Robots: Eliminating the First Contact with an Enemy Force
March 8, 2016 | U.S. ArmyEstimated reading time: 4 minutes
"We should be thinking about having a robotic vanguard, particularly for maneuver formations," said Dr. Bob Sadowski. "There's no reason why the first contact with an enemy force should be with a man-platform, because it means that platform is at the greatest risk."
Sadowski, the Army's chief roboticist at U.S. Army Tank Automotive Research Development and Engineering Center, or TARDEC, in Warren, Michigan, spoke at a robotics conference here, March 2.
A robot doesn't feel pain and suffering if it gets blown up, he continued. "We want it to be the bullet catcher who takes those rounds."
Besides taking the hit, robots could pinpoint and uncover the direction from which the enemy is firing, he added.
Realizing that the enemy is also developing these systems, he said. "So if we don't play in this space, we're not even going to understand what the enemy is doing."
WHERE WE'RE AT
Over the last 10 years, the Army has focused on logistical challenges in Iraq and Afghanistan, Sadowski said. A lot of Soldiers were lost in convoys that encountered improvised explosive devices and the funding and research went into stopping that.
The Army's demonstration of driverless vehicles took place in May 2014 at the Department of Energy's Savannah River Site in South Carolina, where a convoy consisting of seven different tactical vehicles drove completely unmanned at speeds exceeding 40 mph.
Once that technology matures and is fielded, the problem is that "if you replace 16 drivers with 16 autonomous vehicles, you've just lost 16 M-16s that the drivers would be carrying to protect the convoy," Sadowski said, "So you'd need to consider arming the autonomous vehicles, with a Soldier being the remote triggerman."
Possibly by the end of this year, that experiment at Savannah River will morph into an extended warfighter experiment, or, an Army warfighter assessment at Fort Bliss, Texas, he added.
WHERE WE'RE GOING
Today, the effort is still in logistics, but current thinking and doctrine is that robots should be more than logistics; they should be in the fight as well, he said.
The Marines tried this with a robot in Afghanistan, a mule-like device that followed a patrol dismounted, he said. It was rated for 1,000 pounds but the Marines loaded it up with 2,000. Then they complained it was too slow.
So in the future, Sadowski said perhaps robots need to be able to talk back and say, "Sir, I can't carry that."
Currently, testing of vehicles is being done on-road, but off-road is where Soldiers fight, he said.
Future robotic development may go to warp speed by using modeling and simulation, saving time and money by plugging scenarios into computers and testing vehicles in dirt, mud, snow, sand, rain and so on, he said.
To get a peek at the future, look at what's being done already, he said. The Army teamed with Sikorsky and Lockheed Martin to rig a UH-60D helicopter to fly autonomously carrying a robot as its payload. It flew without the aid of a pilot to its destination, dropped off the robot and flew back.
Had it had problems along the way, say with its engine, a sensor was programmed to look for possible landing sites along the way. As well, the robot payload, which was slingloaded, was balanced by the computer , which gave it even more stability in-flight than a pilot could have done, he said.
Page 1 of 2
Testimonial
"In a year when every marketing dollar mattered, I chose to keep I-Connect007 in our 2025 plan. Their commitment to high-quality, insightful content aligns with Koh Young’s values and helps readers navigate a changing industry. "
Brent Fischthal - Koh YoungSuggested Items
Mobix Labs Secures Significant U.S. Navy Tomahawk Missile Component Order as Production Accelerates
03/04/2026 | BUSINESS WIREMobix Labs, Inc., a provider of 5G mmWave, defense, and aerospace components, today announced receipt of a significant production purchase order for components used in the U.S. Navy’s Tomahawk cruise missile program.
Lockheed Martin Demonstrates Next-Gen Command and Control at Lightning Surge 1
01/26/2026 | Lockheed MartinIn collaboration with the 25th Infantry Division (25ID), CPE C3N, multiple U.S. Army stakeholders and several industry partners including Raft and Accelint, Lockheed Martin delivered and successfully demonstrated the first iteration of a Next Generation Command and Control (NGC2) prototype at Lightning Surge 1 (LS1).
Mil Aero High Speed Connectors Market Report 2026: $7.41 Bn Opportunities, Trends, Competitive Landscape, Strategies, and Forecasts, 2020-2025, 2025-2030F, 2035F
01/20/2026 | GlobeNewswireThe Mil Aero High-Speed Connectors Market Global Report 2026 offers strategists, marketers, and senior management the essential data to evaluate this swiftly developing market. The report predicts and analyzes trends that will influence the sector in the next decade and beyond, providing a roadmap to capture emerging opportunities.
Teledyne FLIR Wins $32M Recon Surveillance Contract in Bulgaria
01/15/2026 | BUSINESS WIRETeledyne FLIR Defense, part of Teledyne Technologies Incorporated, announced that it has been awarded a contract by the U.S. Army worth up to $32 million to deliver and integrate advanced electro-optical (EO/IR) systems for the Stryker Infantry Carrier Vehicle (ICV) Recon Kit.
Inside the Fight for U.S. Advanced Packaging: Military Electronics Experts Weigh In
12/15/2025 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamModern warfare—driven by rapid evolution of UAVs, autonomous systems, and high-speed sensing—has made it clear that U.S. defense electronics must move beyond legacy architectures and embrace UHDI, advanced substrates, and next-generation interconnect technologies. In this roundtable discussion, two defense electronics experts outline a central challenge: The U.S. cannot field high-performance systems or maintain technological advantage while relying on overseas PCB, substrate, and component supply chains.