High-energy laser weapons, anti-drone systems, and the future of warfare

Nov. 30, 2018
WASHINGTON – One of the defense world’s newest and most promising innovations is the high-energy laser weapon system. It is the most advanced and capable concept for a tactical, ground-based defensive laser system, capable of being mounted on a variety of air, land, or sea-based platforms. Real Clear Defense reports.

WASHINGTON – One of the defense world’s newest and most promising innovations is the high-energy laser weapon system. It is the most advanced and capable concept for a tactical, ground-based defensive laser system, capable of being mounted on a variety of air, land, or sea-based platforms. Real Clear Defense reports. Continue reading original article

The Military & Aerospace Electronics take:

30 Nov. 2018 -- Of course, lasers themselves are not a new technology. Lasers have been studied and tested for military use for decades. Recently, companies such as Lockheed-Martin, Boeing, and Raytheon have taken this existing technology, scaled it down, and adapted laser weapons for a variety of platforms with a new purpose: to shoot down weaponized drones and small munitions.

This new mission set for the tactical laser offers the military a drone-killing weapon system that could keep the U.S. ahead of the power curve on the modern battlefield, especially in the fight against non-state actors and armies increasingly using drones for combat operations.

Such new anti-drone weaponry would ensure U.S. and coalition troops engaged in irregular warfare can maintain tactical air supremacy. America’s adversaries are developing new techniques like swarming and obtaining cheaper technology like commercially available drones to overcome, or at least deny, the preponderant American overmatch in the burgeoning field of unmanned vehicles in all domains.

Related: Project moves forward to use UAV laser weapons to destroy enemy ballistic missiles in boost phase

Related: Laser weapons show their stuff in real-world conditions

Related: Ball Aerospace to investigate airborne laser weapons to destroy or incapacitate enemy aircraft

John Keller, chief editor
Military & Aerospace Electronics

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