WASHINGTON (Army News Service, April 11, 2008) - The future of Army
combat technology was demonstrated on Capitol Hill Thursday, exhibiting
several systems that enable Soldiers to fight better, faster and most
importantly, safer.
The Future Combat Systems Brigade Combat Team presented several static
displays of future Army technology and provided a live demonstration of
the Land Warrior system and key corresponding equipment: Urban
Unattended Ground Sensors, Small Unmanned Ground Vehicles and Class I
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles.
The demonstration highlighted the ability of LW to provide more
survivability to the Soldier and its capability to be rapidly deployed,
Col. Patrick L. Fetterman explained. As part of FCS overall, the
demonstration explained how new systems would diminish the gaps in
current combat technology through providing situational awareness
previously unachieved.
Land Warrior is a modular fighting system using a state-of-the-art
computer, communications and global positioning technologies to
digitally link Soldiers on the battlefield. The system is carried like
a backpack and has a helmet mounted display used to see and send text
messages, maps, and imagery.
Command Sgt. Maj. Phil Pich, the primary presenter for the LW
demonstration, said the four distinct advantages of LW were situational
awareness, voice and text messaging capability, maps and imagery, and
the ability to change graphics on the move.
Pich indicated colored map icons on a television screen representing a
Soldier's helmet mounted display. These icons are used to pinpoint
enemy location or indicate where friendly Soldiers and equipment are
positioned in real time. Information on the positions of friend and
enemy alike help the Soldier to perform the mission better, faster and
with minimal risk to the individual.
"(LW) gives us situational awareness that the enemy does not have, so
we can be much faster than the enemy and capture or kill him," Pich
said.
"This system has made us so fast on the battlefield that my units --
attached to other organizations that are out there -- they have to tell
us to stop and slow down."
The use of a Class I UAV enables the Soldier to scout areas such as
rooftops or to see inside windows of suspicious cars without putting
individuals in danger. U-UGS are used for situational awareness like
UAVs, as well as perimeter defense, surveillance and target
acquisition. SUGVs, or iRobots, are capable of military operations in
urban terrain, sewers, tunnels and caves.
All of these mechanical devices are linked with LW, providing the Soldier a live feed of combat information.
"We always know where we're at, we always know where we are going,"
Sgt. Curtis Pitman said. Pitman is a combat veteran who used LW on the
battlefield and praises the system as a high-value asset.
"As far as the fog of war goes, this is the most important tool we
have," said Staff Sgt. James Young, also a combat veteran experienced
with the LW system.
LW is durable, extremely easy to use and can be learned in less than 24 hours.
"These guys over here, talking about Land Warrior, are guys who have
worn it for 14 months in combat. They are saying, repetitively, this is
a huge value added to us. We want it, we use it, we save lives with
it," Fetterman said.
Other major technologies and equipment with displays were the
Non-Line-of-Sight Launch System, Manned Ground Vehicles,
Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon and the Multifunctional Utility/Logistics and
Equipment, or MULE vehicles.
For more information, see www.fcs.army.mil.
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2008/04/11/8449-fcs-land-warrior-value-added-to-army/
Command
Sgt. Maj. Phil Pich indicates map icons representing equipment and
target positions in the field. The map and icons appear in the
Soldier's helmet mounted display as part of the Land Warrior system and
provide situational awareness. Photo
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