Technocracy News
Technocrats at defense contractors have developed a hybrid targeting system using drones and AI that find their own targets, then coordinate with artillery-launch missiles for destruction.
There has never been a weapon created in the history of mankind that was not used in battle.
⁃ TN Editor
DPICM made artillery more lethal than ever, but 
there was a cost nobody foresaw: unexploded dud bomblets often littered 
battlefields, becoming a danger to civilians long after the war was 
over. An international movement to ban cluster bombs and artillery came 
about, and though the U.S. isn’t a signatory it has pledged not to use 
munitions with a dud rate greater than one percent. Dud rates for such 
weapons often reach five percent or more.
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Technocrats at defense contractors have developed a hybrid targeting system using drones and AI that find their own targets, then coordinate with artillery-launch missiles for destruction.
There has never been a weapon created in the history of mankind that was not used in battle.
⁃ TN Editor
The U.S. Army is working on a new artillery shell 
capable of locating enemy targets, including moving tanks and armored 
vehicles. The shell, called Cannon-Delivered Area Effects Munition 
(C-DAEM), is designed to replace older weapons that leave behind 
unexploded cluster bomblets on the battlefield that might pose a threat 
to civilians. The shell is designed to hit targets even in situations 
where GPS is jammed and friendly forces are not entirely sure where the 
enemy is.
In the 1980s, the U.S. Army fielded dual purpose 
improved conventional munition (DPICM) artillery rounds. DPICM was 
basically the concept of cluster bombs applied to artillery, with a 
single shell packing dozens of tennis ball-sized grenades or bomblets. 
DPICM shells were designed to eject the bomblets over the battlefield, 
dispersing them over a wide area. The bomblets were useful unprotected 
infantry troops and could knock out a tank or armored vehicle’s treads, 
weapons, or sensors, disabling it.
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