GRAFENWOEHR,
Germany – Soldiers with the
1st Infantry Division got a sneak peek at the Army’s future Sept. 24
when they fired three experimental weapons at Grafenwoehr Training Area.
The new weapons are
upgraded versions of a grenade launcher, a machine gun and a
semi-automatic rifle. The systems are produced at Picatinny Arsenal,
N.J.
Lt. Col. Kevin
Stoddard, project manager for crew-served weapons at Picatinny, said
Soldiers were getting a chance to fire “the next generation of Soldier
weapons.” He said the weapons were built from the ground up with
feedback from Soldiers after each step. The final result was the
weapons, which were fired Sept. 24.
With optical and
thermal sights and little kickback, the weapons proved easy to fire, and
most Soldiers hit the targets on their first attempts.
“These weapons
allow Soldiers to get their first round on target, quickly engage the
enemy, and move to the next target,” Stoddard said.
Spc. Jason
Enriquez, an infantryman with B Company, 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry
Regiment, was the first Soldier in the area to fire the XM25, a
semiautomatic weapon. He had glowing reports on its capabilities.
“It was totally
smooth and light. It shot fantastic,” he said. “It moves your head and
snaps you back. I never felt a kick like that before, but it was smooth.
It wasn’t rough.”
The XM25 is
equipped with a ballistic computer, thermal sights and zoom
capabilities.
Like Enriquez, Spc.
Matthew Krupa also found the weapon easy to use.
“The accuracy was
amazing,” Krupa said, a tanker with Headquarters and Headquarters Troop,
1st Bn., 4th U.S. Cavalry Rgt. “The site was perfect, very advanced.”
Having the XM25 in
Iraq would have proven beneficial, Krupa added.
“It would be good
for getting people behind walls or ducking behind cars. It would have
helped a lot,” he said.
Also tested was the
XM312, which shoots, handles and maintains like a light machine gun.
Spc. Jay Teller and other firers were amazed at both the accuracy and
steadiness of the XM312.
“It has a site, and
it doesn’t move much because there isn’t much kick, so you can keep your
eye right on the crosshairs,” said Teller, who serves as a scout with C
Troop, 1st Bn., 4th U.S. Cav. Rgt. “It’s a very easy weapon to shoot.”
The ability to lay
the first round on target is what impressed Teller the most.
“It would have been
very beneficial downrange. There’s zero time for the bad guy to see
what’s going on,” he said.
That also means a
more optimal use of ammunition, noted Spc. Jonathan Calvin, a fueler
with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 121st Signal Bn.
“It conserves a lot
of rounds because of the accuracy. You would be able to hit your target
every time,” Calvin said.
Also tested was the
SM320, a low-velocity grenade launcher that either attaches to a host
rifle or is fired as a stand-alone weapon. Although none of the Soldiers
had used it before, most scored hits on their first try.
Stoddard said he
expects the fielding of these advanced weapons to begin in 2008.