vice commander of Air Combat Command,
said the Air Force had developed a high-power microwave weapon that
could disperse crowds without killing people by rapidly raising body
temperature, and the system could be put to use immediately on
drones or other aircraft.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Bill Rigby)
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