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US army’s revolutionary XM25 rifles that allow Taliban to only run, not hide | After nine years of war in Afghanistan, the American army in the country have been reportedly provided with the latest game-changing revolutionary rifles called the XM25, which have the capacity to figure out an enemy, even when he is hidden behind buildings or other barriers. According to Fox News, the XM25, designed by Minnesota 's Alliant
Techsystems,
has been in development for about seven years and the first prototypes have been
provided to US combat units in Afghanistan earlier this month. The XM25 Counter
Defilade Target Engagement System is reportedly a high-tech rifle that can be
programmed so that its 25 mm ammunition does not necessarily explode on impact,
but it can be set to detonate either in front of or behind a target, meaning it
literally will go through a wall before it explodes and kills the enemy, the report
said. It also has a range of roughly 2,300 feet, nearly the length of eight football
fields, which enables it to fire at targets well past the range of the rifles
and carbines that most soldiers use these days, the report added. Lt. Col. Christopher
Lehner, project manager for the semi-automatic, shoulder-fired weapon system for
the U.S. Army's Program Executive Office Soldier, said that the XM25 is a
"game-changer"
that will lead to new ways of fighting on the battlefield, beginning this month
in Afghanistan . "With this weapon system, we take away cover from [enemy targets]
forever. Tactics are going to have to be rewritten. The only thing we can see
[enemies] being able to do is run away," Fox News quoted Lt. Lehner, as saying.
With this new weapon in the Army's arsenal, Lehner said, "We're much more
effective,
by many magnitudes, than current weapons at the squad level. We're able to shoot
farther and more accurately, and our soldiers can stay behind sandbags, walls
or rocks, which provides them protection from fire." The 12-pound, 29-inch system
costs up to 35,000 dollars per unit and is easy to easy to use despite being
sophisticated,
the report said. "We have found that this has really made our soldiers so much
more accurate and being able to deliver this high-explosive round in about five
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