http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGAGMMIGWBD.html

They loiter. They sleep. They hide. And when an enemy sticks his neck out,
they kill.
The Department of Defense is preparing new weapons that can loiter over a
battlefield or sneak into enemy territory and "sleep" until an appropriate
military target blunders into their sights.

Some weapons envisioned are mere concepts and may never be produced. Others,
like Lockheed Martin's 5-foot-long Loitering Attack Missile, are already
being tested.

The idea, developers and contractors say, is that the best way to hit an
elusive target is to hide a weapon inside enemy territory ahead of time.

In the Gulf War, U.S. forces were unable to find and strike a single Iraqi
mobile Scud missile launcher, a failure that has catalyzed a slew of new
military technology aimed at narrowing the time delay between spotting and
destroying a target.

Loitering weapons are "the next big step in combat effectiveness," said
Glenn Buchan, a RAND expert in unmanned aerial vehicles and satellites. "You
hang around an area so you can see the target before it shoots, and kill it
before it hides."

The Lockheed missile, for example, sprouts wings and fins and flies to a map
coordinate, then can wander above the area for 45 minutes, directing a
laser-radar seeker to search the ground for a target to destroy, said Steve
Altman, development manager at Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control in
Dallas.

If a tank or mobile artillery battery were detected on a hillside, the LAM
could be dispatched to search the whole hill until it found and destroyed
it, Altman said. The LAMs are fired from a rectangular launch box that can
sit on the back of an Army Humvee, Altman said.

"These missiles are at your side, almost like a sidearm," Altman said. "It's
nice to find your enemy while he's way far away from you, before he starts
shooting at you."

Lockheed flew the first prototype at Eglin in November. It plans a second
test flight this month. Lockheed hopes to deliver the missile to the Army in
time to be part of its Future Combat System, a new generation of battle
vehicles expected to go into service in 2008, Altman said.

The LAM's 45 minutes of loiter time doesn't allow it the patience of an
unmanned aerial vehicle, which can hover over a battlefield for hours,
waiting for a target. UAVs armed with air-to-ground missiles have already
killed people targeted by U.S. forces in Afghanistan and Yemen.

For the next generation of UAVs, the Pentagon wants still longer dwell time
so they can "sit above an area for a very long time, to track a small band
of terrorists or watch for an armored column," said Michele Flournoy, a
senior adviser at Center for Strategic and International Studies.

At the Army's Aviation and Missile Command in Ft. Eustis, Va., officials
have proposed a small UAV that could ferry supplies to forward troops - or
fly small bombs into enemy targets.

The Pentagon is considering whether to fund the program, called Quick
Delivery, for rapid development, according to a pamphlet from Ft. Eustis.
Pentagon spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Don Sewell declined to discuss the proposal.

Sleeping weapons under consideration by the U.S. Air Force would,
ironically, spend most of their time on the ground - as simple sensors that
can transmit electronic data.

The sensor-bombs would be dropped from airplanes onto enemy territory and
would hide until detecting a target and being commanded to destroy it. One
version under consideration wakes up, pops open and fires a missile, said
Steve Butler, engineering director at the Air Armaments Center at Eglin Air
Force Base, near Pensacola, Fla.

"If you had an area that you believed was a launch site for Scuds or other
time-critical targets, you might drop some of these things into the area,"
Butler said. "The concept of loitering is to dig a little burrow and hide
out until you're called to act."

The design requires adding a weapon and firing mechanism to ground sensors
already in use. For instance, U.S. forces already hide sensors that transmit
pictures, recordings, vibrations or metal composition of enemy vehicles.

"If you want to listen to a remote runway, to be aware of planes coming and
going, you could drop one of these sensors in the woods nearby and have it
wake up every time a plane flies in or out," said Butler. "Add a weapon to
one of them and you've got a whole new concept."

The Air Force has no program to build one yet, but "it's not that far
fetched, you could do it if you wanted to," he said.



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You have no right to be here.
And whether you can hear it or not,
the universe is laughing behind your back.


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