Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Grant them their wish, send then to meet the virgins

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Grant them their wish, send then to meet the virgins

    Stolen from Fox News:


    U.S. Army Unveils 'Revolutionary' XM25 Rifle in Afghanistan


    Since the dawn of modern warfare, the best way to stay alive in the face of incoming fire has been to take cover behind a wall. But thanks to a game-changing "revolutionary" rifle, the U.S. Army has made that tactic dead on arrival. Now the enemy can run, but he can't hide.

    After years of development, the U.S. Army has unleashed a new weapon in Afghanistan -- the XM25 Counter Defilade Target Engagement System, a high-tech rifle that can be programmed so that its 25-mm. ammunition does not necessarily explode on impact. Instead, it can be set to detonate either in front of or behind a target, meaning it literally will go through a wall before it explodes and kills the enemy.

    It also has a range of roughly 2,300 feet -- nearly the length of eight football fields -- making it possible to fire at targets well past the range of the rifles and carbines that most soldiers carry today.

    Lt. Col. Christopher Lehner, project manager for the semi-automatic, shoulder-fired weapon system for the U.S. Army's Program Executive Office Soldier, said that the XM25's capability alone is such a "game-changer" that it'll lead to new ways of fighting on the battlefield, beginning this month in Afghanistan.

    "With this weapon system, we take away cover from [enemy targets] forever," Lehner told FoxNews.com on Wednesday. "Tactics are going to have to be rewritten. The only thing we can see [enemies] being able to do is run away."

    And that would make it much easier for U.S. troops to put them in their sights, either with that same XM25 or another direct-fire weapon.

    With this new weapon in the Army's arsenal, Lehner said, "We're much more effective, by many magnitudes, than current weapons at the squad level. We're able to shoot farther and more accurately, and our soldiers can stay behind sandbags, walls or rocks, which provides them protection from fire."

    Lehner said the first XM25s were distributed to combat units in Afghanistan this month. The 12-pound, 29-inch system, which was designed by Minnesota's Alliant Techsystems, costs up to $35,000 per unit and, while highly sophisticated, is so easy to use that soldiers become proficient within minutes.

    "That's how intuitively easy it is, even though it's high-tech," Lehner said. "All a soldier needs to know how to do is laze the target. It decimates anything within its lethal radius."

    Once the trigger is pulled and the round leaves the barrel, a computer chip inside the projectile communicates exactly how far it has traveled, allowing for precise detonation behind or ahead of any target.

    "We have found that this has really made our soldiers so much more accurate and being able to deliver this high-explosive round in about five seconds," said Lehner, taking into account the time it takes a soldier to laze, aim and fire the weapon. Once fired, Lehner said, the round will reach its target in a "second or two," meaning the entire process from aiming to direct hit lasts less than 10 seconds, compared to 10 minutes or longer for traditional mortar fire.

    A potential battlefield scenario, according to Army officials, might go something like this:

    -- A patrol encounters an enemy combatant in a walled Afghan village who fires an AK-47 intermittently from behind cover, exposing himself only for a brief second to fire.

    -- The patrol's leader calls for the XM25 gunman, who uses the weapon's laser range finder to calculate the distance to the target.

    -- He then uses an incremental button located near the trigger to add 1 meter to the round's distance, since the enemy is hiding behind a wall.

    -- The round is fired, and it explodes with a blast comparable to a hand grenade past the wall and above the enemy.

    "This is revolutionary for many reasons," Lehner said, citing increased efficiency, safety and lethality. "This is the first time we're putting smart technology in an individual weapon system for our soldiers. We feel it's very important to field this because it keeps us ahead of the technological curve of our potential enemies. We have a feeling other people will try to copy us -- this is the future."

    Lehner said the Army plans to purchase at least 12,500 XM25 systems beginning next year -- enough for one system in each infantry squad and Special Forces team.

    The military isn't overly concerned that the weapon might be captured by the enemy, because they would be unable to obtain its highly specialized ammunition, batteries and other components. Lehner said he expects other nations will try to copy its technology, but it will be very cost-prohibitive.

    "This is a game-changer," Lehner said. "The enemy has learned to get cover, for hundreds if not thousands of years.

    "Well, they can't do that anymore. We're taking that cover from them and there's only two outcomes: We're going to get you behind that cover or force you to flee. So no matter what, we gotcha."
    Let's hope he can hit a D-1 Curve ball!


    "God gave us the ability to reason, not religion" http://www.deism.com/



  • #2
    I'm sure that the liberals will now claim that we have an unfair advantage over our enemies and either will demand we give our enemies several shipments or they'll just leak the technology to China so they can start selling them them to Iran and North Korea.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Capitol Shock
      I'm sure that the liberals will now claim that we have an unfair advantage over our enemies and either will demand we give our enemies several shipments or they'll just leak the technology to China so they can start selling them them to Iran and North Korea.
      This sounds like a pretty nice addition to the typical squad weaponry. It's not going to replace the standard rifle. If it takes five seconds to aim, that is five seconds someone in the squad is going to have to come out of cover to fire it. That will take a volley of covering fire from the rifles/SAW/60 gunners to keep the enemy pinned behind his cover. A lot of plusses though. Squad can fire into a building where an enemy's location is known withought having to blow the building to bits.
      Wichita State, home of the All-Americans.

      Comment


      • #4
        If it jams due to sand, our troops will be using the AK-47

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by BenWSU
          If it jams due to sand, our troops will be using the AK-47
          Not sure where that came from...

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by SB Shock
            Originally posted by BenWSU
            If it jams due to sand, our troops will be using the AK-47
            Not sure where that came from...

            Comment


            • #7
              Hopefully it's not made by this guy:

              "Don't measure yourself by what you have accomplished, but by what you should accomplish with your ability."
              -John Wooden

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by BenWSU
                Originally posted by SB Shock
                Originally posted by BenWSU
                If it jams due to sand, our troops will be using the AK-47
                Not sure where that came from...
                http://www.rense.com/general44/fatal.htm
                Whatever the merits of the concerns about the M-4 and the M-16, on the matter of latter-day reliability, the complaints that have boomed the Web feel out of proportion to what can be documented in the field.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Capitol Shock
                  I'm sure that the liberals will now claim that we have an unfair advantage over our enemies and either will demand we give our enemies several shipments or they'll just leak the technology to China so they can start selling them them to Iran and North Korea.
                  Since you went off and made this a political discussion...

                  It's the Republicans who have the history of giving our weapons to what will become our enemies, not "the liberals." See Reagan, the CIA, Iraq, and Afghanistan.

                  I'm one of 'dem der liberals, and I'm all for wiping out anyone we deem necessary to die with whatever the most prejudicial means possible can be supplied. As one of 'dem der liberals, though, my differences lie in the "deeming to die" part rather than in the tools by which that end is accomplished.

                  Example:

                  Someone is firing at a US Soldier? Waste them. If our technology is a "cheat," the cure is for the opponent to invent a time machine and develop his own society with the wealth and knowledge to have created the same.

                  Putting, based on trumped up allegations and lies, US Soldiers in an arena where they have to make that decision? Do not like.
                  The truth will set you free. But first, it will piss you off.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by wu_shizzle
                    Hopefully it's not made by this guy:

                    lmao. I was sitting here saying "is that Sam Rockwell"

                    Why yes it is.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by wu_shizzle
                      Hopefully it's not made by this guy:

                      Good Movie.
                      The mountains are calling, and I must go.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        From Dennis Miller: after a few virgins don't you think you'd want a pro?
                        Wichita State, home of the All-Americans.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by BenWSU
                          If it jams due to sand, our troops will be using the AK-47
                          The AK works well and is reliable when precision fire is not necessary, a torso is not precision shooting...
                          “Losers Average Losers.” ― Paul Tudor Jones

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by DUShock
                            Originally posted by BenWSU
                            If it jams due to sand, our troops will be using the AK-47
                            The AK works well and is reliable when precision fire is not necessary, a torso is not precision shooting...
                            it is from 250 yards.
                            Wichita State, home of the All-Americans.

                            Comment

                            Working...
                            X