The new weapon have a deadly effect at long ranges, such as when fighting from mountaintop to mountaintop in Afghanistan.
Several months ago, the US Army announced that they were in the
process of developing a new assault rifle which can fire rounds that
will hit targets with the impact force of a battle tank. They claimed
that the bullets would defeat any body armor, and they hoped that the
weapons would be ready for the battlefield in a shorter time than
initially thought possible.
Colonel Geoffrey A. Norman, the force development division chief at
Army HQ, said in an interview for Task & Purpose that the Army
planned on deploying a Next Generation Squad Automatic Rifle (NGSAR) in
fiscal year 2022 instead of the original implementation date of fiscal
year 2025.
The new weapon is a replacement for the M249 SAW. While the Army has
yet to set out the official requirements for the new system, it is
anticipated that the weapon will be lighter, have a greater range, and
pack far more punch than the current infantry weapons.
The
M249 Squad Automatic Weapon (SAW) fills the automatic rifle role in
infantry squads and provides light machine gun capabilities in combat
service and combat service support units.Norman
said that the most important new feature would be the significantly
increased chamber pressure to ensure that the rounds fired will
penetrate all known body armor at a distance of up to over 1,900 feet
(600 meters). The aim is to equip the service members in the field with
an automatic rifle that fires a bullet at a pressure equivalent to that
at which a tank would fire.
The chamber pressure for rifles currently in use is approximately
45KSI (kilopound per square inch), or 45000 PSI. The Army anticipates
that the new weapon will have a chamber pressure of 60-80 KSI, which is
the chamber pressure exhibited by an M1 Abrams tank. M1A1 firing its main gun as seen from the loader’s hatch. The M240 is visible left while the M2HB is visible right.The
Next Generation Squad Weapons Program consists of the NGSAR along with a
Next Generation Squad Carbine (NGSC) and a squad designated marksman’s
rifle. Also included in the program are specialized ammunition and a
fire control system.
The Army previously focused its efforts on developing an improved
carbine that still fired rounds between 6.5mm and 6.8mm to supersede the
M4, but have now shifted priorities toward a beefy and highly efficient
automatic NGSAR.
The
reason behind this shift, according to Norman, is that the Pentagon is
moving its focus from the close quarters combat of Iraq and Syria to the
mountainous terrain of Afghanistan. The carbine is ideally suited to
the brawls of urban environments such as Mosul, but the long-range
requirements of taking on ISIS and the Taliban in Afghanistan require a
very different type of weapon.
Norman said that for the past decade the Army had focused on weapons
to provide lethal effects on unprotected targets, but now the view has
changed. The American soldier needs a weapon that is effective against
protected targets, and they also have to have a deadly effect at long
ranges, such as when fighting from mountaintop to mountaintop in
Afghanistan. A
U.S. Army Soldier with 1st Battalion, 32nd Infantry Regiment, 10th
Mountain Division, fires an M4 rifle during a gun battle with insurgent
forces in Barge Matal, during Operation Mountain Fire.The
beefed-up rifle is intended for this purpose and prototypes are
currently undergoing testing at Fort Benning in Georgia by the Soldier
Lethality Cross-Functional Team. Initially, the weapon will fire the
7.62mm XM11158 Advanced Armor Piercing (ADVAP) round while new
specialized rounds are under development.
In April 2017, Gen. Mark A. Milley testified to Congress that the
current 5.56mm round does not have the mass to penetrate the body armor
worn by the enemy. The alternative would normally be the 7.62mm round,
but it is too heavy and has insufficient propellant to travel either
fast or far enough to serve the Army’s requirements, so the answer lies
between the two.
The system that will make all the difference and be the heart of the
rifle will be the fire control system, which is being developed
independently. It is touted as a miniature version of the systems
currently in use by ground vehicles and aircraft. Gen. Mark A. Milley, Chief of Staff of the Army
While the Army’s target of fielding at least two of the new weapons
in each squad by 2022 may seem a little ambitious, no one is disputing
that the new rifle is sorely needed. Norman noted in the interview that
they received the support of the Secretary of Defense and Congress for
the new weapon as part of their review of the Army’s combat strategy
portfolio.
The Army is aware that it cannot replace all of its 80,000 SAW rifles
immediately, but intends to get the new variant out to the field as
soon as possible.
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