MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Va., ― A counter-drone laser in use by the Army was on display here this week, giving Marines a glimpse at how they might melt drones soon.

The Compact Laser Weapon System, or CLWS, is already part of the Army’s Mobile Expeditionary High Energy Laser program. It’s deployed on Stryker vehicle in Europe and has been used in field experiments.

The Boeing creation is a 5 kilowatt laser that can be used in a range of methods, including counter-drone, counter-sniper, breaching obstacles, setting of unexploded ordnance, denying enemy landing zones and to defend ports or airfields.

Ron Dauk, program manager, Laser & Electro-Optical Systems, spoke with Marine Corps Times about the system for Boeing. They have developed 2-, 5-, and 10 kilowatt versions. The first 2 kilowatt version was tested at the Army’s annual Maneuver Fires Integrated Experiment in 2016. The next year the brought the 5 kilowatt now in use.

This coming year will be a 10 kilowatt version.

The laser can be mounted atop a vehicle, such as it was on the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle at the Oshkosh Defense booth. Or it can be put on a tripod and hooked to a generator to knock down threats at a medium-sized Forward Operating Base or at the perimeter of a larger installation.

The JLTV configuration showcased at the Modern Day Marine military expo in Quantico, Virginia, was the first time they’d put those two items together publicly, Dauk said.

The Compact Laser Weapon System is a medium-range, low power device that soldiers and Marines can use to counter drones and other threats. (Boeing)

Though they’re doubling the power with the next version, that’s likely the right range for now, he said.

“For CLWS, that product we think the 2- to 10- kilowwatt range is the optimal power level,” Dauk said. “It’s designed for short range, low cost.”

At that power level, the CLWS has a “deep magazine” and can strike down 10 or more targets in a matter of minutes, depending on the size of the configuration, such as a smaller drone swarm.

The power comes from the vehicle or generator, so there’s no need to reload.

“It’s able to operate as long as there’s gas in the tank,” he said.

Boeing does have larger projects in the works. The Army wants a 100 kilowatt laser for more demanding projectiles such as mortars, artillery and missiles.

Todd South has written about crime, courts, government and the military for multiple publications since 2004 and was named a 2014 Pulitzer finalist for a co-written project on witness intimidation. Todd is a Marine veteran of the Iraq War.

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