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Energy weapons include various laser systems and microwave weapons. The US Depar...

The military spends over $ 1 billion a year on energy weapons: what will it give on the battlefield

Energy weapons include various laser systems and microwave weapons. The US Department of Defense spends about a billion dollars a year to develop the so -called "directional energy weapons", VICE writes with reference to a new report on US government control. According to the data, money goes to laser and microwave systems that are still in the development process or as prototypes. Military lasers, like fantastic films, are the ancient dream of the US military.

They are especially tempted by the idea of ​​developing portable laser installations that any fighter can hold. Moreover, compact laser systems should be intended not so much for firing on the enemy, but as an individual protection against the attack of drones. In favor of laser weapons, it is the fact But the main obstacle is still the need for powerful batteries and innovations in optical systems that will allow the laser beam without loss of energy through rain, fog or snow.

Large laser laser installations, which, thanks to its speed, with the help of artificial intelligence systems, will be more real will be used as aircraft to counteract the swarm and drone-Kamikadze. However, the US Air Force is already experimenting with high energy lasers on its planes to knock down the enemy missiles, and the Navy wants to use laser installations to combat UAVs and small enemy boats. Another promising direction that is very interested in the Pentagon.

Microwave generation -based weapons will be able to "pass" through the walls and save troops from storming specific objects with risk to themselves. These weapons are intended primarily for the disruption of the enemy, sensors and other enemy electronics. Of course, microwave weapons can also be used as aircraft. But even here, the main problem is the cumbersome equipment and large energy costs. Military experts say the answer depends on who you ask.

Of course, for military contractors experimenting with similar weapons systems, these costs may even seem too small. And the military themselves can argue the need to spend such an amount on experiments in connection with the concepts of modern wars, which are constantly changing. Some military analysts also claim that high energy weapons are more accurate than ordinary ammunition, which reduces the risk of casual civic casualties.