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Robots Draw Rough Duty as U.S. Combat-Tests Them In Afghanistan
By Tanalee Smith
Associated Press
posted: 09:53 am ET
30 July 2002

QIQAY, Afghanistan (AP) _ Hermes the robot edged its way into the dark cave, its treads spinning over the dust and small rocks _ until a larger boulder appeared in the path

QIQAY, Afghanistan (AP) _ Hermes the robot edged its way into the dark cave, its treads spinning over the dust and small rocks _ until a larger boulder appeared in the path. No problem. The tiny, tanklike machine dropped its side arms, lifted onto and over the boulder, and rolled on, its two cameras sending images to his operator waiting outside.

The war in Afghanistan is the first time robots are being used by the U.S. military as tools for combat. Proponents of the robots believe sending them first into caves, buildings or other dark areas will help prevent U.S. casualties.

On Monday, Hermes was first to enter many of the dozen caves being searched by troops from the 82nd Airborne Division, based in Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Mounted with two cameras and rolling on lime-green wheels and tan treads, the 1-foot-tall (3-centimeter-tall) Hermes disappeared into the darkness, sending images back to the controller, who used a joystick to maneuver the squat robot up and over boulders, around obstacles and over ground that could be mined or otherwise dangerous.
   Images

A soldier uses a robot to detect mines at Bagram Air Base, north of Kabul, Afghanistan, Friday, March 22, 2002. Nearly a quarter-century of fighting has left Bagram littered with mines and unexploded ordnance, from the tiny, flesh-shredding toe-popper land mines to rusting 500-pound Soviet bombs sticking out of the fields just beyond the runway.(AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel)
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``The robot is a great addition to our team,'' said Lt. Col. Ron Rose, who led Monday's mission in Qiqay, about 20 miles (30 kilometers) from Khost in eastern Afghanistan, where U.S. forces are searching for remnants of the Taliban and al-Qaida. ``It is going to prove its worth.''

A one-mile (1.6-kilometer) stretch of land along a dried-up riverbed here holds at least a dozen caves, some with roughly hewn entrances and shallow depths, others with almost perfectly arched entrances. All were potential hiding places.

The three-foot-long (1-meter-long) Hermes roamed a half-dozen caves, finding no danger but ensuring it was safe for soldiers to enter. It traversed the entire length of two tunnels, coming out safely the other side.

The weight of the robot _ 42 pounds (19 kilograms) _ is enough to set off any buried mines. Its height is enough to trip booby-trap wires at foot level. For any traps set higher, or for a general scan of the area, the robots rely on their cameras, which continually scope out their surroundings. Hermes, a prototype, can be fitted with up to 12 cameras.

After Hermes proved a cave was safe, soldiers entered the caves, drawing maps and taking measurements to calculate the amount of explosives needed to blow up the cave so it could not be used as a hiding place.

Col. Bruce Jette, director of the robotics team, said the robots are a perfect way to increase the safety for soldiers _ a great leap from the Vietnam War, when a lone soldier would be sent into a dark area with a a rope tied around him to assess the danger.

``This is history,'' Jette said. ``Nobody has ever used a robot in combat before.''

Jette, deputy of the Objective Force Task Force, was asked by the U.S. Department of Defense to head the project at the end of May, and brought the completed prototypes here a month ago. They have been tested by a few different military companies and will be left behind to assist U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Jette said the soldiers have seen the value of the robots and even suggested more uses for them, including as security monitors or listening posts.

The four dlrs 40,000 prototypes _ Hermes, Professor, Thing and Fester _ can hold up to 12 cameras, a grenade launcher and a 12-gauge shotgun. The sturdy, 42-pound robots operate on a sensor system and by wireless desktop control. They are fitted with a Global Positioning System, and can see themselves and each other on a map, ensuring more efficient searches. They run on 2, 6-pound rechargeable batteries that run one hour each.

Jette returns Wednesday to the United States, and will put together an analysis of the robots and their effectiveness in the field.

``It appears the best course of action is to put more robots in the hands of soldiers faster so the soldiers are not in personal danger,'' Jette said.


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