This is truely amazing. A hundred of these wasps would fit inside a coffee can and if they were equipped with multiple shooting "stings" that had poisons or tranquilizers they could easily neutralize soldiers who are dressed in the current combat gear most army, navy, air force and even special ops are dressed up in. All an attacker has to do is sneak up close to a large, well defended military base anywhere in the world and just unleash a couple thousand of these wasps. The wasps would be programmed with schematics showing where every nook and cranny of the base was, coordinate wise, and where all the little holes are. The wasps would enter simultaneously and then using heat sensors and visual pattern recognition attack all humans and neutralize them. The attacking forces would then just walk into the base that they just commandeered!
Right now they are just designing them to attack terrorists and
civilians but the potential is even greater with regards to army to
army. Imagine unleashing a couple thousand of these onto a flotilla
with an aircraft carrier and a half dozen destroyers cruising in the
ocean. In 15 minutes you could just take ownership of that whole fleet
and cuff the stunned sailors as POWs!
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10411384Israel seeks futuristic nanoweapons to fight Palestinians
A high tech and unmanned "bionic wasp" capable of destroying a cell
of militants or guerrillas is among a series of futuristic weapons
being discussed a group of experts set up by the Israeli Vice Prime
Minister, Shimon Peres.
A spokeswoman for Peres yesterday
confirmed a report that the veteran politician had set up a 15-strong
group of security, high technology business and academic experts to
discuss the use of battlefield "nanotechnology" by Israeli forces.
The
report in the mass circulation daily Yedhiot Ahronot said that the
emerging technology would allow weapons, based on "building blocks" the
size of a millionth of a millimetre, and of the sort that "one sees
today only in science fiction films."
It quoted Mr Peres, a
holder of the Nobel Peace Prize, as telling a recent meeting: "The war
in Lebanon proved that we need tiny weapons. There is no point in
sending a hundred-million-dollar aircraft against a suicide terrorist.
From this we will assemble the weapons of the future and also
innumerable civilian developments. That is where the future is."
One of several other possible military assets using the same
technology, according to the report, would be a "miniature robot,
equipped with a tiny engine, will be able to act as a drone, squeezing
into narrow alleys in enemy territory, jamming communications
equipment, photographing intelligence targets and even killing armed
men by shooting or explosions."
It said Mr Peres was seeking to raise "hundreds of millions of dollars" to develop the ideas.
It
added researchers were also seeking to develop a glove or sleeve using
the same technology that would be attached to soldiers' arms and
"significantly increase their ability to strike, break down doors and
lift heavy objects."
- INDEPENDENT