(CNN) -- The U.S. Navy says its new laser weapon works and it will use it if it has to.
The Office of Naval
Research reported Wednesday that its laser weapons system -- dubbed LaWS
-- had performed flawlessly in tests aboard the amphibious transport
dock USS Ponce in the Arabian
Gulf from September to November.
"Laser weapons are
powerful, affordable and will play a vital role in the future of naval
combat operations," Rear Adm. Matthew L. Klunder, chief of naval
research, said in a statement. "We ran this particular weapon, a
prototype, through some extremely tough paces, and it locked on and
destroyed the targets we designated with near-instantaneous lethality."
Klunder said the laser
performed so well that the commander of the Ponce is now authorized to
use it in defense of the vessel, according to a report from the U.S. Naval Institute.
"The captain of that ship
has all of the authorities necessary if there was a threat inbound to
that ship to protect our sailors and Marines (and) we would defend that
ship with that laser system," Klunder is quoted as saying in a USNI
report.
The laser could be used
to stop threats ranging from drones and helicopters to small patrol
boats, Klunder said, according to the USNI report.
Navy video released
Wednesday shows the LaWS hitting exactly those types of targets.
Watching the video, you can't see any light beam as you might expect
from watching science fiction movies. Instead, the targets just burn up.
The Navy says the laser
weapon is safer than conventional arms that use propellants and
explosive warheads, and more cost-effective.
"At less than a dollar
per shot, there's no question about the value LaWS provides," Klunder
said in the Navy statement. "With affordability a serious concern for
our defense budgets, this will more effectively manage resources to
ensure our sailors and Marines are never in a fair fight."
The laser also takes fewer crew members to operate. It can be fired by one sailor using a video game-like controller.
The weapon performed without failure in conditions of high wind, humidity and temperature, the Navy said.
The Navy hopes to deploy variations of the laser weapon system in the fleet by 2020.
--CNN News
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