All Content from Business Insider 8小时前
China is the Pentagon's top challenge. Here's what the Army says it's doing about it.
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

文章探讨了美国陆军为应对中国日益增长的军事实力所做的准备。美国陆军将重点放在无人系统、自主技术和下一代武器平台,并致力于改进决策流程。文章指出,美国陆军正在进行大规模转型,旨在威慑中国,并确保在潜在冲突中取得优势。同时,文章也提到了军队面临的挑战,例如需要重新评估武器采购流程,以及在印太地区进行实地测试的重要性。总的来说,文章强调了美国陆军为应对未来战争,特别是与中国的潜在冲突所做的战略调整和技术升级。

🛡️ 美国陆军将应对中国崛起作为首要任务,重点发展无人系统、自主技术和新一代武器平台,以应对来自中国的军事挑战。

💡 美国陆军正在改进其决策流程,认识到需要更快地迭代和适应技术进步,并从一线士兵那里获取更好的反馈,以改进武器和系统。

🌍 在印太地区进行实地测试对于评估武器和技术在特定环境中的效能至关重要,特别是在高温、高湿等恶劣条件下,无人系统的性能可能受到影响。

💰 美国陆军正在进行大规模转型,预计耗资约360亿美元,包括重新评估武器采购、淘汰过时系统,并提升单兵作战能力,以增强战备水平。

Beijing has amped up its military's power, capabilities, and size in recent years, raising alarms in Washington.

The US Army is pushing radical transformation, preparing for a war that it hopes never happens, and striving to send China the message that it won't win should a fight come.

China is a rising military power and a chief concern for the Department of Defense. The Pentagon has characterized China as a "pacing challenge," and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth has warned that "the threat China poses is real," stressing that Beijing is "credibly preparing to potentially use military force to alter the balance of power in the Indo-Pacific."

US Army leadership told Business Insider how it intends to meet this challenge.

The Army is pursuing future warfighting technologies and new weapons. But the service is also working on improving areas within its decision-making that it says are inefficient and ineffective.

Though there have long been efforts to pivot the military's focus to China and the Indo-Pacific, fights in the Middle East and Russia's war against Ukraine have often pulled the US in other directions.

In an interview with Business Insider, US Secretary of the Army Daniel Driscoll and Gen. James Rainey, the commanding general of Army Futures Command, spoke to what the Army's doing to not just counter China, but as Rainey said, convincing its adversary that "they're not gonna win a fight."

Readying for a future fight

The Army has plans to drastically increase its drone arsenal.

The Army is working on implementing future warfare technologies and weapons, such as uncrewed systems, autonomy, and artificial intelligence, across the force, especially in the priority Indo-Pacific theater where these emerging capabilities could be critical.

There are questions around which weapons the Army needs to purchase to sufficiently prepare for potential future wars. Both Driscoll and Rainey shared that there are certain systems that are no longer necessary and that with the speed of technological advancements in modern wars, the Army has to rethink its acquisition process.

"What we've learned is you can't write a requirement for something you want five years from now," Rainey said, adding that there needs to be a change in behavior "so we can iterate faster."

Driscoll said that inefficient decision-making models have led to equipment "often not being where it should be" and that there is a need for better information from soldiers on the ground for improving weapons and systems quickly.

"That feedback loop has just been broken for a long time," he explained.

Soldiers are testing new tech out in the field with allies and partners, and the service intends to increase and streamline feedback between the Army and industry partners.

The value of some of these systems, Rainey said, "can't be overstated." And learning how weapons and tech work in specific environments in the Indo-Pacific is essential.

For a potential future war, certain weapons, vehicles, systems, and force structures have been deemed by US military leaders as no longer a priority.

During a recent training, troops from the 25th Infantry Brigade saw decreases in the flight distances and endurance of drones and uncrewed systems in the Philippines due to hot and humid weather, as well as rain and winds affecting vertical takeoff and landing capabilities. And in a deployment of the new Mid-Range Capability, an Army missile system, soldiers reworked it in the field in the Philippines to improve effectiveness.

Beyond field experiments, the Army is also preparing to field a next-generation command and control system, Rainey said, that takes advantage of data-centric warfare and "lets our commanders make more, better, faster decisions."

In recent years, the Army and the larger US military have acknowledged a need to present commanders with options and responses quickly. Cross-domain fires, too, meaning capabilities from ground, maritime, air, cyber, and space, have been a priority to increase lethality.

US President Donald Trump's Pentagon has spoken at length about increasing lethality, a buzzword that refers to how effectively a military can fight. In line with efforts to boost individual soldier lethality, longstanding efforts, Army leadership told BI it's working to get rifle squads better weapons, night-vision devices, and command and control capabilities.

One of the Pentagon's current lines of effort is cutting the programs, legacy systems, and force structures that Trump, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and other military leaders deem nonessential for warfighter readiness.

That call has led to sweeping directives on transformation initiatives in the Army, especially in how it buys and uses new weapons and systems. Driscoll said that pursuing these radical transformations is "the number one thing we are doing to get the Army ready for a threat like China."

The planned overhaul, which could cost an estimated $36 billion as the service figures out what it needs for potential high-intensity future fights, stands to be one of the largest since the end of the Cold War.

Read the original article on Business Insider

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

美军 中国 军事 现代化 战略
相关文章