FORT BELVOIR, Va. (Army News Service, Nov. 10, 2009) -- A Soldier
successfully shoulder-fired a "smart" High Explosive Airburst, or HEAB,
round for the first time Aug. 11 from the XM-25 weapon system at
Aberdeen Test Center, Md.
The Army plans on purchasing more than 12,500 XM-25 systems starting in
2012, which will be enough to put one in each Infantry squad and
Special Forces team, according to officials at Program Executive
Office-Soldier.
At first glance, the XM-25 looks like something out of a Sci-Fi movie.
It features an array of sights, sensors and lasers housed in a Target
Acquisition Fire Control unit on top, an oversized magazine behind the
trigger mechanism, and a short, ominous barrel wrapped by a recoil
dampening sleeve.
Unlike a Hollywood prop, however, this weapon is very real and designed
to accurately deliver an explosive round that neutralizes targets at
distances of up to 700 meters - well past the range of the rifles and
carbines that most Soldiers carry today.
"What makes this weapon system truly revolutionary is the ability to
target the enemy, pass on this information to the sensors and
microchips of its 25mm HEAB round, and have that round detonate over
the target," explained Maj. Shawn Murray, a Soldier Weapons assistant
product manager in PEO Soldier, the organization responsible for
developing the XM-25.
"When the HEAB round explodes, the target is peppered with
fragmentation," Murray said. "Our studies indicate that the XM-25 with
HEAB is 300 percent more effective at incapacitating the enemy than
current weapons at the squad level."
Because of the XM-25's unique TAFC and HEAB round, Soldiers will be
able to engage enemy forces located in the open and "in defilade"
-behind cover, such as walls, rocks, trenches, or inside buildings. The
semi-automatic weapon's magazine holds four 25mm rounds and can be
employed at night or during inclement weather thanks to the XM25's
built-in thermal sight.
After only five minutes of instruction at the Aberdeen Test Center,
Sgt. Logan E. Diveley from the 180th Infantry Regiment was able to put
his first HEAB round through a building's window and take out an enemy
mannequin at 200 meters.
When asked what he thought of the weapon, Diveley responded, "I've been
in over nine contacts with the enemy during my two tours in Iraq. Their
ambushes were usually initiated with an IED and followed up with small
arms fire from behind walls and buildings, places where it was hard for
us to get at them. The XM-25 would have taken care of things and made
our jobs much easier."
Once downrange and in the building where the defeated enemy mannequin
lay, Maj. Murray noted the limited collateral damage associated with
the XM-25.
"Because of its pinpoint accuracy and relatively small warheads, the
XM25 can neutralize an enemy without the need to destroy a whole
building," Murray said. "For our counter-insurgency operations to be
successful, it is important to keep collateral damage to a minimum and
to protect the civilian population. I think the XM-25 will prove itself
many times over in Afghanistan," Murray said.
The XM-25 is being developed by PEO Soldier, the Army acquisition
organization responsible for nearly every piece of equipment worn or
carried by Soldiers. This includes items ranging from socks, to
weapons, to advanced sensor and communication devices. PEO Soldier
bases much of its work on the feedback from individual Soldiers,
developing or procuring solutions to meet those needs.
The development of the XM-25 is one such a program, designed to provide
Soldiers a solution for dealing with enemies in the open and behind
cover that is more precise, quicker to employ, and more cost effective
than mortar, artillery, or airstrikes.
A Battlefield Scenario for the XM-25
An American patrol nears a walled, Afghan village when an enemy
combatant looks over the wall and fires his AK-47 rifle at the oncoming
U.S. Soldiers. The Americans return fire with their rifles and
maneuver, but find it difficult to neutralize the enemy rifleman who
repeatedly exposes himself for only a second, shoots, then ducks behind
the thick wall. At this time, the patrol leader calls for the XM-25
gunner to take action.
Immediately, the XM-25 gunner aims the laser range-finder at the top of
the wall where the enemy last ducked down. The gunner presses the laser
range finder button on the front of the XM-25's trigger guard and
records a distance to the wall of 451 meters. The distance is displayed
on the TAFC's optical lens along with an adjusted aim point, or "cross
hair," to help the soldier better aim the XM-25.
The adjusted aim point takes into account air pressure, temperature,
and the ballistics of the 25mm round for the given range of 451 meters.
The soldier then uses the increment button on the trigger guard and
adds one more meter to the firing solution since the enemy combatant is
about one meter behind the wall.
Upon pulling the trigger, the TAFC programs the HEAB round in the
chamber of the weapon, telling the round to explode at 452 meters from
launch point. The HEAB round departs the rifled barrel, arms at 30
meters, clears the top of the wall at 451 meters and explodes its two
warheads at 452 meters, right above the enemy. The entire firing
sequence takes the gunner less than five seconds to aim and fire and
another 2.5 seconds for the round to fly and explode over the target,
thereby clearing the way for the patrol to resume its mission.
(Lt. Col. Christopher Lehner writes for PEO Soldier - Soldier Weapons
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