THE U.S. NAVY JUST ENTERED THE LASER ERA. The destroyer USS Preble used its HELIOS laser to kill FOUR drones in one at-sea exercise. Not a lab test. Not a demo video. A real ship. A real swarm. – Whatfinger News' General Dispatch
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Sunday / February 8.
HomeWhatfinger NewsTHE U.S. NAVY JUST ENTERED THE LASER ERA. The destroyer USS Preble used its HELIOS laser to kill FOUR drones in one at-sea exercise. Not a lab test. Not a demo video. A real ship. A real swarm.

THE U.S. NAVY JUST ENTERED THE LASER ERA. The destroyer USS Preble used its HELIOS laser to kill FOUR drones in one at-sea exercise. Not a lab test. Not a demo video. A real ship. A real swarm.

Why this matters: • Missiles cost $1–2M per shot • Lasers cost pennies • Unlimited magazine • Saves interceptors for real threats HELIOS is: • Integrated into Aegis • ~60 kW today (scaling to 150 kW+) • Already software-loaded on 5+ destroyers After decades of promises, directed energy just crossed the line from prototype to operational reality. Cheap drones changed naval warfare. Lasers just changed it back. Sources: The War Zone • Navy Times • Lockheed Martin • Army Recognition

  • Dr. Frank, I agree prioritizing non‑kinetic weapons is essential for the Pentagon. Modern conflict is no longer defined solely by missiles and armor; it’s shaped by who controls the electromagnetic spectrum, who can blind or disable enemy systems without firing a shot, and who can dominate cyberspace. Non‑kinetic capabilities give the U.S. the ability to neutralize threats early, silently, and with far fewer escalatory risks. In an era of drones, hypersonic, and AI‑driven targeting, the side that wins the information and electronic battlespace wins the war. Ignoring that reality would be a strategic mistake. – Richard Miriti

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