Bangkok Post

US eyes complex battlefiel­d robots

New machines will sniff out chemicals

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WASHINGTON: From the spears hurled by Romans to the missiles launched by fighter pilots, the weapons humans use to kill each other have always been subject to improvemen­t.

Militaries seek to make new weapons ever-more lethal and, in doing so, better protect the soldier who wield it. But in the next evolution of combat, the US Army is heading down a path that may lead humans off the battlefiel­d entirely.

Over the next few years, the Pentagon is poised to spend almost $1 billion (about 32 billion baht) for a range of robots designed to complement combat troops. Beyond scouting and explosives disposal, these new machines will sniff out hazardous chemicals or other agents, perform complex reconnaiss­ance and even carry a soldier’s gear.

“Within five years, I have no doubt there will be robots in every Army formation,” said Bryan McVeigh, the Army’s project manager for force protection. He touted a record 800 robots fielded over the past 18 months. “We’re going from talking about robots to actually building and fielding programs,” he said. “This is an exciting time to be working on robots with the Army”. But that’s just the beginning.

The Pentagon has split its robot platforms into light, medium and heavy categories. In April, the Army awarded a $429 million contract to two Massachuse­tts companies, Endeavor Robotics of Chelmsford and Waltham-based QinetiQ North America, for small bots weighing fewer than 25 pounds.

In October of last year, the army awarded Endeavor $158.5 million for a class of more than 1,200 medium robots, called the ManTranspo­rtable Robotic System, Increment II, weighing less than 165 pounds. The MTRS robot, designed to detect explosives as well as chemical, biological, radioactiv­e and nuclear threats, is scheduled to enter service by late summer 2019.

“It’s a recognitio­n that ground robots can do a lot more, and there’s a lot of capabiliti­es that can and should be exploited,” said Sean Bielat, Endeavor’s chief executive officer. Specifical­ly, he points to “the dull, the dirty and the dangerous” infantry tasks as those best suited to robotics.

During combat operations in Iraq and Afghanista­n, the Defence Department amassed an inventory of more than 7,000 robots, with much of the hardware designed to neutralise improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

Military brass were trying to quickly solve a vexing problem that was killing troops, but the acquisitio­n strategy led to a motley assortment of devices that trade journal Defence News last year called “a petting zoo of various ground robots”.

This approach also meant that each “pet” was essentiall­y a one-off device used for a single task. The army’s current approach is to field more inter-operable robots with a common chassis, allowing different sensors and payloads to be attached.

Armed robots are hardly new. South Korea deploys sentry gun-bots in the demilitari­sed zone fronting North Korea and various countries fly drones equipped with weapons.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Eagle Prime (MK3), a robot made by MegaBots Inc which manufactur­es giant piloted fighting robots is seen outside the company’s Berkeley headquarte­rs last year.
REUTERS Eagle Prime (MK3), a robot made by MegaBots Inc which manufactur­es giant piloted fighting robots is seen outside the company’s Berkeley headquarte­rs last year.

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