

The Defense Secretary and Congress have been pounding on the Army, to start showing some results from its massive modernization project, Future Combat Systems. The Army is getting the message, sending a platoon of Future Combat's flying robots to Iraq, immediately.

30 of the Micro Air Vehicles, or MAVs, "are on their way to Baghdad two weeks from now," Future Combat Systems program manager Maj. Gen.

Charles Cartwright tells Defense News.

Unlike other small drones – which fly like miniature airplanes – the MAVs use ducted fans to float in the air. Hovering in one place, they can stare down with "electro­optical and infrared cameras, and soon will have a gimbal-mounted camera and a laser designator," *Defense News *notes.

Pressure from Congress and from the E-Ring may not be the only bureaucratic push to put the MAV on the Sandbox Express. There's also a bit of an inter-service rivalry surrounding the drones. The Navy announced back in January that their bomb technicians would use the 18-inch high, 40-pound machines look out for roadside explosives. (The MAVs were originally developed in a joint service program, and were only later sucked into Future Combat Systems.)

The Army is keen on showing off FCS'

relevance in today's fights – especially since the Defense Secretary said that program "must continue to demonstrate its value for the types of irregular challenges we will face." So the service is working to get other FCS gear out the door. There's talk of speeding up the Fire Scout robotic helicopter project, for instance. Last week, the service brought Future Combat's first prototype of its

next-generation cannon to the Capitol. But the display didn't go precisely as planned. FCS enthusiast Sen. James Inhofe, for one, wasn't interested in talking about how such a weapon might contributein Iraq or Afghanistan. First, he told a story about how Russia and China's growing military might. The he said:

*The United States Army currently ranks behind four other countries in cannon artillery capabilities; British, Russian, South African and

German artillery systems are better than the United States... I am happy to be able to say that those days are over, and today, with the rollout of the Non-Line-of-Sight Cannon, the United States once again retains for itself the greatest artillery piece in the world. *

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* Army's Familiar 'Future'

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* $190 Billion for "Modular Army"

* French Army "Future": Bad Idea?

* Army Defends Its 'Future'

* Army's $200 Billion Reboot Fizzles

* Army Future's Software Overload

* Congress Pulls Plug on Shady Defense Deals

* Future Combat Systems: Point, Click, Shoot

* Army "Future" vs. Insurgent Superbombs

* New Name for Army "Future"

* Old-School Army "Future"

* Army "Future": Invade Azerbaijan

* Guess Which Country We Invade in Army's "Future"

* Boeing Defends Big Price Tag for Army "Future"

* More Bucks for Army "Future"

* Army "Future" Flickering Out

* Army's Future Combat System Going, Going, But Not Quite Gone

* Shady Contract for Army "Future"

* Army "Future" Pricier, Lamer by the Second

* Son of Crusader

* How to Salvage Army's "Future"

* Hovering Drones Rushed to Iraq