• NuraShiny [any]@hexbear.net
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    26 days ago

    It’s contractor graft and military incompetence. The US has not been in a war that forced it to actually innovate since WW2 and has not had a military rival for 40 years. There is no actual enemy to measure new ideas against, so the idea has become to be ready for anything, without knowing what that anything is or what that anything needs as a countermeasure.

    I would argue that the last thing the military needs is new rifles. What can even be improved in that field any more? You are throwing the same exact ammo as ever, the delivery mechanism doesn’t matter that much and you already have uncountable millions of surplus guns collecting dust in warehouses. Every arguably cool way to do it differently (mainly that’s caseless ammo, lasers aren’t really man-portable weapons and gyrojet is just kinda stupid) has run into myriad problems that mean it’s not gonna be as good as cased ammo and that will stay true forever, because we need the new innovation today and not when it’s ready after many more years of research and optimization!

    Because if there isn’t a new rifle now to sell tens of millions of, then the contractor would run out of money. And if that happens, they can’t make new rifles. Which we don’t need, but we have no one else to make them, so they gotta keep making them. And since the rifle maker needs to make a profit (and more profit then last year too), because capitalism is a sane system with no flaws, these new rifles gotta get more and more expensive. Why they are more expensive doesn’t even matter, They just gotta be more expensive to keep the company afloat. Put AI in them next, that can tell the soldier made up facts about why they fight. It’s only a matter of time.

    Best system, best country, best empire.

    • Darkcommie@lemmygrad.ml
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      26 days ago

      XM7 was made because China and the US adversaries were getting better armour it was designed to penetrate that armour and “kill in one round” and to be fair it does it fairly well the problem is everything else, reduced ammo capacity, heavier equipment (in an era where surveillance is easier than ever and the army expects its troops to be constantly on the move) and also the idea of the weapon sounds neat but as we see in combat footage like Ukraine, Afghanistan etc combat is chaotic whenever you fire at someone they’re going to be ducking for cover, trying to get away from you or hiding themselves to such an extent that the only way you could see them is through their muzzle flash.

      Only time will tell if this rifle is good enough

          • NuraShiny [any]@hexbear.net
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            26 days ago

            Well good for them for actually iterating on that!

            I am sure the ability for an infantryman to kill another infantryman is highly, highly crucial in tomorrow’s wars, where everything will be a drone that explodes.

            • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.mlOP
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              25 days ago

              Drones are important but the infantryman isn’t getting replaced any time soon. Still the backbone of the army.

                • cfgaussian@lemmygrad.mlOP
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                  25 days ago

                  Yea, to hold ground

                  Yes that’s part of it. Also storming positions is still done by dismounted infantry. You don’t need very fancy guns but you still need good ones. Also the role of sniper has not disappeared.

                  Drones have not replaced infantry. They fulfill roles previously assigned to reconnaissance, sabotage, specialized anti-armor units, CAS, and partly artillery (though artillery has also not been obsoleted by drones, it just serves a slightly different purpose).

                  Drones can neither take nor hold ground. Anyone who makes the mistake of overinvesting into drones at the expense of the traditional “basics” makes the same mistake as those who overinvest in airpower.

                  • NuraShiny [any]@hexbear.net
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                    25 days ago

                    The US does not need this, as any war they could need it for would end on the day it’s started in nuclear hellfire. You don’t need this fancy shit to murder civilians and irregulars.

    • ComradeSalad@lemmygrad.ml
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      25 days ago

      Since WW2? Both the Soviets and Americans pulled out some insane engineering feats throughout the Cold War, I’d say that with Reagan consolidating the military industrial complex in the early 80s in light of the Soviet Unions imminent collapse, the stage was set for corporations to kick up their feet.