AUSA Winter 2008 convention held at Ft. Lauderdale in February
2008 provided the venue for the second largest land forces exhibition
held in the USA in recent months. (Defense Update reported from
AUSA 2007 Convention in October 2007). Although the winter event
addressed many of the aspects already covered last October, the
rapid pace of development and upcoming changes in the Army's and
department of Defense priorities, funding and plans brought many
exhibitors to focus on new topics.
One
of the most visible changes was the high priority that all defense
integrators and vehicle manufacturers are placing on the Joint
Light Tactical Vehicle program – a 'winner takes all'
multi-billion dollar opportunity to be grabbed by a single team
in the next decade. While the final decision on the winner design
and team is expected only by 2013, industry teams are already
in battling to win the technology demonstration and system development
phases.
(Click
here for our JLTV updated report).
While
JLTV is making progress, the military continues to spend huge
amounts on the procurement of MRAP, despite their limitations
(regarding tactical maneuverability and strategic mobility).
Another issue realized with current MRAP deployments was the
gap in the ability to recovery disabled MRAPs in theater. While
the Army has yet to publish a specific requirement for heavy
recovery assets to be able to support these beasts, both Oshkosh
and BAE Systems are preparing to submit their offers for such
vehicles, two of which were on display at AUSA Winter. (Read
Defense-Update review of the new recovery vehicles at AUSA Winter
2008)
Another hot issue is the warfighter – new wearable systems
are being introduced in growing numbers, following the trend
of miniaturization, and empowerment of the 'combat edge', as
reflected by Special Forces units and the latest 'Land warrior'
trend. At AUSA Winter we discovered several new systems such
as the Watchdog physiological monitoring system, CID, acoustic
gunshot locator, multiple radio communications controller and
more. (see
our dismounted warfighter, land warrior and soldier systems
articles)
Much
progress is being made with the Army's Future Combat Systems;
Two of the four unmanned systems included in the FCS family
of systems are being released as part of 'Spiral 1', to support
the current force. More systems, including the ground unattended
sensors will follow soon and the Non Line of Sight – Cannon
(NLOS-C) – the first of eight manned vehicle platforms
will roll out of BAE production line this year. (link to FCS
family of vehicles article) Progress was made with the lightweight
120 gun associated with another vehicle, as well as with the
mortar system, missile etc. At the network level, AUSA Winter
provided the opportunity to demonstrate the operability of the
Joint Tactical Radio System (JTRS) Network Centric waveform,
a critical element in the formation of the overarching future
FCS network and the Army's future Warfighter Information Network
– Tactical (WIN-T) networking infrastructure. One of the
most critical elements of this network will be Satcom on the
Move, an area which attracted much interest from visitors and
exhibitors alike. (FCS
networking update)
Some
of the weapons displayed at AUSA Winter highlighted the continued
trend toward measured effects enabling precision attack at extended
range. New weapons such as the P44/42 and DAGR, both developed
by Lockheed Martin are examples of the two extremes –
carrying the effect currently provided by the Hellfire missile
to much longer range (P-44/42) or to shorter range, and controlled
collateral damage, by the new DGAR guided rocket. New warheads
are also offered for the modern missiles, optimizing the weapon
to achieve the desired effects against a wide range of threats.
New sensors capable of better identifying targets from longer
ranges and in difficult conditions, are supporting the weapons
providing real-time forensic support needed for rapid targeting
and engagement through an ever short sensor-to-shooter process.
(Click
here for our 'Weapons for Scalable Response' article)
Sensors and Electro-Optical (EO) equipment received extensive
coverage at AUSA Winter. Advanced vision systems including image
intensifiers and thermal vision systems (FLIRS) are providing
the warfighter ever better performance. With the market evolving
at record pace to realize enhanced and more capable systems,
many exhibitors of EO systems underlined their generic technological
capabilities, promoting new thermal imaging modules, digital
I2 devices and laser augmented imaging which could be integrated
into new systems meeting specific customer requirements. Other
solutions focused on the uses of imaging resources – recording,
storage and retrieval at the lower level, distribution, processing
and workflow that creating actionable intelligence by correlating
images based on geographic relevance or through time to discover
changes or hidden links or meanings. Intelligence is automatically
and manually processed from millions of images received continuously
from scores of combat cameras and video sensors distributed
in the field, as well as from human sources. Means of creating
reports, tagging information and processing it to discover hidden
meaning and links are the focus of several intelligence application
developers that unveiled part of their work at the convention.
(see the feature on: Electro-optics,
Intelligence and IMINT)
Defense
Update continues the coverage of the Army's Joint Heavy Lift
program. This year at AUSA Winter. The Army decided to support
three different technologies which are currently pursued by
Lockheed Martin, the Boeing-Bell team and Sikorsky. Another
program currently in progress is the A-160 Hummingbird, developed
by Boeing. The program suffered a setback with the loss of one
of the A-160T unmanned vehicles last December, but Boeing assured
that the problem did not casue significant delay for the program.
(JHL article)