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Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Future Combat System

The GAO has a report on the problems with technology roadblocks in fielding the Future Combat System (FCS). While conceding the Army is working on overcoming problems:


Yet, today, the program remains a long way from having the level of knowledge it should have had before starting product development. FCS has all the markers for risks that would be difficult to accept for any single system, much less a complex, multi-system effort. These challenges are even more daunting in the case of FCS not only because there are so many of them but because FCS represents a new concept of operations that is predicated on technological breakthroughs. Thus, technical problems, which accompany immaturity, not only pose traditional risks to cost, schedule, and performance; they pose risks to the new fighting concepts envisioned by the Army.

As I wrote in this blog, the wonder tank will not be built (and here, too). I mentioned the FCS issue in an article of mine that Military Review published in 2002 and commented on the problem of our assumed great leap forward in technology:

Although different authors project capabilities, some ordinary and some fantastic, the overall tenor of the debate has a science fair quality. If you could wish for a future combat vehicle, it would be nice to receive one that was beyond your wildest dreams. Reality is likely to be far less comforting in its ability to reconcile the Army's need for power and deployability. It must not count on fielding a system that "pushes the boundaries of technology well beyond what is achievable today." It may be as reasonable just to skip the inconvenient task of building an FCS and just wish for victory.

I concluded:

Building the FCS, however, is a high-risk venture. The Army should not spend whatever it takes attempting to meld multiple revolutionary technologies into one vehicle for all missions. The FCS should be different from the Abrams and Bradley but must be designed with near-term technology that incorporates modular improvements if the Army is to turn "gee whiz" ideas into actual hardware. Separated missiles and a sensor grid; active defenses; EGTs; and exotic engines, fuels, and weapons can be retrofitted to defeat more capable enemies. Barring successfully fielding exotic technologies to make the FCS work, the Army must consider how it will defeat future heavy systems if fighting actual enemies and not merely suppressing disorder becomes its mission once again. The tentative assumptions of 2001 will change by 2025. When they do, the Army will rue its failure today to accept that the wonder tank will not be built.


Main battle tanks are not yet obsolete since we have not come up with their replacement yet. And our assumptions sure have changed. As I noted here and here, the Abrams heavy main battle tanks will be around for quite a while.