Among the systems on display, were some already operational,
including the US Land Warrior system, displayed at the
U.S. Army's Program Executive Office (PEO) Soldier booth
and the precursor for the British
FIST – known as Enhanced Situational Awareness
(ELSA), shown at the Thales display. Other systems
are nearing production, primarily the French
FELIN shown at the Sagem combined display, slated
for initial deployment next year.
Also of interest was the Israeli 'Advanced Infantry
System (AIS)' scheduled to enter service by 2010. This
system was displayed by Elbit Systems. A year later
the German MOD is expected to release an order for 939
advanced ISS suites of the IDZ-ES
model, shown here by Rheinmetall Defense. The company
also demonstrated elements of a suite developed for
the Canadian forces while EADS demonstrated a comparable
system called Warrior21, in development for Swiss and
Spain. In Scandinavia, ISS are currently being developed
for the Norwegian and Swedish Armies. These were displayed
by the Norwegian company Knogsberg Defense and Saab.
Auxiliary
equipment designed to assist dismounted operations was
also in the focus of the exhibition. Among the systems
that caught our attention was the MK-V wide spectrum
hand-held thermal beacon (WSTB) developed by Thermal
Beacon Ltd from Israel. This hand held device is already
in service, supporting cooperation between aerial and
ground units, operating at night or in conditions where
thermal sights are used. MK-V emits an invisible blinking
light, visible only to thermal imaging systems (all
types are covered – both LWIR, SWIR and NWIR).
The unit is visible from a range of 2 km when viewed
with 8-12 MCT cameras, or 4-5 km using 3-5 micron equipment.
When viewed with light intensifier the device is visible
at a range of 10 km.
A
different thermal tactical flashlight is offered by
OptigO, through its cooperation with parent company
Elta Systems of the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI)
group. The Samantha multi-wave thermal flashlight operates
in the long- and mid-wave infrared can be used for identification
and signaling between forces using thermal imaging equipment.
Utilizing directional beam with adjustable beam width,
the system can operate effectively overlong distances
and used securely while operating behind enemy lines,
for search and rescue and other special operations missions,
in areas where both friendly and hostile forces are
using thermal vision systems.
Power is one of the most critical aspects of all ISS
operations, on extended, dismounted missions. Power
provisions have already become a main factor in the
design of current and future systems, as the battery-load
carried by the soldier rapidly matches the other loads
of other combat critical supplies, such as ammunition,
water and protective armor.
New trends in power systems based on primary batteries,
rechargeable cells, and fuel cells, used either as direct
power sources, or battery chargers, running on relatively
lightweight yet energy-efficient fuels. Such fuel cells
are being developed by a number of companies including
Ultracell in the USA and EFOY in Germany.
Medis Technologies is another company that has sofar
focused on commercial applications of fuel cells, but
is introducing a new fuel-cell technology called Power
Knight. Contained in a small, flat backpack it is promising
up to 72 hours of continuous operation, delivering 20
watt for the individual soldier. A prototype system
has already been developed for General Dynamics for
evaluation in its future soldier systems program. The
company already began producing a commercial version
of the system in March 2008.
Other articles included in our Eurosatory 2008
focus are: