Laser Weapons In U.S. Sights
Oct. 20, 2003
The military's Tactical High Energy Laser
is a chemical laser in a test stage. Solid-state lasers could be
smaller and more mobile. (Photo: AP)

Solid-state lasers could shoot down mortars and
artillery shells, explode ordnance in enemy depots and even wipe out
ballistic missiles 500 miles away.
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(CBS) U.S. scientists are on the verge of creating a laser
weapon that could give American forces an awesome advantage on the
battlefield, but would also raise tough questions for Pentagon war planners,
a newspaper reports.
After 40 years of work, the Pentagon may have a solid-state laser in its
arsenal within a decade, reports the Oakland Tribune.
Compared to the chemical lasers now in use by America's military,
solid-state lasers would be compact and efficient — perhaps running off
the engine of an Army Humvee or an Air Force F-16.
Solid-state lasers would also be deadly. In a recent demonstration at
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory — one of three sites of research on
a solid-state laser — a test-fired laser emitted 400 pulses of light in
two seconds, drilling through an inch of steel, the Tribune reported.
Once fully developed, the Tribune reports, solid-state lasers could shoot
down mortars and artillery shells, explode ordnance in enemy depots and even
wipe out ballistic missiles 500 miles away. They would strike with
incredible speed and could be retargeted instantly.
Contrary to science fiction, the lasers will not be visible streams of
light. Instead, targets will simply explode. Troops will not point and shoot
lasers, because they will most likely have to react to dangers and targets
moving too fast for a human response. Nor will lasers be holster-sized —
the smallest to date is the size of a commercial jetliner.
Making lasers smaller is one reason for moving from chemical lasers —
which require a larger mass of chemicals to generate more power — to
solid-state lasers, which use electricity to generate a beam. According to
the Tribune, Northrup Grumman is trying to reduce the size of one laser to
fit in a single C-130 cargo plane.
But once the technical problems are solved, strategic issues will loom
large, posing questions that, so far, the Pentagon has not answered.
For example, it is unclear if the U.S. would use the laser to target people
or restrict its use to hitting inanimate targets. It is not known whether
lasers would be employed to defend or attack satellites.
How will U.S. doctrine accommodate a weapon that can strike without
detection possibly hundreds of miles away at relatively little cost? Since
no other country is anywhere near developing a militarized solid-state
laser, under what circumstances would the U.S. use it in a war?
In most cases, the "law of war" requires discrimination and
proportionality. While a laser could do a better job of discriminating
between troops and civilians, it is unclear that its use could be
proportional to any enemy threat.
The military already uses several types of lasers. Some guide bombs and
missiles. An experimental system, the Tactical High Energy Laser, has been
used to shoot down missiles in demonstrations.
The national missile defense system includes work on an Airborne Laser that
would be mounted on a freighter aircraft and used to shoot down ballistic
missiles in flight.