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Run away the ray-gun is coming : We test US army's new secret weapon
Daily Mail ^ | 9/18/07 | Michael Hanlon, wimp

Posted on 09/25/2007 11:35:44 AM PDT by LibWhacker

Modern face of warfare: The Silent Guardian "Where do I put my finger? There ... OK? Nothing's happening ... is it on?"

"Yes, it's on. Move your finger a bit closer."

"Er ... ow! OW!" Not good. I try again. "OWWW!" I pull my hand away sharpish. My finger is throbbing, but seems undamaged.

I was told people can take it for a second, maximum. No way, not for a wimp like me.

I try it again. It is a bit like touching a red-hot wire, but there is no heat, only the sensation of heat. There is no burn mark or blister.

Its makers claim this infernal machine is the modern face of warfare. It has a nice, friendly sounding name, Silent Guardian.

I am told not to call it a ray-gun, though that is precisely what it is (the term "pain gun" is maybe better, but I suppose they would like that even less).

And, to be fair, the machine is not designed to vaporise, shred, atomise, dismember or otherwise cause permanent harm.

But it is a horrible device nonetheless, and you are forced to wonder what the world has come to when human ingenuity is pressed into service to make a thing like this.

Silent Guardian is making waves in defence circles. Built by the U.S. firm Raytheon, it is part of its "Directed Energy Solutions" programme.

What it amounts to is a way of making people run away, very fast, without killing or even permanently harming them.

That is what the company says, anyway. The reality may turn out to be more horrific.

I tested a table-top demonstration model, but here's how it works in the field.

A square transmitter as big as a plasma TV screen is mounted on the back of a Jeep.

When turned on, it emits an invisible, focused beam of radiation - similar to the microwaves in a domestic cooker - that are tuned to a precise frequency to stimulate human nerve endings.

It can throw a wave of agony nearly half a mile.

Because the beam penetrates skin only to a depth of 1/64th of an inch, it cannot, says Raytheon, cause visible, permanent injury.

But anyone in the beam's path will feel, over their entire body, the agonising sensation I've just felt on my fingertip. The prospect doesn't bear thinking about.

"I have been in front of the full-sized system and, believe me, you just run. You don't have time to think about it - you just run," says George Svitak, a Raytheon executive.

Silent Guardian is supposed to be the 21st century equivalent of tear gas or water cannon - a way of getting crowds to disperse quickly and with minimum harm. Its potential is obvious.

"In Iraq, there was a situation when combatants had taken media as human shields. The battalion commander told me there was no way of separating combatants from non-combatants without lethal force," Mr Svitak tells me.

He says this weapon would have made it possible because everyone, friend or foe, would have run from it.

In tests, even the most hardened Marines flee after a few seconds of exposure. It just isn't possible to tough it out.

This machine has the ability to inflict limitless, unbearable pain.

What makes it OK, says Raytheon, is that the pain stops as soon as you are out of the beam or the machine is turned off.

But my right finger was tingling hours later - was that psychosomatic?

So what is the problem? All right, it hurts, but then so do tear gas and water cannon and they have been used by the world's police and military for decades.

Am I being squeamish?

One thing is certain: not just the Silent Guardian, but weapons such as the Taser, the electric stun-gun, are being rolled out by Britain's police forces as the new way of controlling people by using pain.

And, as the Raytheon chaps all insist, you always have the option to get out of the way (just as you have the option to comply with the police officer's demands and not get Tasered).

But there is a problem: mission creep. This is the Americanism which describes what happens when, over time, powers or techniques are used to ends not stated or even imagined when they were devised.

With the Taser, the rules in place in Britain say it must be used only as an alternative to the gun. But what happens in ten or 20 years if a new government chooses to amend these rules?

It is so easy to see the Taser being used routinely to control dissent and pacify - as, indeed, already happens in the U.S.

And the Silent Guardian? Raytheon's Mac Jeffery says it is being looked at only by the "North American military and its allies" and is not being sold to countries with questionable human rights records.

An MoD spokesman said Britain is not planning to buy this weapon.

In fact, it is easy to see the raygun being used not as an alternative to lethal force (when I can see that it is quite justified), but as an extra weapon in the battle against dissent.

Because it is, in essence, a simple machine, it is easy to see similar devices being pressed into service in places with extremely dubious reputations.

There are more questions: in tests, volunteers have been asked to remove spectacles and contact lenses before being microwaved. Does this imply these rays are not as harmless as Raytheon insists?

What happens when someone with a weak heart is zapped?

And, perhaps most worryingly, what if deployment of Silent Guardian causes mass panic, leaving some people unable to flee in the melee? Will they just be stuck there roasting?

Raytheon insists the system is set up to limit exposure, but presumably these safeguards can be over-ridden.

Silent Guardian and the Taser are just the first in a new wave of "non-lethal" weaponry being developed, mostly in the U.S.

These include not only microwave ray-guns, but the terrifying Pulsed Energy Projectile weapon. This uses a powerful laser which, when it hits someone up to 11/2 miles away, produces a "plasma" - a bubble of superhot gas - on the skin.

A report in New Scientist claimed the focus of research was to heighten the pain caused by this semi-classified weapon.

And a document released under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act talks of "optimal pulse parameters to evoke peak nociceptor activation" - i.e. cause the maximum agony possible, leaving no permanent damage.

Perhaps the most alarming prospect is that such machines would make efficient torture instruments.

They are quick, clean, cheap, easy to use and, most importantly, leave no marks. What would happen if they fell into the hands of unscrupulous nations where torture is not unknown?

The agony the Raytheon gun inflicts is probably equal to anything in a torture chamber - these waves are tuned to a frequency exactly designed to stimulate the pain nerves.

I couldn't hold my finger next to the device for more than a fraction of a second. I could make the pain stop, but what if my finger had been strapped to the machine?

Dr John Wood, a biologist at UCL and an expert in the way the brain perceives pain, is horrified by the new pain weapons.

"They are so obviously useful as torture instruments," he says.

"It is ethically dubious to say they are useful for crowd control when they will obviously be used by unscrupulous people for torture."

We use the word "medieval" as shorthand for brutality. The truth is that new technology makes racks look benign.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: ads; bang; banglist; miltech; nonlethal; raygun; runaway; silentguardian
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To: LibWhacker
Hmmm .... so what happens when some unscupulous police officer aims this thing into a jail cell????

Just a thought.

61 posted on 09/25/2007 1:23:13 PM PDT by Centurion2000 (“Jesus Saves. Moses Delivers. Cthulu Reposesses...")
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To: Centurion2000
correction: unscruplulous.

Because saying scruples is fun .....

62 posted on 09/25/2007 1:25:26 PM PDT by Centurion2000 (“Jesus Saves. Moses Delivers. Cthulu Reposesses...")
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To: LibWhacker

I am told not to call it a ray-gun, though that is precisely what it is...

Would you prefer we call it RayBan?

63 posted on 09/25/2007 1:27:35 PM PDT by Jonah Hex ("How'd you get that scar, mister?" "Nicked myself shaving.")
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To: LibWhacker

Too bad we will never use it in combat.


64 posted on 09/25/2007 1:27:37 PM PDT by airborne (Proud to be a conservative! Proud to support Duncan Hunter for President!)
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To: Centurion2000

He’ll get the Nobel Prize in medicine for finally figuring out how to completely rehabilitate criminals! j/k


65 posted on 09/25/2007 1:28:05 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: pyx

silent guardian would be the least of our concerns if Hillary is elected


66 posted on 09/25/2007 1:31:15 PM PDT by ari-freedom (I am for traditional moral values, a strong national defense, and free markets.)
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To: airborne

Too good we will actually just kill the bad guys


67 posted on 09/25/2007 1:33:29 PM PDT by ari-freedom (I am for traditional moral values, a strong national defense, and free markets.)
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To: LibWhacker

Horrible side effect - look what it did that man’s fingernails.


68 posted on 09/25/2007 1:35:49 PM PDT by relictele
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To: Gorzaloon
I think I shall buy shares in Reynolds and Alcoa in time for the next demonstration season. Full-body tinfoil..the new fashion.

I wonder if that would be protective, or result in your being extra crispy?
69 posted on 09/25/2007 1:40:39 PM PDT by Kozak (Anti Shahada: There is no god named Allah, and Muhammed is a false prophet)
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To: LibWhacker
"In fact, it is easy to see the raygun being used not as an alternative to lethal force (when I can see that it is quite justified), but as an extra weapon in the battle against dissent."

Who is conducting this "battle?" How would this weapon prevent the author's dissent? Paranoid.

70 posted on 09/25/2007 1:40:55 PM PDT by Misterioso
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To: LibWhacker

Considering how Muslims use women and children as human shields, this could be useful in persuading the shields that maybe they don’t want the job


71 posted on 09/25/2007 2:09:14 PM PDT by SauronOfMordor (When injustice becomes law, rebellion becomes duty)
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To: buwaya

In any event (and I agree with you) I note that the author doesn’t credit it with being non-lethal, not does he make the distinction bewteen its non-lethality and the planting of IEDs or car bombs designed to kill or maim civilians.


72 posted on 09/25/2007 3:43:05 PM PDT by CaptRon (Pedicaris alive or Raisuli dead)
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To: LibWhacker

“It is a bit like touching a red-hot wire, but there is no heat, only the sensation of heat. There is no burn mark or blister.”

The perfect weapon for someone who doesn’t want evidence left at the scene of the crime.


73 posted on 09/25/2007 4:07:19 PM PDT by abishai
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To: onedoug

ping


74 posted on 09/26/2007 1:08:33 PM PDT by windcliff
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To: cyclotic
And, to be fair, the machine is not designed to vaporise, shred, atomise, dismember or otherwise cause permanent harm.
Ah, fooey.
75 posted on 09/26/2007 4:31:02 PM PDT by raygun (Boy that Catch-22 is a pretty big catch. Yep, its the best that there is.)
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To: LibWhacker
Run away the ray-gun is coming

You can run, but you'll just die fried.

76 posted on 09/27/2007 10:54:09 PM PDT by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: Regulator
I haven't heard of the North American military.

North American Air Defense Command.

The Mexicans refer to both Canadians and US citizens as Norte Americanos. They do not call themselves that. They do sometimes call themselves Americanos, but only in the context that includes Tierra del Fueganos to Aleuts.

77 posted on 09/27/2007 11:01:05 PM PDT by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: theBuckwheat

Could you could strap someone to a table and use this on them for 5 minutes straight, would it do damage then? The pain would be unbearable, like burning alive but not being able to die.


78 posted on 09/27/2007 11:02:35 PM PDT by Xenophon450 (They say it's lonely at the top, then I am as lonely as can be.)
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To: buwaya
Build a bunch of 'em, with beams wide in azimuth and narrow in elevation. (ie. taller skinner antennas) and put then along the border, maybe both borders. Leave 'em on all the time.

If nothing else, you'll find out what countermeasures work against the system.

Tinfoil burkas perhaps?

79 posted on 09/27/2007 11:06:13 PM PDT by El Gato ("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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To: LibWhacker

A Faraday Cage would defeat it. Picture a suit of chainmail with links the size of the metal mesh in a microwave oven door. You’d need to ground it.

Another way to defeat it would be through mental conditioning. You get a device and deliberately subject your men to it, teaching them to use meditation and other forms of self-hypnosis to ignore the pain. You start with a ten second exposure; when you men can take ten seconds, you give them fifteen; when they can stand fifteen, up it to twenty; and so forth.

A corner reflector held up in front of one of these things would also have interesting effects.


80 posted on 09/27/2007 11:15:28 PM PDT by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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