Montreal Gazette

Military eyes lasers on armoured vehicles to blast IEDS

-

OTTAWA — It may sound like something out of a futuristic movie, but the military is looking at mounting high-powered lasers on armoured vehicles to help protect troops from roadside bombs.

The Canadian Forces wants to put lasers on its fleet of Cougar armoured vehicles so soldiers can blast apart improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, from a safe distance.

“(High-energy laser) is considered as one of the most promising technologi­es to provide the Can- adian Army with an unpreceden­ted performanc­e edge,” says a contract notice posted Friday.

Improvised explosive devices evolved into the deadliest threat faced by soldiers over the course of Canada’s 10-year combat mission in Afghanista­n. Of the 158 Canadian soldiers killed, 93 died in IED attacks, according to the independen­t monitoring website icasualtie­s.org.

When the military added more armour to vehicles so they could better withstand the blasts, the insurgents responded by building even bigger, deadlier bombs, often by stacking explosives on top of each other.

Lasers could be the key to defeating such threats, the military contract notice suggests. The technology has come a long way in recent years, it says, and lasers are now close to being used in the field.

“This rapid evolution is due to recent developmen­ts in the fibre laser technology which led to an abrupt availabili­ty of low cost and robust core laser systems readily available for defence applicatio­ns,” the notice says.

No one from the Canadian Forces was readily available to comment.

 ?? TASK FORCE AFGHANISTA­N ?? The Canadian Forces wants to use lasers on select vehicles to blast apart deadly roadside bombs from a safe distance.
TASK FORCE AFGHANISTA­N The Canadian Forces wants to use lasers on select vehicles to blast apart deadly roadside bombs from a safe distance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada