From: "Catherine Austin Fitts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


                                             SIGHTINGS




                                      New US Rifle Can
                                 Shoot Around Corners
                                                 By Ian Brodie In Washington

http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/tim/00/02/26/timfgnusa01004.html?999
                                                           2-27-00



                                    Some call it the Smart Shooter, a new
rifle for American
                                    infantry troops that is two weapons in
one, is accurate up
                                    to 1,000 yards and in effect fires
around corners. Its
                                    message to enemies is that they can run
but they can't
                                    hide.

                                    The futuristic mega-gun is causing alarm
among
                                    arms-control specialists who call it the
Darth Vader
                                    weapon and say that it will cause
enormous carnage
                                    among civilians when it inevitably falls
into the hands of
                                    terrorists.

                                    Still in the development phase, the
rifle for 2006 has just
                                    been shown off with great pride by the
Pentagon to
                                    members of Congress who will be asked to
put up the
                                    money. It will not be cheap. Each rifle
will cost as much
                                    as £7,500 pounds - 20 times the price of
the M16 that it
                                    will replace. But, as army officers like
to say, they will
                                    get a much bigger bang for their buck.
The makers,
                                    Alliant Techsystems, say that the weapon
will
                                    revolutionise ground combat much as the
machine gun.

                                    Pentagon jargon has given the new gun an
awkward title:
                                    the Objective Individual Combat Weapon.
Using one
                                    trigger, the rifle can fire a standard
5.56mm Nato bullet
                                    and a 20mm high explosive shell that
will burst in the air.
                                    It can spray shrapnel behind, above or
even from the side
                                    of enemy troops who have taken cover
behind a building.
                                    The shell can be timed to explode after
a short delay.
                                    The weapon's 1,000-yard accuracy is
twice that of other
                                    rifles, made possible by a laser system
built into the sight.
                                    This rangefinder fixes the target,
measures the distance
                                    and passes it along to a computer chip
in the shell.

                                    The gunsight has an infrared lens for
night vision. It can
                                    also have video camera with a zoom lens
that is linked to
                                    a video display attached to the
soldier's helmet, allowing
                                    him to aim accurately without exposing
himself to enemy
                                    return fire. But there are snags still
be be ironed out. Two
                                    men were injured when a shell burst in a
barrel during
                                    firing tests. The rifle weighs more than
18lb. There are
                                    questions whether its electronic innards
will be rugged
                                    enough for rain, snow and difficult
terrain.

                                    Michael Klare, a professor of peace and
world security
                                    issues and a board member of the Arms
Control
                                    Association, says that the Pentagon is
seeking this
                                    combination of firepower and automation
to compensate
                                    for the uncertain aim of GIs.

                                    He said: "Soldiers won't have to worry
about careful
                                    steady aim. They'll just look through
the viewfinder and
                                    pull the trigger."



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