Right Hand, Left Hand

There's almost always something worthwhile going on over at Defense Tech. A couple of articles caught my eye today.

First, this evaluation of troop morale...

Over three weeks in and around Baghdad this July, I spoke to dozens and dozens of soldiers about their views on the conflict. For the most part, morale among these infantrymen and engineers and bomb-disposers was high. Shockingly high, given the fact that they didn’t buy the Bush administration’s rationales for the war.

“Democracy? Here? Are you fucking kidding me?”...But he’s glad he’s in Iraq, regardless. Mostly, because of the insurgents...

“It boggles my mind, how someone can go into a crowd of kids, and kill them all. I’ll never understand it. But that’s why I’m here,” said Staff Sgt. Mark Palmer, with the 717th Ordnance Disposal Company, an Army bomb squad. “Yeah, it’s still fun to blow stuff up. But it’s not the core thing. Figuring out how this shit [the bomb] works. Stopping it from hurting people. That’s the main thing.”...

I’d say three in four of the GIs I spoke with were planning to reenlist. The new, fat bonuses are one reason, of course. But another is the sense that there are real-life psychopaths out there that need to be stopped. It may sound corny. It may sound dumb. But that’s what I saw.

Despite the name, the guys at Defense Tech are no mindless boosters of the American military establishment. They are quite often skeptical of the official armed forces line. They routinely refer to DARPA as the Pentagon's "mad scientist division".

But they're honest skeptics.

Now, I’d be remiss if I didn’t throw in a few caveats here. These soldiers were all stationed at Camp Victory, the poshest military base I’ve ever seen. It’s also one of the safer places would could be in a warzone. Which means better morale. Could soldiers and marines feel differently out in the sticks, where it’s MREs three times a day and mortars all night? You bet.

On a lighter note, they point us toward this ridiculous looking development in non-lethal weaponry, with appropriate skepticism of course...

The weapon, developed by the laboratory's Directed Energy Directorate, employs a two-wavelength laser system and is the first of its kind as a hand-held, single-operator system for troop and perimeter defense. The laser light used in the weapon temporarily impairs aggressors by illuminating or "dazzling" individuals, removing their ability to see the laser source.

The first two prototypes of the Personnel Halting and Stimulation Response, or PHaSR, were built at Kirtland last month and delivered to the laboratory's Human Effectiveness Directorate at Brooks City Base, Texas, and the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate at Quantico, Va. for testing.

PHaSR, eh? Is there no shame?


posted by Justin on 11.01.05 at 10:36 AM





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I salute our brave soldiers. The title of this post....

Funny about me, I know:
It is with my left hand that I write.
And yet I am so far to the Right.



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