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- <text id=91TT0263>
- <title>
- Feb. 04, 1991: Inside The High-Tech Arsenal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Feb. 04, 1991 Stalking Saddam
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE GULF WAR, Page 46
- THE WEAPONS
- Inside the High-Tech Arsenal
- </hdr><body>
- <p>"Smart" bombs, fast planes and sharp-eyed satellites have made
- U.S. weapons into stars, but precision engineering can cut
- both ways
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-DeWitt--Reported by Sue Butler/Cocoa Beach,
- Jerry Hannifin/Washington and Lara Marlowe/Dhahran
- </p>
- <p> For years, American military hardware has been the butt of
- bitter jokes, taxpayer complaints and congressional
- investigations. To judge by the cost overruns and testing
- mishaps, the U.S. arsenal seemed to consist of planes that spun
- out of control, tanks too cumbersome to maneuver and spare
- parts with Tiffany price tags. What a difference a war makes.
- Now that U.S. Patriots are chasing down Scuds and laser-guided
- bombs are nailing targets in Iraq, the once derided weaponry
- has become the star of the war. Suddenly, everybody is a
- weapons buff.
- </p>
- <p> For military planners, the apparent success of their
- high-tech equipment in the early weeks of the battle is sweet
- vindication. Though Operation Desert Storm still relies in part
- on armaments of Vietnam War and even World War II vintage, the
- Pentagon has staked its reputation on its state-of-the-art
- showpieces. For 40 years, it has pursued a sometimes
- controversial doctrine that says the best way to counter a
- potential adversary's superior numbers is with superior
- technology. Now military experts are watching the payoff with
- excitement but also apprehension. The high-speed electronics
- and precision engineering that make the new weapons so
- effective also make them vulnerable.
- </p>
- <p> The most visible symbol of the U.S.'s technological edge--those pinpoint strikes on Iraqi targets--actually represents
- some fairly straightforward bombing. The key technology is a
- simple laser detector on the nose of a glide bomb that is
- electronically linked to adjustable fins in the bomb's tail.
- All the pilot has to do is point a pencil-thin laser beam at
- his target and push a button. A stabilizing computer keeps the
- beam locked in place, freeing the pilot to pitch and roll as
- necessary to evade enemy fire while the bomb rides along the
- beam's reflection, flying into the target like a moth to a
- flame.
- </p>
- <p> The real technological marvels in the U.S. missile array are
- the sea-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles that smashed Iraqi
- air-defense systems early in the war. Packed with advanced
- electronics and several different guidance systems, they are
- essentially flying computers capable of sailing through the
- goalposts on a football field from a range of several hundred
- miles. They can also perform dizzying acrobatics, as witnessed
- by U.S. reporters who, before they were ousted from Iraq,
- watched with amazement as a Tomahawk streaked below their hotel
- windows and made a pair of swooping 90 degrees turns to avoid
- the Al Rasheed in downtown Baghdad.
- </p>
- <p> The secret of the Tomahawk's precision flying is a two-step
- guidance system. First, a radar altimeter compares the
- topography of key landmarks along the missile's flight path
- with detailed contour maps stored in its computer memory. Then,
- as the Tomahawk approaches its target, a small digital camera,
- acting as an electronic eye, compares the view from the nose
- cone with a library of images prepared from satellite photos.
- If the missile sees that it is even slightly off course, it
- makes adjustments.
- </p>
- <p> One of the biggest uncertainties before the war started was
- how the Patriot system would fare. The antimissile missile is
- guided by a sophisticated phased-array radar consisting of more
- than 5,000 radar antenna elements that can detect and track 100
- targets at a time and follow any given one far more rapidly
- than the rotating cone of conventional radar. But the system
- had never been tested against a Scud.
- </p>
- <p> During the first week of the war, the Patriot performed
- better than had been expected, hitting 95% of its targets as
- opposed to the 60% experts had predicted. But the system, which
- was designed as an antiaircraft weapon and later modified to
- shoot down missiles, is not infallible. Many of the Scuds that
- got through last week were actually struck by Patriots but not
- destroyed. Investigators say part of the problem seems to be
- that Scuds tend to break up as they re-enter the atmosphere. In
- at least one case, a Patriot struck the tail end of a
- disintegrating Scud, leaving the warhead intact to complete its
- mission.
- </p>
- <p> Another surprise for the allied command is how well its
- pilots--and equipment--are performing at night. One concern
- had been the efficacy of night-vision goggles, which had been
- blamed for dozens of crashes over the past decade. These
- goggles, which are standard issue for ground forces, rely on
- the same light-gathering technology used in video camcorders
- to amplify ambient light up to 60,000 times. But pilots flying
- over Kuwait and Iraq had another window into the darkness.
- Affixed to F-16s, F-15Es and other attack aircraft is an
- imaging system called LANTIRN (low-altitude navigation and
- targeting infrared system for night), which illuminates objects
- with infrared beams. This system projects the view on a
- phosphorus screen in the cockpit. Objects appear as
- yellow-green shapes in an image that resembles a photographic
- negative.
- </p>
- <p> Should the ground war start, the biggest technological
- question mark may be the Army's M1 and M1A1 Abrams tanks, the
- most advanced armored vehicles ever built. The M1 features a
- 120-mm gun that can fire accurately even while the tank is
- running over rough terrain, thanks to a built-in ballistic
- computer and sophisticated stabilizers. Both models carry a
- chemical fire-suppression system that can put out a flame in a
- quarter of a second and are shielded by armor plates
- containing nonradioactive uranium 2 1/2 times as dense as
- steel. But some specialists fear that the tanks, which rely on
- computerized controls and finicky electronics, could be undone
- by desert dust. Another worry: that their gas-guzzling turbine
- engines could run dry in mid-battle.
- </p>
- <p> Working behind the scenes and above the war zone is the
- largest fleet of spy satellites ever arrayed. There are at
- least seven different types of "birds" passing over the gulf,
- ranging from sharp-eyed Keyhole photo-reconnaissance
- satellites, which can spot an object the size of a football
- from 500 miles, to the eavesdropping Magnum, which monitors
- enemy radio communications using antennas the size of baseball
- diamonds.
- </p>
- <p> At least one early-warning satellite is parked over the
- Indian Ocean at all times, using its infrared eye to scour
- Iraqi territory every 12 seconds for the hot flare of a missile
- launch. Upon detection, an astonishing split-second relay of
- signals is set into motion. First, the satellite sends its data
- simultaneously to an Air Force ground station in Woomera,
- Australia, and to the U.S. Space Command's Missile Warning
- Center near Colorado Springs. Computers in Colorado instantly
- sort through the information, identify individual missiles,
- project target areas and flash the results by satellite back to
- the gulf. All this happens in time for air-raid sirens to sound
- four to five minutes before the missiles complete their
- seven-minute journey. A new, more direct route may increase the
- odds of intercepting the Scuds. According to this week's issue
- of Aviation Week & Space Technology, Patriot batteries are
- receiving unprocessed alerts directly from the early-warning
- satellites.
- </p>
- <p> None of this would work were it not for the intricate
- communication network that now crisscrosses the gulf. This
- elaborate command-and-control system enables allied generals
- to coordinate not only the American land, sea and air forces
- but also those of its coalition partners. The brains of the
- operation are housed in a government building in Riyadh, where
- an encrypted book of flight schedules and bombing targets is
- generated every 24 hours and is broadcast to individual
- commanders by satellite, microwave and secure telephone lines.
- </p>
- <p> How do the generals keep straight the tens of thousands of
- details involved in organizing up to 3,000 missions a day? "We
- have a lot of computers," says Lieut. General Charles Horner,
- the allied air commander. The exact number of machines is
- unknown, but a Texas supply house reports that Central Command
- gave it a rush order last month for 1,300 desktop computers,
- 1,300 laser printers, 350 laptops, 10 local-area networks and
- an assortment of peripheral equipment (including dust covers
- and cleaning kits) with a delivery date of "no later than Jan.
- 14."
- </p>
- <p> The danger with any endeavor so dependent on advanced
- electronics and jewel-like engineering is that when such
- systems encounter unexpected trouble they usually do not just
- slow down; they crash. The Pentagon has not shown any TV
- pictures of "smart" bombs flying a perfect path into the side
- of a camel. But as the Scud hits have demonstrated, mistakes
- do happen. One aircraft expert says the desert sand has wreaked
- havoc with the British Tornado jets, lodging in the turbine
- engine blades and melting into glass. If blades on U.S. jets are
- faring better, it may be because enginemakers imported tons
- of Saudi sand for tests several years ago and modified their
- equipment accordingly.
- </p>
- <p> Another natural phenomenon that might cause trouble is
- electromagnetic radiation from the sun. Heightened solar-flare
- activity, expected over the next few months, could disrupt
- military communications and satellite traffic. Air Force
- officials have called this issue "too sensitive for comment."
- </p>
- <p> It is still too early to say whether the Pentagon's grand
- doctrine of fighting superior numbers with superior technology
- will ultimately prevail. It may yet be possible to foil the
- world's most sophisticated--and expensive--weapons with
- countermeasures, some of which are literally dirt cheap. They
- include burning smoke pots to deflect heat-seeking missiles,
- draping targets with pictures of bomb craters to discourage
- further attack, and hunkering down in caves and sand dunes to
- wait out the blitz. In the end, no electronic marvel is going
- to liberate Kuwait. That is a job that will probably fall to
- the ultimate biological weapon: the G.I.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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