US XM25 Counter Defilade Target Engagement System

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The weapon itself is shown at the bottom.

The XM25 Counter Defilade Target Engagement System has a range of roughly 2,300 feet - and is to be deployed in Afghanistan soon. I would call it the “Equalizer.” Some call it the “Punisher”.


The rifle’s gun sight uses a laser rangefinder to determine the exact distance to the obstruction, after which the soldier can add or subtract up to 3 meters from that distance to enable the bullets to clear the barrier and explode above or beside the target.

Soldiers will be able to use them to target snipers hidden in trenches rather than calling in air strikes.


The 25-millimeter round contains a chip that receives a radio signal from the gun sight as to the precise distance to the target.







Lt. Col. Christopher Lehner, project manager for the system, described the weapon as a ‘game-changer’ that other nations will try and copy.







He expects the Army to buy 12,500 of the XM25 rifles this year, enough for every member of the infantry and special forces.







Lehner told Fox News: “With this weapon system, we take away cover from [enemy targets] forever. Tactics are going to have to be rewritten. The only thing we can see [enemies]
being able to do is run away.”


Experts say the rifle means that enemy troops will no longer be safe if they take cover. The XM25 appears to be the perfect weapon for street-to-street fighting that troops in Afghanistan have to engage in, with enemy fighters hiding behind walls and only breaking cover to fire occasionally.







The weapon’s laser finder would work out how far away the enemy was and then the U.S. soldier would add one meter using a button near the trigger.







When fired, the explosive round would carry exactly one meter past the wall and explode with the force of a hand grenade above the Taliban fighter.

The army’s project manager for new weapons, Douglas Tamilio, said: ‘‘This is the first leap-ahead technology for troops that we’ve been able to develop and deploy.”

A patent granted to the bullet’s maker, Alliant Tech systems, reveals that the chip can determine how far it has traveled. Mr. Tamilio said: “You could shoot a Javelin missile, and it would cost about $69,000. These rounds will end up costing $25.00 apiece.”

They’re relatively cheap. Lehner added: “This is a game-changer. The enemy has learned to get cover, for hundreds if not thousands of years. Well, they can’t do that anymore. We’re taking that cover from them and there’s only two outcomes: We’re going to get you behind that cover or force you to flee.” The rifle will initially use high-explosive rounds, but its makers say that it might later use versions with smaller explosive charges that aim to stun rather than kill.
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What one of the revolutionary bullets looks like that can be pre-programmed to explode to hit troops that are hiding.


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I was wondering when this would hit the field. The 25mm man cannon has been in prototyping for a few years now, and the us army said that they planned to continue development on the targeting system from the xm8 weapons platform (originialy for the 40mm grenade).
Scare #### coming from an infantry point of view.
 
This is what became of the original OICW project. It origanlly had a 5.56 assault rifle under barrel and the sight performed double duty. The original was quite heavy and I think they felt splitting the 2 and having the 25mm launcher as a separate platform. Very clever system. I also wondered when this was gonna see the light of day.
 
Yeah scary if your an infanteer for sure. The only thing thats kind of remotely comforting is that it "explodes with the force of a hand grenade" The USMC has reduced the "book" effective kill radius of a hand grenade to 1M. Apparently they aren't that lethal unless ur pretty much sitting on it.
So hopefully the bad guys don't have that great of aim.
 
The Xm25 project has been around for a few years as some one already posted. I could see the forces adopting maybe one per squad as a Gernader. But I can only imagine the cost of adopting these on mass. Not to mention, there is only a set number of situations that some thing like this can be tactically useful. Last time I checked clearing rooms with a grenade launcher in CQB was a bad idea...
 
Once these get copied or sold to other nations an enemy carrying that thing will become the priority target. Don't want him getting a shot off.
 
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