Forget The Terminator For Future Army AI: LTG Wesley

Forget The Terminator For Future Army AI: LTG Wesley
Forget The Terminator For Future Army AI: LTG Wesley

DETROIT: The Artificial Intelligence the military needs most is not some kind of killer robot, the Army’s three-star senior futurist told me today. The Army really needs AI to make sense of lots of data, fast, so commanders and quartermasters can send the right forces with the right supplies to the right place on the…

Army Helicopters: Piecemeal Modernization For Future War

Army Helicopters: Piecemeal Modernization For Future War
Army Helicopters: Piecemeal Modernization For Future War

ARLINGTON: US Army helicopters can penetrate Russian-style anti-aircraft defenses, service leaders say, but many aircrew are likely to die trying without new technologies, upgrades that the Army can only afford for part of the force. That mismatch between military demand and budgetary supply may force an end to 14 years organizing and modernizing all Combat…

The Long Road To Army’s Next-Gen Combat Vehicle

The Long Road To Army’s Next-Gen Combat Vehicle
The Long Road To Army’s Next-Gen Combat Vehicle

  ARLINGTON: Two years after the demoralizing cancellation of the Ground Combat Vehicle, the Army is rallying round a new vision for its future armored force. That vision has come into sharper focus just in the last few months, armor leaders said Tuesday. Facing a rising Russia with an aging American arsenal, the Army will…

Army Gets Serious About Next Tank: Next Generation Combat Vehicle

Army Gets Serious About Next Tank: Next Generation Combat Vehicle
Army Gets Serious About Next Tank: Next Generation Combat Vehicle

ARLINGTON: The US Army wants its Next Generation Combat Vehicle to serve as pack master to a swarm of crawling and flying robots. It wants lighter weapons with heavier firepower, able to aim almost straight up to shoot drones out of the sky and hit rooftop snipers. It wants miniaturized missile defenses to shoot down incoming anti-tank…

Army Seeks Early Industry Input On Mobile Protected Firepower

Army Seeks Early Industry Input On Mobile Protected Firepower
Army Seeks Early Industry Input On Mobile Protected Firepower

After two decades of canceled combat vehicles, the Mobile Protected Firepower program is a crucial test for the Army’s new approach to acquisitions. The service is seeking off-the-shelf technology instead of gambling on breakthroughs. It’s bringing together industry, combat officers, and acquisition professionals together at an earlier stage than ever before. And it intends to rein…

Big Guns For Light Infantry: Mobile Protected Firepower

Big Guns For Light Infantry: Mobile Protected Firepower
Big Guns For Light Infantry: Mobile Protected Firepower

This week at Fort Benning, Ga., the Army told some 200 industry representatives from 59 companies what it wants in its next war machine, the Mobile Protected Firepower vehicle (MPF). The MPF must be light and nimble enough to accompany foot troops where the massive M1 Abrams cannot go: into dense jungle and narrow streets, up mountains and…