Comprehensive Analysis of the Global Prospects for Counter-IED Systems
- Issued By: Agency
- City / State: Navi Mumbai
- Phone: +91 22 27578668
- Submitted: October 15, 2010 3:53 pm
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Navi Mumbai, October 15, 2010:
Improvised explosive devices (IED) have been brutally effective weapons for insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan, and increasingly, in other parts of the world. IEDs have been blamed for thousands of deaths of military personnel and also civilians. The US and its allies have responded to the IED threat by spending billions of dollars on vehicles, equipment, personnel and training for counter-IED and explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) missions. This has provided very strong demand in recent years in the counter-IED systems market. Based on research, global spending on counter-IED systems amounted to $7.7bn in 2009.
However, demand is expected to decline from these high levels with the continuing US and allied withdrawal from Iraq and the imminent drawdown in Afghanistan. It finds a market in decline, albeit still retaining high value due to the central importance placed on countering IEDs.
This new report, The Counter-IED Market 2010-2020: Systems and Technologies for Force Protection, provides an analysis of the global market for mine-resistant vehicles, electronic countermeasures mainly in jammers, IED detection equipment and unmanned systems purposely designed for counter-IED. This report examines corporate announcements and news accounts, policy documents, reports of relevant contracts and original expert views from industry, to analyse how the counter-IED systems market will develop during the period 2010 to 2020.
Although many systems have already been acquired, countries are expected to continue making spending on counter-IED systems a priority in the context of tighter defence spending in general.
The US has by far spent the most on counter-IED systems as it was an urgent and vital part of force protection mainly in Iraq but currently and in the near future, in Afghanistan where US operations have escalated with a surge of tens of thousands of new troops. Major Western-allied powers like the UK, Canada and Australia have followed suit in investing heavily in counter-IED systems. Countries like India, which faces its own insurgent groups who have reportedly taken to using more IEDs, is also likely to become a key market in the future.
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This world that is choking on IEDs was entirely predictable from the late 60s experience in Vietnam. That the US and others were caught with their pants down is no surprise at all as our battlefield analysis in the ensuing period has been full of wishful thinking academics and few competent generals. Generals with only promotion on their mind who brook not any subordinate anyone removing their braid and Emperor’s New Clothes.
They would do well to do more modelling on the grandfathers of the modern battlefield such as then (ex RE) Lt Col, later General Sir Percy Hobart, KBE CB DSO MC, RTC tactics lecturer, Quetta – 1926 in ‘Light Division of the Future.’ said:
“Pace is protection, rapidity means surprise…Increased mobility and range entails great calls not only on endurance…but on intelligence and initiative in all ranks…A new sort of discipline is required. The ‘You’re not required to think’ variety is
obsolete.”
All this brass and hierarchy is a nonsense. Even if our model focuses on the Israelis, we learn that the Hebrew language has no word for “Sir”.
Think…