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美军在小型无人机领域取得进展,但仍面临追赶挑战
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近期,美国陆军在小型无人机技术应用方面取得了一些显著的“首次”成就,例如从四旋翼无人机上投掷手榴弹以及实现首次无人机对无人机的击杀。然而,这些进展相较于俄罗斯和乌克兰等国家仍有差距。陆军官员也坦承了这些挑战,并表示正在积极追赶。尽管取得了技术上的进步,但文章指出,美军在装备部队具备先进小型无人机能力方面仍有待加强。国防部长强调,美军单位尚未配备现代化战场所需的高效小型无人机。文章详细介绍了陆军在无人机演习中的一些具体案例,并提及了士兵在实际操作中遇到的设备故障、部件缺失等问题。这些都表明,尽管学习和进步在发生,但美军在小型无人机技术的整合和应用方面仍处于一个“成长的阵痛期”。

🎯 **技术进步与现实差距并存**:美国陆军近期在小型无人机技术上实现了一些里程碑式的突破,如成功从四旋翼无人机上投掷M67手榴弹,以及在演习中完成首次无人机对无人机的击杀。这些成就标志着陆军在无人机作战能力上的积极探索和发展。然而,与在俄乌冲突中已广泛应用的先进无人机战术相比,美军的步伐显得相对滞后。文章指出,这些战术在其他国家已应用多年,凸显了美军在追赶和应用前沿技术方面的紧迫性。

🚧 **装备与能力上的短板待补**:尽管取得了一系列进展,但美国陆军在充分装备部队方面仍面临严峻挑战。国防部长皮特·海格斯在备忘录中明确指出,美军单位尚未配备现代化战场所必需的高效小型无人机。士兵在实际演习中也遇到了视频信号不稳定、关键部件缺失、设备损坏等问题,这些都反映出在装备的可靠性和可用性方面仍需改进。陆军官员承认这些困难,并强调正在通过记录和分享经验教训来克服这些挑战。

📈 **积极追赶与未来展望**:文章强调,美国陆军正处于一个“追赶”阶段,并且正在采取积极措施来弥合与领先国家在小型无人机技术上的差距。通过在实地演习和训练课程中不断测试和学习,陆军正在努力整合小型无人机技术。陆军表示,sUAS(小型无人机系统)的成功部署、整合和操作使用对于维持技术优势和保护部队至关重要。同时,反无人机系统的研发也被视为一项关键任务。尽管过程缓慢,但这些努力预示着美军在无人机作战领域将持续投入和发展。

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The US Army has been celebrating some of its recent achievements in drone warfare, like dropping grenades from a quadcopter and scoring its first drone-on-drone kill.

These tactics, however, aren't new. They've seen extensive use in Russia's war against Ukraine. First-person-view drones dropping ordnance was commonplace years ago, and drone intercepts of other uncrewed aircraft are down to a science in Ukraine.

The Army's recent wins highlight positive progress, but also the glaring skill gaps it needs to close to be ready to employ and respond to small, cheap combat drones. The US military is still widely working on adequately equipping troops with this capability.

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth wrote in a July memo that American "units are not outfitted with the lethal small drones the modern battlefield requires."

Army drone achievements

The Army has been trailing, but recent developments suggest a game of catch-up is underway.

In July, the Army's X account shared video in a now-deleted post that showed American soldiers dropping a live M67 grenade from a quadcopter drone during an exercise in Germany. It was the first such event in the Army for conventional forces.

The post's caption asked the question: "Have you ever seen a drone drop a grenade?" The query drew an onslaught of online criticism, as that drone tactic has seen prominent use over the past decade, including by ISIS terrorists during the Battle of Mosul in Iraq and by both sides of Russia's war in Ukraine.

Examples of drones dropping grenades and other explosives have been documented extensively by militaries, open-source information accounts, and war watchers. While the Army post has since been deleted, the video is still available.

The Army also recently celebrated its first drone-on-drone kill during an exercise at Fort Rucker in Alabama. This big event involved piloting a first-person view quadcopter drone armed with a Claymore mine into a fixed-wing drone. The explosive was detonated, destroying its target.

Drone-on-drone combat is a growing hallmark of the Ukraine war, with small quadcopters ramming or bombing one another in uncrewed dogfights. The tactics have evolved rapidly — yet the Army is only now testing the basics as Ukraine is putting up thousands of interceptor drones as an alternative to expensive air-defense missiles.

US paratroopers with the 173rd Airborne Brigade readied a drone for an April exercise.

In other exercises, Army soldiers have found themselves out in the field with faulty video feed connections between operators and drones, missing parts, a lack of desired equipment, and unexpected damage from environmental hazards. The Ukrainians and the Russians grapple with these issues, too, but years of war have better prepared them to handle them.

Army officials acknowledge the challenges. Integrating small drone technology into the force comes with difficulties that troops are trying to overcome. Lessons learned are being documented extensively and shared across the service. It's clear that drones are critical to modern warfare, and learning is happening, even if it is by trial and error.

That work is being done in the field, with soldiers testing how drones operate in different weather patterns in the Pacific, as well as in schoolhouses and courses. "We're behind globally," the head of a new crash course said recently. "This is our aggressive attempt to close the gap."

The Army told Business Insider that progress in using small uncrewed aerial systems is ongoing beyond any single milestone or achievement, adding that "the successful fielding, integration, and operational use of sUAS are vital for maintaining a technological edge and protecting our forces." The service also said that its work on counter-drone systems is critical.

Work in progress

Zachary Kallenborn, a drone, uncrewed capabilities, and unconventional warfare expert, told Business Insider that while there are assuredly experts and officials that are concerned about the US military's speed in adapting to small drones, it's also difficult to draw conclusions for overall military readiness on drone warfare, especially as other services, programs, and offices in the Pentagon are working on the technologies and capabilities as well.

For the Army, drones are a notable element of the service's massive transformation initiative, with signs of progress already visible. Yet the work is slow, and that is not without reason.

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The US hasn't overwhelmingly needed to — or been particularly effective at — low-level experimentation with weaponry. In Ukraine, it's strongly encouraged, Kallenborn said, "so they've been able to come up with all these really great things and build all these really cheap, innovative systems."

The US also isn't in a conflict that demands it go all-in on drone technology, purchasing millions of drones that might be obsolete by the time they're needed. Ukraine is investing heavily in this tech because it lacks many of the capabilities available in the West. Experts have cautioned Western militaries against taking the wrong lessons from the Ukraine war and looking to drones as a replacement for conventional military strengths. Without a wartime demand, experimentation moves more slowly.

But with concerns about the possibility of a peer-level conflict, against an adversary like China, there's a strong argument not only in favor of skilling up on offensive drone warfare, but also counter-drone capabilities. A recent report from the Center for a New American Security argued that US forces could be overwhelmed by drones in a fight with China if it isn't adequately prepared with effective, combat-ready equipment.

Right now, the Army appears to be going through what could perhaps best be described as growing pains. As one Army drone pilot said during a recent exercise that BI attended, "We're still so new to having drones with us."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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相关标签

US Army Small Drones Drone Warfare Military Technology Unmanned Systems 美国陆军 小型无人机 无人机战争 军事技术 无人系统
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