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Future Army Battle Uniforms - Wired, Lethal 756

ssyladin writes "CNN is running an article about the future US army battle dress, code-named 'Scorpion'. It says that "..soldiers of 2011 will step into wired uniforms that incorporate all the equipment they need. The uniforms will monitor vital signs and plug them into a massive network of satellites, unmanned planes and robotic vehicles the military has planned." There will be sensors to monitor heartrate and blood-pressure, built-in tourniquets, a HUD to connect to GPS info, overhead maps, infrared and starlight cameras, and even the venerable M16 rifles are slated for an overhaul."
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Future Army Battle Uniforms - Wired, Lethal

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  • Nostalgia (Score:4, Funny)

    by NeoMoose ( 626691 ) <neomooseNO@SPAMdespammed.com> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:13AM (#6121842) Homepage Journal
    But can it play networked Pong?
    • by brocheck ( 59415 ) <brocheck@satlu g . o rg> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:20AM (#6121867) Homepage
      Yes, with bullets.
    • by Lord Prox ( 521892 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @06:27AM (#6122286) Homepage
      I am wondering if having everyone and everything automated and wirelessly networked is a hot idea. A technologically adept adversary could take advantage of this fact and, say, feed false info into the system, or order an air strike, remote acivation of the automatic tourniquit(sp?) system, what have you. Even if they didn't hack the system a captured unit might be just as good.

      • by onthefenceman ( 640213 ) <szoepf@NoSpAm.hotmail.com> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @08:52AM (#6123224)
        Is the idea of hundreds of soldiers running through a forest, all attached with miles of CAT 5 cable any better?
      • by Anarchofascist ( 4820 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @10:00AM (#6123867) Homepage Journal
        "A technologically adept adversary could take advantage of this fact and, say, feed false info into the system..."

        Taking the opposite strategy let Australia defeat the US in wargames a few years ago.

        Australia took the part of defenders of a large (anonymous) desert country, and the US the attackers from the sea. US plans included a lot of electronic surveillance. The Aussies passed commands using runners and pieces of paper, sent fake messages to each other implying that the most heavily defended area of beach was completely empty, and foiled the US landing.

        The script said this wouldn't happen, so the referees allowed the game to continue as if the landing was successful.
        • by FeloniousPunk ( 591389 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @12:37PM (#6125294)
          The script said this wouldn't happen, so the referees allowed the game to continue as if the landing was successful.
          That's probably not quite how the matter was dealt with.
          When the military, or at least the US military, does one of these exercises, there is a list of training objectives for that exercise that participating units need to meet. During the flow of the exercise, if the BLUFOR (training units) gets creamed unexpectedly by the OPFOR (bad guys) or else something else goes badly, it is noted, and then the exercise moves on so that the units can train the other tasks they have to do. At the end of the exercise, an After-Action Review (AAR) is conducted, where all flaws, failures and mistakes come out in the wash, often brutally so. At the end of all this, the units are sent home with a package of training objectives for the coming year or 6 months, with recommendations on what to correct and what to reinforce.
          In all the wargames I've participated in, I can't remember "winning" a single one. They are designed specifically so that a BLUFOR win is very rare, because you learn more by losing.
          I have no idea what exercise you are referring to, but in US-run exercises that's how it goes.
  • to the phrase "Blue Screen of Death" doesn't it?
  • Good Riddance (Score:2, Insightful)

    by klmth ( 451037 )
    I'm glad to see they are going to get rid of the M16. Hopefully they'll replace it with something that's a bit more reliable. Having your rifle jam after a swim is not a feature.
    • Re:Good Riddance (Score:2, Informative)

      by publius314 ( 672902 )
      The army's supposedly coming out with the OICW in 2004, which has a bunch of new features, including a range of up to 1000 meters (the M16 has a max. range of 400, and thats with really good training)
      • Re:Good Riddance (Score:4, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:03AM (#6121992)
        Not exactly true.

        Maximum effective range:
        Area target: 2,624.8 feet (800 meters)
        Point target: 1,804.5 feet (550 meters)

        Source: http://www.hqmc.usmc.mil/factfile.nsf/7e931335d515 626a8525628100676e0c/6a60172b3db3d5ce8525627b0062d 928

        If I was a soldier I wouldn't want to have to packaround an OICW. They are significantly heavier than the M16A2 and the last thing our soldiers need at this point is more weight to pack around.
      • Re:Good Riddance (Score:5, Informative)

        by Joseph_ShawII ( 257564 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @06:01AM (#6122188)
        The army's supposedly coming out with the OICW in 2004, which has a bunch of new features, including a range of up to 1000 meters (the M16 has a max. range of 400, and thats with really good training)

        Given that the M16 and the OICW are both chambered in .223/5.56NATO, there's no way it's going to be good for 1000 meters, as that's a limitation of the cartridge design not the gun. The OICW is also a bullpup design, but still has a short barrel, decreasing maximum effective lethal range. The OICW uses the same magazines as the M16. Even .308/7.62NATO isn't really good to 1000 meters because of it's vulnerability to wind interference.

        The OICW is a waste. Give any soldier the choice between a set of combat gear or the scorpion suit, and he'll choose the combat gear. Give him a choice between the OICW or an M16, and he'll choose the M16. Why? Because when your life is on the line complex systems fail more often than simple systems and they can also get in the way. When you're on the battlefield and people are shooting at you, you want to be able to shoot back. When you have to reboot your gun or your combat helmet is on the frits, these are bad things. Moving to the latest new fangled gadgets does not make a successful armed force.

        This is why smart guns will be a flop. The Glock firearm design is currently the most popular modern design on the market because it is a simple design that works. It has very few moving parts compared to other semi-auto pistols, and that means it tends to be much more reliable than other designs. When you start introducing computer controls, fingerprint scanners, and the like things get much more complicated much quicker and I personally would hate to lose my life because my smartgun crashed while someone was kicking down my door.

        The most venerable machine gun designs were from guys who weren't working for the government. Guys like John Moses Browning who designed the majority of the military machine guns in US history and many still in use today. The .50 BMG (BMG = Browning Machine Gun) guns you saw mounted on those armored vehicles in Iraq were a Browning design. And it was Gene Stoner who developed the original AR-10 machine gun, which was redesigned into the M16. Now the US has outlawed the kind of work Browning and Stoner did, and given the excessive excise tax required to become a Class II manufacturer, it's unlikely that you'll ever have that kind of innovation again. Trying to build a machine gun makes you a federal felon with an instant 10 years at Club Fed, and we're talking the pound you in the butt prison, not some country club.

        Today's combat weapons are made by large military contractors who move at a snails pace. Browning was turning out multiple designs per year. You'd think with all the backing these big defense contractors have, they could at least keep up.
        • Re:Good Riddance (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Pxtl ( 151020 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @07:23AM (#6122517) Homepage
          Plus, locallized, controlled EMP is becoming more and more doable every day - the use of all this high-tech computer equipment may be vulnerable to that (though I'm sure the computers on these things are shielded out the wazoo, I still worry)

          And speaking of computer control - did you notice the mention of autonomous robotic artillery vehicles? Doesn't that bother anyone? Currently, robots function as spy planes, spy jeeps, bomber planes, and now artillery tanks. This is a bad trend. They seem to be giving the robots all the heavy firepower. Whether the catastrophe is SkyNet or some ham radio guy who knows his crypto, this does not seem to be a good trend.
        • Re:Good Riddance (Score:3, Insightful)

          by sql*kitten ( 1359 )
          The OICW is a waste. Give any soldier the choice between a set of combat gear or the scorpion suit, and he'll choose the combat gear. Give him a choice between the OICW or an M16, and he'll choose the M16.

          To a certain extent this is true, but remember the M16 was able to replace the M14. At the time the M14 was much more reliable, and it fired a round with a lot more stopping power. Next thing you know the US army is in Vietnam - sure you can carry a lot more 5.56 ammo and fire it full auto, but the 7.62
        • Re:Good Riddance (Score:3, Insightful)

          by haraldm ( 643017 )

          Because when your life is on the line complex systems fail more often than simple systems and they can also get in the way.

          Having been a soldier for a number of years I can tell you this is all too true. The German MG-42 isn't still in use just for fun but because it's a good, simple and battle field proven design.

          I am looking forward to soldiers in wired combat suits jammed by high-power microwave or EMP transmitters, grinding them to a sudden halt.

          All this is good for is breastfeeding an industry

        • Re:Good Riddance (Score:3, Insightful)

          by -ryan ( 115102 )
          The only way I can see a weapon of the same caliber (OICW and M16) having different effective ranges is either one of two things. Charge, or rifling. Either they plan to be shooting with new brass in a short mag style or maybe just using more powder, or the OICW is a bullpup design allowing for a longer rifle barrel.

          That said, the vast majority of infantry engagements are done within 150 meters. That's why we can get away with using a weapon with shitty ballistics (velocity namely), like an M4. I don't ca

    • Re:Good Riddance (Score:5, Insightful)

      by x0 ( 32926 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @07:15AM (#6122462) Homepage
      Having been a Marine for a number of years, I have to call bullshit on this. Unless you are incompetent, *never* cleaned your rifle, or are incapable of grasping the concept of proper lubrication, M16s just work.

      In all of the years I qualified on the KD (Known Distance) course, I had only one failure to feed (which can happen to *any* semi-auto firearm), and I never had a 'jam'. Of the others firing the same course with me that did have jams, the overwhelming majority were due to having a 'dry rifle'; ie: no, or improper lubrication. The others did have mechanical failures, but that is to be expected when you consider the age and actual use of those rifles.

      To answer to some of the other replies below: M16s are pretty damned accurate as well with the proper load. The Army Marksmanship Unit shoots the M16 now... And they have won some pretty tough matches with those rifles. Even out to 1000 yards. I left the Corps a few years back, but it wouldn't shock me to hear that the USMC Rifle Team switched from the M14 to the M16.

      For what its worth, with the exception of boot camp and the first year afterward, I qualified expert every year averaging 230 out of a possible 250 points. (And 286 out of 300 shooting an off the rack M16 on the NRA High Power course during Marine intramural competition.)

      • Re:Good Riddance (Score:3, Informative)

        by gillbates ( 106458 )
        the overwhelming majority were due to having a 'dry rifle'; ie: no, or improper lubrication .

        Which is exactly the problem: the M16 wasn't designed to be used in battlefield conditions. A little sand here, or lack of lube there, and you've got a glorified bayonet.

        The M16 is a classic example of textbook engineering - it is a very well designed, very accurate rifle. But unlike the soviet and chinese counterparts, it has no tolerance for dirt; without proper lubrication, it jams. Compound this with the

        • Re:Good Riddance (Score:4, Interesting)

          by FeloniousPunk ( 591389 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @08:54AM (#6123238)
          Which is exactly the problem: the M16 wasn't designed to be used in battlefield conditions. A little sand here, or lack of lube there, and you've got a glorified bayonet. The M16 is a classic example of textbook engineering - it is a very well designed, very accurate rifle. But unlike the soviet and chinese counterparts, it has no tolerance for dirt; without proper lubrication, it jams. Compound this with the fact that the Army doesn't issue field cleaning kits, and that CLP (lube) is distributed at the platoon level (if at all), and you've got a recipe for battlefield failure. Granted, the AK47 and Kalishnikov rifles aren't accurate past 400 meters, but the average soldier couldn't hit anything beyond 150 meters with any appreciable accuracy anyway. Contrary to popular belief, firefights don't consist of a bunch of soldiers picking off the enemy from 1000 meters. In short, having a reliable, albeit inaccurate weapon is much more useful than having an accurate weapon that jams at the wrong time.
          You are way overstating the case. Yes, the original marks of the M16 in the Vietnam era had a lot of problems, but those were worked out in the A1 and especially A2 versions of the rifle. You need to clean and lubricate your weapon but this is true of all weapons. The current M16 is no different than most other modern battle rifles in reliability. A military that doesn't train its troops to maintain their equipment is a poor military and probably has other problems beyond dirty weapons.
          I don't know what platoons you were in, but in the units I was in, every soldier got a little bottle of CLP, and as much of that and patches as he could ask for. Soldiers who use magazines as hammers need to be corrected of that habit, maybe some extra duty or a statement of charges will do the trick. Never use a tool for something other than what it was intended to do.
      • Re:Good Riddance (Score:5, Informative)

        by mnmlst ( 599134 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @10:36AM (#6124254) Homepage Journal

        I must respectfully disagree with my Marine Corps fellow traveller here. As a former U.S. Army officer, I wielded an M-16A1 in the first Persian Gulf War. I found my M-16 was okay during peacetime, but had some doubts about it for wartime, due to my copious research beforehand. When the more senior officers traded in their M1911A1 Colt .45 ACP pistols for M-16A1's, I acquired one of those pistols as an addition to my personal armoury. I wanted the .45 with me on the off chance that I got into a firefight and the M-16 jammed.

        The M-16 spokesman here says that it works fine if kept properly lubricated. I NEVER lubricated my M-16 during PGWI because I couldn't. The first (and last) time I did, it became utterly encrusted with sand. There was no escaping the sand in the Arabian deserts as it is a fine powder easily blown into the air or stirred into the air by vehicles and troops moving about. I wiped it down to a "near dry" condition and it was still caked in sand. It was only after a few more days and wipedowns that it finally dried out and quit being covered in sand. From then on, I just wiped it down with a dry cloth every day. Assuming the Marine above is correct, my M-16 was rendered just about useless. Basically, I would have had to begin dousing it in lubricant right when I actually needed it. Hopefully, that would not have been during one of the frequent "shamals" (sandstorms) we endured.

        The most egregious design flaw of the M-16 is the reloading arrangement to support semi-automatic fire. A small gas tube taps the barrel near the front sight and carries some of the hot gas from the cartidge's detonation back to a very short tube or "catcher" just above the rotary bolt that houses the firing pin. This means you have crappy, government gunpowder blowing crap right into the most critical part of the weapon. This residue rapidly gums up the area where bullet meets bolt and firing pin. (This area is called the firing chamber.) This problem calls for either frequent lubrication to loosen the deposits or a tolerance for the occasional jam. An old neighbour of mine was fortunate enough to not have his M-16 jam when he found himself three feet from a Viet Cong in the jungles of Viet Nam. In that case, the M-16 beat the Kalashnikov.

        Another M-16 design flaw is the weak recoil spring that pushes the bolt back into place to chamber the next round after one is fired. This spring and the earlier-mentioned fouling problem caused the addition of the "forward assist" for the M-16A1. Inevitably, experienced shooters will forget that forward assist at the wrong moment because no other weapon I know of has such a jury-rigged loading process as the M-16. Talk about cruft... The operator's manual for an M-16A1 or the current M-16A2 recommends the forward assist be pushed forward with the heel of the hand following each loading of a fresh magazine's first round. The M-16's predecessors; M-14, M-1 Garand, M1903 Springfield, the Krag- Jorgensen and "Trapdoor Springfields" had no need for such a procedure to be followed in the middle of a firefight.

        The Kalashnikov designs use a metal rod to collect the gas from a bullet's detonation to push the bolt back. This small but significant difference from the M-16 means the vast majority of the gunpowder residue never reaches the firing chamber of an AK. This is a huge help in not gumming up a Kalashnikov when it is being used. Another tremendous advantage of the Kalashnikovs on campaign is the small number of parts they have. Having field stripped AK's and M-16's many, many times, an M-16 has about three times as many parts. These parts are typically much smaller and more prone to breakage on the lighter M-16. Some of those parts are not "idiot proofed" either. When it's 3 am and you are running on six hours sleep in the last three nights, the last thing you need is to be sure to put some cotter pin in only from the right as the weapon won't fire if that pin was inserted from the lef

  • by satanicat ( 239025 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:15AM (#6121847)
    It does sound like a video game.

    I wonder if the "network" keeps track of Frags?
    • What military weapon has not yet been described as a "video game" by the press? I'm getting kind of tired of this.
      • by Saint Stephen ( 19450 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:56AM (#6121977) Homepage Journal
        The army very much thinks that playing video games makes good soldiers -- even way back in the 80s, playing Space Invaders and Asteroids trained a whole generation of F14 pilots how to use a joystick, AWACS & nuke sub operators how to read their screens -- but not the usual grunt with a rifle. But Quake does that now.

        What I'm trying to say is, the military is very upfront about how video games and military are pretty damn similar.
        • Re:like a video game (Score:5, Interesting)

          by mnemonic_ ( 164550 ) <jamec.umich@edu> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:34AM (#6122078) Homepage Journal
          I can't see how using an arcade joystick with big blastic ball on the top would be helpful in any way in the operation of the joystick of the F-14's HOTAS. Moving an arcade joystick teaches as much about a flying an aircraft with its joystick about as much as moving the stick shift in your car. It'll teach you how change direction, but not what the castle button on the top of the F-14's stick does when pushed in the N direction, or even the fact that pushing the stick forward makes the aircraft pitch down and side motion controls roll.

          As for the connection between AWACS and sonar operators learning how to read their screen by arcade games, I'd say that you're vastly underestimating the complexity of said military applications. Since when do arcade games use the same symbology, labeling conventions and settings as radars? How could staring at a bunch of pixelated space ships help in reading a waterfall display on a sub?

          The Quake thing is kind of true- a modified version of Doom was used for reaction training, and now a system based off Operation Flashpoint is in development. Based off of it, but still heavily modified.

          Might I ask whether you have any references for your other claims?

          The only games I've found to be similar to military activities are the ones that actually try to portray it realistically. Even with those there are significant sacrifices made for gameplay or development reasons.
          • Well that's why the studies were done by scientists and not idiots spouting off on /.

            btw....If you are completely without a clue, said studies proved that heavy gamers have increased spatial reasoning abilities. I.e. while one person can only track so many moving objects at one time, the gamer can track *up to* 50% more. This is good for both jet pilots & RADAR operators.

            As for references, it was just in the news (and I believe Nature) last week, Google's your friend.

            Jaysyn
    • America's Army does! (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Redking ( 89329 ) <stevenw@@@redking...com> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:47AM (#6122136) Homepage Journal
      America's Army [americasarmy.com] home page.
  • Good... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anubis333 ( 103791 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:15AM (#6121850) Homepage
    Maybe now we won't be firing at ourselves the majority of the time. ... unmanned drones and vehicles will be?

    CE
  • by pieterh ( 196118 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:16AM (#6121852) Homepage
    "But sarge, I don't really think shooting those civilians is such a good ide.. BLAMAWAP!!!!"


    Sarge: "Dang, that remote works well."

  • by koh ( 124962 )
    They may finally be able to avoid too many civilian casualties and "friendly fire", wouldn't they ?

    • by Fembot ( 442827 )
      Friendly fire maybe, civilans no... I doubt that "Enemy combatants" are going to willingly do ANYTHING which would make the easily noticeable to a compter, infact this sort of thing is more likely to make them fight in civilian clothes...

      And did anyone else notice the picutre looked like somthing out of tiberian sun?
    • They may finally be able to avoid too many civilian casualties and friendly fire

      Maybe, this would be great for asymetric warfare. You just need one smart kid to break into the system and you simultaniously give all the enemy troops a lethal dose of amphetamines....

      Or, if not, just send all the American troops into attacks on each other.

      You can already do that though, communication is already very bad. A lot of the nuclear and intelligence stuff is on private isolated networks, but a bunch of stuff is go
  • by brocheck ( 59415 ) <brocheck@satlu g . o rg> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:17AM (#6121856) Homepage
    I seem to recall a while back about the Urban Warrior System and all that nonsense that it was supposed to do and how every soldier would be using it by the new millenium. Frankly I don't expect something like this to be adopted for a long time. It adds another point of failure (`Fuck! My clothes have crashed!') requires maintenance, and replenishable energy of some sort ('Everyone, remember to recharge your helmets before the battle'.) Its redicilous, supposedly all soldiers will be networked and you will know the location of every soldier, and whether he is hurt, etc etc. We can do that now, slightly more laboriously (radios) perhaps but I think it gets the job done pretty well.

    This seems to be just your average pork barrel gee whiz military contracting.

    • If I was a soldier, with the current state of technology, I wouldn't want any sort of automatic tourniquet built into my clothes. I'd rather bleed and wait for the medic.

    • I think a lot of this stuff is not really intended for the benefit of the soldier, its for their commanders. The trend is towards fewer more sohisticated soldiers which their commanders can micromanage on the battle field with a lot of this technology to utilise resources as fully as possible.
    • Ground troops are all trained these days in hand-to-hand combat. Technology is never meant to replace abilities as basic as that. Soldiers are expected to be able to work in a battlefield should their equipment fail. Should technology like this fail in a battlefield, that isn't going to render a soldier useless. Radios also use power that needs to be replenished from time to time and can also quite easily break. Why would this be any different?

      The military is smarter than making a soldier solely relia
    • Train the soldiers (Score:3, Insightful)

      by GT_Alias ( 551463 )
      The idea of "point of failure" is pretty scary, particularly given some of the issues the military already has had with some of it's standard issue gear. One would hope that a very prominent part of training would involve teaching the soldier to function without any computer-assistance--or possibly a worse case would be a malfunctioning computer (tourniquets tightening without injury, etc.).

      At first the military would teach soldiers to be soldiers, and the gear would be supplementary, but it would most l

  • No substitute... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:17AM (#6121857)
    Definitely too many things to go wrong! GPS and heartbeat maybe, so they know where to collect the bodies?? But relying on all that electronics makes grunts too vulnerable to EMP. There's no substitute for a reliable weapon in the hands of a well trained soldier.
    • by NewbieProgrammerMan ( 558327 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @06:57AM (#6122405)

      EMP was the first thing that came to mind when I saw the article. If you're fighting an enemy that has no compunction about using nukes, then they can make at least some of this fancy hardware useless. But then again, nuclear weapons tend to make a lot of things useless by physically destroying them. (Just to save someone the trouble of correcting me, I know EMP has a greater area of effect than the radiation and shock wave, and I know there are non-nuclear means of generating an EMP capable of disabling electronic hardware.)

      EMP aside, the not-so-reliable weapons systems of today will pave the way for reliable versions in the future. History is full of examples where newfangled technology was introduced to the battlefield, and probably got a lot of people killed, but the lessons learned from it eventually resulted in reliable weapons or defenses that provided an advantage. That's just the way things seem to work.

  • by jabbadabbadoo ( 599681 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:18AM (#6121863)
    ...Dolph Lundgren and Claude Van Damme.
  • As people wire up more and more. Especially the basic electronics of communication: there is really no excuse anymore for putting these into dangling breakable boxes when they can be easily moulded into belts. Think of "smart armour" more than "smart clothes". Backpacks that are thin and protective and also wired. Helmets that provide enhanced vision and sound as well as safety. Shoes that incorporate tracking devices. Shoulder packs that hold all the latest MP3s. It's inevitable.
  • News Flash (Score:2, Funny)

    by farnsaw ( 252018 )
    IPv6, once known as "Toaster Net", has officially been renamed "Bullet Net". Every Bullet will have it's own IPv6 address, built in webcam, Fly by Wireless, and will automatically check to see if there is any beverage left in the coffee pot / coke machine.
  • by bushboy ( 112290 ) <lttc@lefthandedmonkeys.org> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:27AM (#6121900) Homepage
    Woefully under equipped tatty soldiers in 3rd world countries with 40 year old weaponary in 2011 ?
    • Yes (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Redking ( 89329 ) <stevenw@@@redking...com> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:42AM (#6122114) Homepage Journal
      I think you're trolling but I'll respond. A bullet is a bullet is a bullet. In 2011, 40 year old weaponry will be an M-16 / M-60 / AK-47 / AK-74. Last time I check those weapons fire projectiles that will kill a human being. I'm pretty sure the same results will happen 8 years from now too.

      The point is not to worry about future opponents, the point is to be modular, to quick deploy and to be tactical - all at the same time. Send soldiers to police a public demonstration in NYC, equip them with body armor, gas mask and non-lethal projecticles. Send soldiers to police Baghdad, same equipment as above but include lethal projecticles, GPS with maps and translation software.
      • Re:Yes (Score:5, Insightful)

        by aerojad ( 594561 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @06:28AM (#6122290) Homepage Journal
        If in 2011 the military is sent in to police public demonstrations then that's not the country I feel like living in. You can have it.
      • Re:Yes (Score:5, Informative)

        by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @07:50AM (#6122710)
        Send soldiers to police a public demonstration in NYC, equip them with body armor, gas mask and non-lethal projecticles.

        No, you don't send soldiers to a public demonstration in NYC.
        You send the police, and maybe the National Guard in really, really extreme cases.

        Posse Comitatus [uscg.mil] prohibits the US military from performing general police functions within the borders of the US.
        There are some things they can do, but mostly just assistance and transport.
  • america is scary (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kop ( 122772 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:28AM (#6121903)
    It freaks me out a little bit, why should a country that is allready so powerful still invest so heavyly in arms. who needs these arms? what for? There is nobody strong enough to challenge the US and nobody will be in the foreseeable future.
    As a non american i feel threatened.
    Am i to be 'liberated' next?
    • Remember the romans (Score:4, Interesting)

      by girino ( 669437 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @06:18AM (#6122247)
      The last (almost) global empire, the Roman one, did think the same thing. They thought their legions were unbeatable by anyone in the world, so they just didn't care about improving it, and the number of logionaires was at an all time law by the end of the 5th century. They were still the greatest army in the known world, and unbeatable by any other army.

      Then in the winter of around 495 the legions of the Rhine and Danube fronteers just saw something strange. Hundreds of thousands of people were camping in the borders of the rivers. But not Soldiers. Not young and strong man. But Old men and women and children...

      As soon as the rivers got frozen by the lower winter temperatures, they just crossed it. Thousands of people, unarmed, weak, starving. And the legions could do nothing, even with better equipment and better training and all the money Rome spent with them. There were simply not enough of them to stop thousands of "civilians" to invade the empire.

      I guess the US are just not willing to incur in the same mistakes as the romans did.
    • by defishguy ( 649645 )
      This isn't going to be popular. At the end of WW1 with the Treaty of Versailles Germany was soundly placed in the position of a 3rd world country. Inflation rocketed to over 1000%, and the economic system in Germany collapsed under the weight of an impoverished population. At this time the United States (feeling quite secure in the victory it helped achieve) entered a new age of prosperity... during the 1920s the US economy experienced enormous gains and the US population was much wealthier as a result.
    • Why? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by ratamacue ( 593855 )
      It's simple, but nobody wants to believe it: War is the health of the state. War is the single most effective way to increase the power and scope of government. History has proven it time and time again. The government which can successfully make a business out of war is the government which enjoys nearly unlimited power over its people.

      We need to realize that government is a business. Like any business, government's objective is to serve its own interests: to profit. The main difference between government
  • So... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Dark Lord Seth ( 584963 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:30AM (#6121907) Journal

    US forces are starting to look like Imperial Storm Troopers? Well, they already aim pretty lousy... That was a start, this is just the finishing touch I guess.

    • The force.. (Score:3, Funny)

      by leuk_he ( 194174 )
      Finally we figure out how darth vader chokes one of the commanders.

      "donÂt underestimate the powers of the force"

      While pressing the neck tourniquette of one of the commanders with his remote.
  • by skookum ( 598945 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:31AM (#6121914)
    I seem to remember seeing this hashed over various times in the past. It sounds great and all, but when you give all this crazy crap to a marine and ask him what he thinks, he says "This is 27 pounds I *don't* need." (Well, he may not say that if his CO is around, but that's what he's thinking.)

    Technology is great and all, but until they can pack it all down to a few ounces, I really don't see it taking off. Every soldier knows how much burden something like just an extra pound adds to a pack. It can really make a difference. In the end it seems to always come down to the battery. They can shrink LCD screens, keyboards, earpieces, whatever. But to have a useful lifetime they still need a heavy battery pack and I think that's what's really holding this back.

    The military is all about "total information access" or whatever they call it. But in fact, sheer information alone is useless. I was at Quantico a few years ago presenting a research project and during a presentation, the director of this program emphasized that current technology gives them boatloads of data, the rub is in making sense of it and presenting in a useful way -- both to the soldier and to the people at base camp (or whatever.) So just strapping a GPS module, encrypted digital radio, digicam, etc. on a soldier's back isn't neccessarily useful for anyone involved. Somehow you've got to figure out how to make it all useful.

    • I read recently that the Army did a study which concluded that the maximum weight that soldier should be sent into combat carrying was (I think) 40 lbs. Of course, this figure is already routine exceeded. But without claiming any expertise in this area, I too have real doubts about whether the value the average soldier will get from this hardware justifies the weight. Plus, if soldiers are constantly transmitting their locations and heartbeat rate, etc., then doesn't this open up the possibility that th
  • hack attack! (Score:2, Insightful)

    I think ill reconsider my position on that korean hacking school now.
    Imagine half the US army's uniforms activating their automated tourniqets at once, whilst it would no doubt be hilarious to watch it probably wouldn't do them much good ;)

  • ...And yet.... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SoupIsGoodFood_42 ( 521389 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:35AM (#6121922)
    ...None of this is going to do much against terrorist attacks.
  • whoa. (Score:2, Funny)

    The most high-tech component will be the helmet, with tiny, built-in cameras to spot enemies lurking in the dark or concealed by bushes. The cameras' images will appear on semitransparent screens attached to their helmets.

    Sweet! Wall hacks for US soldiers. What else will we learn from counterstrike and quake 3 kids?
  • by t0qer ( 230538 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:36AM (#6121925) Homepage Journal
    Then comes a uniform with built-in tourniquets that one day might be tightened and loosened remotely.

    Bored Soldier: Base I'm bleeding bad, I need my "arm" tightened.

    Base: Our sensors show that isn't your arm.
  • by magwm ( 466805 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:38AM (#6121930) Homepage Journal
    Why is there no SEP(Somebody Elses Problem)-field included in this nice suit?

    ouch - this is really bad for the eyes.. Zaphod
  • Let's play CounterStrike - Reality mode.
  • Man, I'd love to be the one to hack that network.
  • by Lio ( 102872 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @04:59AM (#6121985)
    But still, they all died. Except for Ripley of course ;-)
  • Propaganda? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by AEton ( 654737 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:10AM (#6122009)

    I've been seeing a _lot_ of articles and "special features" lately about The Weapon and The Soldier of The Future. I can't help but be reminded of the pro-army propaganda in Starship Troopers (the antiwar movie, not the conservative novel). The Future Soldier that CNN is featuring somehow reminds me of a wimped-down version of Heinlein's powered armor suits.

    There have been many instances of media covering the weapons of the future (I submitted a story on future robots a couple of weeks ago); what I'm worried about is why that focus is there. Are we getting ready for a long series of wars, ones that we expect to last until at least 2011, when these super-wired Counterstrike uniforms will come into service? That's kind of scary.

    (sorry for the blatant US-centrism)

  • As mentioned in "Encounter at Farpoint". If the uniforms can monitor health and apply tourniqets, it is only a small step to being able to administer pain relief medication and then go even further and supply a surge of adrenalin immediately prior to battle, followed by a sedative once fighting has ceased.

    What's your rank and unit soldier?
    Corporal, 1055 Berserker Division Sir.
    ============
  • Skins (Score:3, Funny)

    by Cackmobile ( 182667 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:24AM (#6122035) Journal
    DO you think it would allow the soldier to put their own skins on the enemy. Make them look like they are wearing a purple pokka dot bikini or something...

    but seriously how about not putting the money into armies and not having wars.
    • Re:Skins (Score:4, Insightful)

      by thebigmacd ( 545973 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @08:25AM (#6122997)
      Lets not put money into the military and watch as we get run over by warring nations.
    • Re:Skins (Score:3, Insightful)


      but seriously how about not putting the money into armies and not having wars.
      Sure, and how about not putting money into police departments and not having crime? Sound real logical, doesn't it?
      Perhaps we could put up several large signs that read "Shhhh! Do Not Disturb." along our borders. I'm sure the rest of the world would respect our wishes.
  • by Markee ( 72201 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:34AM (#6122077)

    Welcome to two new high level members of the Army:

    General Protection Fault

    and

    Major Error!

    And good luck to their subordinates.
  • by echucker ( 570962 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @05:37AM (#6122087) Homepage
    Our latest operations in Afghanistan displayed one startling weakness for a uniform like this - not enough satellites. Unless the Scorpion program launches a ton of orbiting equipment in support of the program, I don't see it going very far.
  • Power Source (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bugmaster ( 227959 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @08:08AM (#6122860) Homepage
    All this sounds great, but where will the gear draw its power from ? At 50lbs, it doesn't seem like the standard lead-acid batteries are an option.

    In fact, power storage is really what is hampering any major advances into the portable, semi-autonomous electronics. Wireless phones, laptops, robotic flies, cybersoldiers, etc. -- we need some sort of a major breaktrhough in power storage until we can produce actual designs as opposed to mockups that you need to plug into the wall socket.

  • Great idea, but... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by BoneFlower ( 107640 ) <.moc.liamg. .ta. .ecurbehteinna.> on Thursday June 05, 2003 @09:44AM (#6123742) Journal
    Speaking for the Marine Corps... Shit breaks. A lot. A common joke in the Corps is if you put a couple marines, naked, in an empty room with three steel balls, one ball will be eaten, another broken, and the third lost. STuff like this... bad news.

    Give these systems to Marines at CAX, and give them an order to see how easy it is to break. I guarantee you the failure rate will be astronomical. Don't field it to regular forces until the Marine Corps cannot break it any more regularly than they can the current gear, AND don't field it until the weight is brought down.

    The article mentioned lower weight... Quite a bit of a combat load is things like tents, shovels, extra uniforms, socks, another pair of boots, food, water, how does this system propose to deal with that? Especially with the requirement to carry spare batteries. What I read of the article, the equipment this stuff replaces is not any heavier- the gear involved in this is a fraction of a real combat load. IT might be significantly lighter for a heavily armed sentry, but for an infantryman in the field, any gain would be marginal, and not worth the greater potential for failure. The OICW is about twice the weight of an M-16... Even if the overall system weight is less, thats still double the weight on the arms in combat. Anyone who has used the M-16 in rifle PT knows how quickly even a lightweight rifle can become extremely heavy.

    Military forces do best when they stick to simple gear that gets the job done. Aviation and naval forces may be able to get away with more complexity by the nature of their jobs, but the basic infantryman doesn't have time to worry about all that crap. Field simple to use, lightweight, and reliable gear and go out and raise hell. Thats how the infantry wins.
  • by steppin_razor_LA ( 236684 ) on Thursday June 05, 2003 @11:29AM (#6124755) Journal
    When I was a grad student, I did some work for an Army project on building some of the biosensors that would be included in future uniforms. The organization I did the research for was working on biosensors to measure heartbeat (I did some work on the microcode) and was attempting to build a hypothermia/shiver detector (that I was doing most of my work on).

    We were experimenting with placing small devices that measure acceleration in various places and attempting to determine from a frequency-time analysis (i.e. imagine a frequency spectrum vs time) using neural networks and wavelet analysis to try and differentiate between the acceleration profiles caused by walking, running, moving, etc vs shivering....

    The alternative was to stick a small thermometer up the soldier's "rear" which I don't think anyone wanted :)

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