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Special forces to use strap-on 'stealth wings'
(006/06/06)
Elite special forces troops being dropped behind enemy lines on
covert missions are to ditch their traditional parachutes in
favour of

The lightweight carbon fibre mono-wings will allow them to jump
from high altitudes and then glide 120 miles or more before
landing - making them almost impossible to spot, as their
aircraft can avoid flying anywhere near the target.
The technology was demonstrated in spectacular fashion three
years ago when Austrian daredevil Felix Baumgartner - a pioneer
of freefall gliding - famously 'flew' across the English
Channel, leaping out of an aircraft 30,000ft above Dover and
landing safely near Calais 12 minutes later.
Wearing an aerodynamic suit, and with a 6ft wide wing strapped
to his back, he soared across the sea at 220mph, moving six feet
forward through the air for every one foot he fell vertically -
and opened his parachute 1,000ft above the ground before landing
safely.
'Massive potential'
Now military scientists have realised the massive potential for
secret military missions.
Currently special forces such as the SAS rely on a variety of
parachute techniques to land behind enemy lines - or else they
must be dropped by helicopter.
Existing steerable square parachutes can be used - opened at
high altitude of 27,000 ft - but jumpers then have to struggle
to control them for long periods, often in high winds and
extreme cold, while breathing from an oxygen tank to stay alive.
Alternatively they can freefall from high altitude, opening
their parachutes at the last possible minute, but that limits
the distance they can 'glide' forward from the drop point to
just a few miles.
Now German company ESG has developed the strap-on rigid wing
specifically for special forces use.
Resembling a 6ft-wide pair of aircraft wings, the devices should
allow a parachutist to glide up to 120miles, carrying 200lb of
equipment, the manufacturers claim.
Fitted with oxygen supply, stabilisation and navigation aides,
troops wearing the wings will jump from a high-altitude
transport aircraft which can stay far away from enemy territory
- or on secret peacetime missions could avoid detection or
suspicion by staying close to commercial airliner flight paths.
The manufacturers claim the ESG wing is '100 per cent silent'
and 'extremely difficult' to track using radar.
Once close to their target landing zone, the troops pull their
parachute rip cord to open their canopy and then land normally.
Weapons, ammunition, food and water can all be stowed inside the
wing, although concealing the 6ft wings after landing could
prove harder than burying a traditional parachute.
ESG claims the next stage of development will be fitting 'small
turbo-jet drives' to the wings to extend range even further.
According to SAS insiders, very few operational parachute jumps
have taken place in recent years, with teams tending to rely
more on helicopters or other means of transport.
Supporters of the new mono-wing technology hope it will give a
new lease of life to parachute tactics in the special forces
world.
The Ministry of Defence would not comment on any equipment used
by special forces, but is expected to evaluate the new system
for use by
UK special forces. |