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Friday, July 06, 2012

SMART WARS AND SMART SOLDIERS OF THE FUTURE!

A TEST BLOG-----SMART SOLDIERS AND SMART WARS OF THE FUTURE! Jul 6 2012  | Views 68 |  Comments  (1)  | Report Abuse        NOTE: all information culled out from newspapers and Internet.         Recently Britain has claimed that it had developed a " smart" fighter jet which won,t need a pilot . This aircraft would be commissioned into British air force by 2013. It would revolutionize the future wars, whether by " regular" or "irregular" soldiers----- read non- state actors or the terrorists. This invention is nothing but a further advancement on DRONE or PTA ( Pilotless Aircraft) technology, which is in use in Afghanistan. It has given a new dimension to future wars.           "Dumb Soldiers" move on! Days of FRONLINE BRAVERY and GALLANTARY are over. We have the SMART SOLDIERS now fighting a future war with NO "REAR" and NO" FRONT". Have the days of uniformed soldiers in olive green, monkey dancing behind enemy lines or knocking out enemy's war potential, come to an end? It might NOT seem immediately so but the advent of pilotless vehicles and smart ammonutions, along with CYBER SOLDIERS, the very dimensions of war has transformed tremendously. There is a total shift in war-making and fighting. Therefore the days of battle field bravery and gallantary are over. Move away award-seeking Generals and fake GURUS of Victories. Smart soldiers are here ---thousands of miles away from the battle fronts------to deliver the knock out blow to the enemy.            Pilotless vehicles can be guided and controlled by smart soldiers as they control NASA Flights to celestial bodies, like Mars, Venus and Saturns. Loaded with adeaquate weapons with accurate description of the target , they would create havoc in enemy lines. There would be no place to hide.           Glimpses of it we saw in Iraq War when Saddam Hussein's DUMB ARMY fell like nine pins to USA's Synchronised army. Iraq war had removed the distinction between "FRONTS" and "REARS" of the war. We are also witnessing the same in Afghanistan and iraq, where COUNTER-TERRORISM is being fought by these REMOTE SOLDIERS. These rear echelon soldiers are the REAL HEROS of Modern war. The use of DRONES would explain the shape of things to come. I am providing you a link, as I can not post the video, watch how SMART SOLDIERS smash their enemy.   READ BELOW BEFORE OPENING THE ATTACHMENT------ The female drone controller is actually flying the aircraft. Her flight instruments screen is located in the upper left of the lower central large monitor screen. The other screens are views from the drone itself.The control booths or rooms are made in Garland , TEXAS by Raytheon .For non-pilots, these controllers are in Nevada and each is flying a drone on the other side of the world thousands of miles away, in the combat zone in Iraq and Afghanistan . Their left hand is on the throttle controlling the drone's engine. The right hand is flying the plane. All the buttons used to fly the drone are located on the   joystick. The controller never removes his or her hand from the throttle.Kill a Taliban leader then go home for lunch or dinner! Welcome to the new world. Imagine how big the communication pipe has to be to pump all the data necessary to perform these complicated tasks through it on the other side of the world in REAL TIME. It is not a modem you or I will ever get our hands on at Radio Shack !!! This is modern warfare.Today's headline: Missiles fired fromNevada controlled drone aircraft kill Taliban leader in Afghanistan .Now watch how   www.youtube.com/watch and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fSY3VxdSz5s&feature=related   An unmanned aerial combat drone developed by Boeing has successfully completed its first flight at Edwards Air Force Base, California. Called the Boeing Phantom Ray, the aircraft is designed to support several potential missions including surveillance and attack.Boeing says its Phantom Ray flew for 17 minutes, reaching an altitude of 7,500 feet and a speed of 178 knots, or 205 miles per hour.The Unmanned Aerial System, or UAS, has been in development since mid-2008, and the first test flight on April 27 was designed to demonstrate its basic airworthiness. Additional flights, ultimately taking the UAS to 40,000 feet at nearly the speed of sound, will take place over the next few weeks. The Phantom Ray has not been developed for any specific mission and Boeing is testing it at its own expense. The company says it will serve as a platform for a variety of scenarios involving reconnaissance, strike or electronic attack. Drones similar to the Phantom Ray have been in use over Afghanistan and Pakistan in recent years. The aircraft's delta wing shape allows it to evade radar and its deeply embedded engine reduces heat and noise making it very difficult to detect. The aircraft is flown by an operator on the ground via a computer, programmed to tell the UAV where to fly, when to deploy its payload, and when to return to base. At 36 feet long with a wingspan of 50 feet, it is also designed for inflight refuelling.   © rajee kushwaha

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