surtout qu'en pensez vous?
Dorenavant la guerre ne sera plus dirigée par une armée reelle sur le terrain mais par de petits robots qui font la sale besogne en jetant des missiles la ou sa vaut le coup. "L'ennemi" sera neutralisé de la maison du "combattant
Une guerre pareille bien sur va en l'encontre des principes moraux car alors que la partie opposée est bien sur le terrain et prete a mourir pour ces croyances, les pays en possession de cette arme diabolique est presque invisible et surtout invincible.
A mon avis l'utilisateur d'un tel procedé dans la guerre est un lache.
Aujourdhui pas seulement les USA mais aussi l'Iran et le Pakistan possedent cette astuce de guerre des robots sur terrain. Est ce le retour a la guerre froide? Ou simplement le commencement du declin de l'armée reelle?
Dorenavant la guerre ne sera plus dirigée par une armée reelle sur le terrain mais par de petits robots qui font la sale besogne en jetant des missiles la ou sa vaut le coup. "L'ennemi" sera neutralisé de la maison du "combattant
Une guerre pareille bien sur va en l'encontre des principes moraux car alors que la partie opposée est bien sur le terrain et prete a mourir pour ces croyances, les pays en possession de cette arme diabolique est presque invisible et surtout invincible.
A mon avis l'utilisateur d'un tel procedé dans la guerre est un lache.
Aujourdhui pas seulement les USA mais aussi l'Iran et le Pakistan possedent cette astuce de guerre des robots sur terrain. Est ce le retour a la guerre froide? Ou simplement le commencement du declin de l'armée reelle?
From Nic Robertson
CNN Senior International Correspondent
(CNN) -- The Pentagon has revolutionized warfare during the past decade, making unmanned aerial vehicles, known as UAVs, a staple of modern combat in Afghanistan and Iraq.
A USAF technician at Creech Air Force Base, checks Hellfire missile attachments on a Predator.
Remotely-controlled drones, such as the Predator and the Reaper, have allowed the U.S. military to spy on and attack enemy combatants without putting their own forces at risk, thereby making UAVs a must-have.
"The real advantage of unmanned aerial systems is they allow you to project power without projecting vulnerability," says USAF Lt. Gen. David Deptula at the Pentagon.
But as USAF commanders try to provide enough pilots to take charge of drones, many are considering another aspect of the warfare revolution -- the psychological impact on those controlling the vehicles.
As Dr. Kory Cornum, a USAF colonel, explains: "Whereas we have thousands of years of data on what it's like to go to war really, we only have a few years of data on what it's like to go to war virtually. And so we don't have really enough data."........
CNN Senior International Correspondent
(CNN) -- The Pentagon has revolutionized warfare during the past decade, making unmanned aerial vehicles, known as UAVs, a staple of modern combat in Afghanistan and Iraq.
A USAF technician at Creech Air Force Base, checks Hellfire missile attachments on a Predator.
Remotely-controlled drones, such as the Predator and the Reaper, have allowed the U.S. military to spy on and attack enemy combatants without putting their own forces at risk, thereby making UAVs a must-have.
"The real advantage of unmanned aerial systems is they allow you to project power without projecting vulnerability," says USAF Lt. Gen. David Deptula at the Pentagon.
But as USAF commanders try to provide enough pilots to take charge of drones, many are considering another aspect of the warfare revolution -- the psychological impact on those controlling the vehicles.
As Dr. Kory Cornum, a USAF colonel, explains: "Whereas we have thousands of years of data on what it's like to go to war really, we only have a few years of data on what it's like to go to war virtually. And so we don't have really enough data."........
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