The U.S. military does not believe its soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines should be engaged in combat with adversaries on a "level playing field." Our combat individuals enter engagements to win. To that end, the United States has used its technical prowess and industrial capability to develop decisive weapons that overmatch those of potential enemies. In its current engagement—what has been identified as an "era of persistent conflict"— the nation's most important weapon is the dismounted soldier operating in small units. Today's soldier must be prepared to contend with both regular and irregular adversaries. Results in Iraq and Afghanistan show that, while the U.S. soldier is a formidable fighter, the contemporary suite of equipment and support does not afford the same high degree of overmatch capability exhibited by large weapons platforms—yet it is the soldier who ultimately will play the decisive role in restoring stability.
Making the Soldier Decisive on Future Battlefields establishes the technical requirements for overmatch capability for dismounted soldiers operating individually or in small units. It prescribes technological and organizational capabilities needed to make the dismounted soldier a decisive weapon in a changing, uncertain, and complex future environment and provides the Army with 15 recommendations on how to focus its efforts to enable the soldier and tactical small unit (TSU) to achieve overmatch.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Summary
1 Introduction
2 Capabilities
3 Setting the Conditions to Achieve Soldier and TSU Overmatch
4 Achieving Overmatch
Appendix A-- Biographical Sketches of Committee Members
Appendix B-- Committee Meetings
Appendix C-- Army Terminology and Doctrine Relevant to Dismounted Soldier Missions
Appendix D-- History and Status of Design for the Soldier as a System
Appendix E-- Measures of Performance and Measures of Effectiveness
Appendix F-- Simulation Technologies and Devices
Appendix G-- Technology Solutions for TSU Sensor Missions
Appendix H-- Prospective Robotics Technologies
Appendix I-- Energy Technologies and Applications for the Soldier
Appendix J-- Lethal and Nonlethal Weapons