Posted on 11/08/2005 5:26:51 PM PST by JustAnotherOkie
The US government has unveiled a "non-lethal" laser rifle designed to dazzle enemy personnel without causing them permanent harm. But the device will require close scrutiny to ensure compliance with a United Nations protocol on blinding laser weapons.
The Personnel Halting and Stimulation Response (PHASR) rifle was developed at the Air Force Research Laboratory in New Mexico, US, and two prototypes have been delivered to military bases in Texas and Virginia for further testing.
The US Department of Defense (DoD) believes the weapon could be used, for example, to temporarily blind suspects who drive through a roadblock. However, the DoD has yet to reveal details of how the laser works and has yet to respond to New Scientists requests for further information.
Laser weapons capable of blinding enemies have been developed in the past but were banned under a 1995 UN convention called the Protocol on Blinding Laser Weapons. The wording of this protocol, however, does not prohibit lasers that temporarily dazzle a foe. Permanent harm
"In the past, the problem with lasers of this type has been that they often permanently blind human targets," says Tobias Feakin, an expert at Bradford University's Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project in the UK.
But he says newer systems may avoid this problem by using less powerful laser beams. "This new wave of low-intensity laser weapons do not have a permanently damaging effect, apparently," he told New Scientist.
Several laboratories across the world are working on such weapons. But even low power laser systems can cause eye damage if they are used at close quarters or for extended periods.
The PHaSR may attempt to address safety concerns by automatically sensing its distance from a target. The limited information released by the DoD includes mention of an "eye-safe range finder", which may mean the laser's power is adjusted depending on the distance to the target. The system is also said to incorporate a "two wavelength laser system", which may be designed to counter goggles that can filter out certain wavelengths of laser light. Pulsing green light
Neil Davison, another expert at Bradford University, says the situation in Iraq may encourage the US to push for the development of less-than-lethal laser weapons. "They already use bright white lights at vehicle checkpoints in Iraq to dazzle drivers who are approaching too fast," he says.
Several commercial systems capable of temporarily dazzling a target exist. LE Systems, based in Connecticut, US, for example, makes the Laser Dazzler, which resembles an ordinary torch and emits a low power pulsing green laser light. The company says this device has been tested extensively and been shown to cause no lasting eye damage.
The possibility of causing lasting eye damage can be reduced by diffusing the laser beam or rapidly moving it across the target with a series of mirrors.
And the same US military research lab developed another laser weapon more than a decade ago, called the Sabre 203. This device attached beneath the barrel of a normal rifle and emitted a low-power laser light over a range of 300 metres. It was used by US forces in Somalia in 1995 but later shelved because of concerns over safety and effectiveness.
WTF! Who cares?
What a collosal folly to let the UN decide whether we can use less lethal weapons or not. (Perhaps we shall even be called upon to turn over to the UN details of how these weapons are made.)
Why let the UN have any voice in what we find necessary to defend ourselves?
(The UN never protested or intervened when poison gas was used by Iraq, or when genocide was carried out in Rwanda;
it's doing a lousy job in the Sudan--but when it comes to attacking the USA, anything goes.)
Don't they know about our Beebers?
Better.
Dead ones can't get an ACLU lawyer and file charges against us or demand constitutional rights.
Bump for the Beeber archive.
American amateur astronomers have been dazzling commercial airline pilots for several years now.
With a track record like that, why not officially use the DPSSFD lasers in tactical situations?
F**K The UN! Any laser weapons should KILL. Not just blind or stun but it needs to burn nice holes through the enemy.
All the enemy needs is a couple of these.
This was an improvement over the (CRASR) Crowd Repent And Stop Rioting gun.
I hope it has many settings. Like, a range from 'flashlight', to 'blind', to 'tear a bunch of new a**holes'.
New Terrorist Body Armor
so we daze them then we shoot them...
alright....
He's Dead Jim!
Agreed. They ought to field a laser that would cook the target's head in a nanosecond - no need to worry about blinding the target then.
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