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Army General Praises New NLOS Howitzer
MINNEAPOLIS -- The Army's top general said he saw the future when
looking at a new artillery vehicle that can hit a target over the
horizon while remaining lighter, faster and more fuel efficient than the
vehicle it will replace. Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the Army's chief of
staff, examined the so-called non-line-of-sight cannon with Sen. James
Inhofe, R-Okla., at Minnesota defense contractor BAE Systems on Friday
during a visit Casey said was meant to "check on our future." The
cannon, a two-man combat vehicle with an automated ammunition system
that can fire 155 mm projectiles with greater precision than current
Army equipment, is part of an Army modernization plan called Future
Combat Systems. The Army will formally unveil the cannon next month at
its birthday celebration in Washington, D.C. The Future Combat Systems
initiative has been criticized by some members of Congress for delays
and escalating costs. But with a cannon prototype to show off, Casey
said he hopes to convert the skeptics. "We're able to demonstrate to
people that the Future Combat Systems is real. They've been hearing
about it, seeing it on briefing slides for a long time. But Sen. Inhofe
and I just saw it drive around the parking lot," Casey said during a
roundtable discussion with reporters at BAE Systems, which designed and
built the cannon with help from several other contractors.The cannon is
still several years away from being used in combat. Like the other
vehicles in the program, it's built on a common chassis that can travel
up to about 37 mph. It's much lighter than conventional combat vehicles,
with rubber tracks and a compact, hybrid-electric engine. It can fire
six rounds a minute, compared to less than four for current Army
artillery units, Casey said. It's been engineered to precisely hit a
target up to nearly 19 miles away, which Casey said is important for
both urban and rural warfare. It will give U.S. troops a "decisive
advantage" over any enemy, he said. The cannon also takes fewer soldiers
to operate because ammunition can be loaded automatically. Comparable
vehicles the Army uses require four people, and the soldiers have to
handle 100-pound bullets to make it work, said Deepak Bazaz, who helped
direct the cannon project for BAE Systems. "These are getting to be more
like aircraft," Bazaz said while showing the vehicle to reporters. "All
that automation is back here and the crew is up front controlling it."
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