Daily Tribune (Philippines)

SWARMING ‘GHOST’ SHIPS DEADLY

- FTM DGIWIRE

In May 2014, the naval chief of Iran’s powerful Revolution­ary Guard voiced a warning to the United States: Iran would target American aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf if a war between the two countries ever broke out.

Critics might scoff, but Iran’s saber-rattling elicits uncomforta­ble memories of the USS Cole bombing in October 2000, in which 17 US sailors were killed and 39 injured in an al-Qaeda attack in a Yemeni port.

In that attack, a small craft approached the destroyer, and an explosion occurred afterward, creating a 40-by-60-foot gash in the ship’s side.

To guard against such attacks, the US Navy and the Office of Naval Research are developing a high-tech solution: unmanned surface vehicles (USV) autonomous swarm technology.

In theory, acting in tandem as a “swarm” of robot boats, a group of USV using this technology could approach an enemy vessel like sharks circling their prey, without any humans on board. Each robot boat would transmit radar views to the others, so the group would share the same situationa­l awareness.

The Navy claims USV technology can be scaled up to involve as many as 30 boats at a time, but there are many technical hurdles to be overcome due to the ever-changing sea surface.

Several naval experts have judged that what is needed to ensure protection against swarms of enemy boats is a more stable marine platform.

Based in Portsmouth, NH, Juliet Marine Systems is aiming to provide just this sort of stable platform via its product called GHOST. Comparable to an attack helicopter on water, GHOST is a high-speed attack craft designed to protect vital waterways.

Agroup of USV could approach an enemy vessel like sharks circling their prey, without any humans on board.

Using supercavit­ation technology and high-performanc­e jet engines, GHOST achieves high speed and hull friction reduction. Its large fuel capacity allows for long-term missions, and its heavy weapons payload capacity ensures it can be stocked with weapons.

What makes GHOST unique is its combinatio­n of speed, maneuverab­ility and endurance, all essential to engaging potential enemy swarms before they reach their attack range.

Gregory E. Sancoff, President and CEO of Juliet Marine Systems, says, “We believe GHOST can potentiall­y offer the Navy exactly the type of stability on the water that its USV technology needs to operate effectivel­y. As a stable platform in all types of water conditions, GHOST might allow us to wage a proper defense against enemy swarms.”

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 ?? PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF JULIET MARINE SYSTEMS ?? GHOST prototype in action.
PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF JULIET MARINE SYSTEMS GHOST prototype in action.

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