US Army’s Futures Center Working Two New Initiatives for Troops in Iraq
(Source: US Army; dated Sept. 27, issued Sept. 30, 2004)
WASHINGTON --- The new Spiral Developments Division of the Army’s “Futures Center” at Fort Monroe, Va., is working on two initiatives which its director hopes may soon help Soldiers deployed in Iraq.
The RAM Counterstrike Capability is being designed to protect troops against rockets, artillery and mortars. And a Soldier Squad Radio that can transmit through dense urban buildings, officials said, may soon be available for use at the squad level.
“In this insurgent warfare that we’re dealing with today, mortar attacks are a growing trend in theater,” said Col. Daniel Wolfe, director of the Spiral Developments Division. “Soldiers are being injured and, in some cases, lives are lost due to these attacks.”
Wolfe’s division is looking at a counterstrike capability that not only aims to knock down incoming mortar rounds, he said, but will also locate the insurgents and send out unmanned aerial vehicles armed with Viper Strike munitions.
“We are looking at some testing for intercept capability in the near future,” Wolfe said. “There are existing radars that can detect a mortar round from where it was fired, which should allow us to predict with great accuracy where it came from and where it will land based on its trajectory.”
The target acquisition radars Wolfe mentioned include the Q-36 and Q-37 models used in theater today, as well as a new model, the Lightweight Counter Mortar Radar or LCMR.
Wolfe described their challenge as taking the information and rapidly directing it to an armed Hunter UAV to provide the counter strike.
When Wolfe’s Spiral Development Division was organized earlier this summer, it began a “capabilities gap analysis” to identify shortfalls in current force capabilities.
To address a gap in communications, especially in urban areas, the division has focused on an off-the-shelf solution: the ICOM F-43 radio.
Communications among squad members and the platoon leader is critical as they navigate from building to building in the urban fight, Wolfe said. He explained that there is a need for radio signals to go through walls and, while it’s not necessary for the signal to go over great distances, the signal needs to flow easily in the built-up areas that don’t allow for line-of-sight or verbal communication between squad members.
The ICOM F-43, now referred to by the Army as the Soldier Squad Radio, was recently evaluated at Fort Benning.
The assessment and feedback from Fort Benning was “very positive,” Wolfe said.
Wolfe predicted that authorization for procurement by units in the field may happen within 90 days, and said that the radio is readily available today from ICOM.
Serving as director of the Spiral Developments Division since Aug. 1, Wolfe explained how the division was an offshoot of the Current to Future Force task force, which was developed to focus on spiraling future force capabilities into the current force.
A task force recommendation established the new division, which was approved May 13, at the Army’s Training and Doctrine Command headquarters.
Located in the Capabilities Development Directorate of the Futures Center, the Spiral Developments Division was created to look at future force capabilities and establish creative ways of bringing those capabilities to help Soldiers deployed in Iraq, Wolfe said.
“This is what the Spiraling Developments Division is all about – we look at technology solutions to fill the capability gaps and make the necessary recommendations,” Wolfe said. “We will continue to look at the new capability we’re working with today in theater or in near-term development and ensure it is included in the program of the future for our Units of Action.”
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