2026-05-15T12:04:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
华盛顿讯——在美国军方加紧研发适用于战场的低成本一次性无人机之际,一名陆军爆炸物安全专家警告称,美国国防部的创新提速可能超出了基本爆炸物安全保障的范围,增加了事故风险。
这一评估被收录在哥伦比亚广播公司新闻获得的一份备忘录中,该备忘录详述了一架小型无人机发生爆炸并造成一名陆军特种部队士兵受伤的事件。
在一份3月份的备忘录中,一名拥有20多年军装服役及文职经历、负责评估和监督美军安全工作的美国陆军文职人员警告称,尽管美国陆军特种部队擅长在战场上即兴制定解决方案,但应对无人机威胁的整体行动带来的压力,可能会破坏长期以来的安全标准。
“我们完全理解特种部队创新并制定战术解决方案以完成任务或部署的能力,”备忘录写道,但随后该安全专家指出,国防部“急于解决与无人机系统相关的未来及长期威胁”,以至于“基本的爆炸物安全原则被忽视”,“最终将导致更多事故或意外相关的风险”。
美军使用无人机已有数十年历史,尤其在伊拉克和阿富汗战争期间。但俄乌冲突极大地拓展了无人机战争的战场边界,如今人们已达成共识,美军需要找到快速且低成本地大规模生产杀伤性无人机的方法。
去年年底,在特朗普总统发布行政命令要求增产无人机系统后,五角大楼向国防工业征求信息,以了解其生产约30万架无人机的“意愿和能力”。
这份3月份的评估由位于路易斯安那州波尔克堡的司令部安全办公室的一名爆炸物安全专家撰写,该基地是陆军联合战备训练中心所在地。
该备忘录由该专家发送至北卡罗来纳州布拉格堡的美国陆军特种作战司令部安全总监。
这份警告出现在一份详细描述某起事件的信件中,当时一枚附着在无人机上的小型爆炸装置在陆军联合战备训练中心的一栋建筑内发生爆炸。
美国陆军特种作战司令部的阿里·斯科特上校告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,备忘录中安全调查员的言论似乎只是他的个人观点,并非基于事实。
斯科特确认了该备忘录和安全报告调查结果的真实性,并表示涉事士兵在爆炸中受伤后不久就重返岗位。
哥伦比亚广播公司新闻联系了这位爆炸物安全专家及其在波尔克堡的工作单位,但未收到回复。该媒体还联系了位于阿拉巴马州诺沃塞尔堡的美国陆军作战战备中心,该中心负责安全、风险管理和事故预防的统筹工作。
该中心的一名发言人告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,他们未收到对此事件进行调查的请求,并解释称,陆军中心要调查一起事件,必须“达到设备损失价值和/或永久性伤害或死亡的相关阈值”。
爆炸发生时,隶属于陆军第3特种部队群的一名特种部队士兵在故障排查过程中试图断开该装置,导致手臂和面部割伤以及脑震荡等轻伤。备忘录中附带的照片拍摄于一个杂乱的工作区内,展示了受损的无人机和散落在桌上的设备,突显了此次事件险些造成更严重伤害的程度。
调查人员认为,爆炸可能由静电电荷或弹药电磁辐射危害引发,可能是由于继电器开关固定不当,导致电流通过无人机的碳纤维框架传导。
涉事装置为XM183“迷你爆炸”烟火弹药筒,由总部位于休斯顿的PR战术公司制造,该公司专门为美军训练演习生产烟火炸药。
PR战术公司的弗雷德·劳克林在接受哥伦比亚广播公司新闻采访时表示,在看到完整报告之前,公司不予置评。
XM183“迷你爆炸”弹药筒旨在模拟现代战场的视觉和声音效果。该弹药筒用于部队演习,是更广泛的战场效果模拟系统的一部分,旨在让士兵在不使用实弹的情况下沉浸在逼真的训练环境中。
备忘录指出,XM183“迷你爆炸”弹药筒被评估为具有中等危险风险,因为它可能产生危险的碎片或弹片,也可能意外引燃或爆炸。
备忘录还提到,美国陆军作战能力发展司令部尚未为XM183“迷你爆炸”弹药筒提供“全面物料放行”认证。
根据陆军条例,“全面物料放行”是一项正式认定,即某一物料在批准条件下使用时,安全可靠、能够满足作战需求并可通过陆军后勤系统实现持续供应。
Pentagon rush to counter drone threat may be undermining safety standards, Army explosive safety specialist warns
2026-05-15T12:04:00-0400 / CBS News
Washington — As the U.S. military races to adapt low-cost, expendable drones for battlefield use, an Army explosive safety specialist warned that the Defense Department’s rush to innovate may be outpacing basic explosive safeguards, raising the risk of accidents.
The assessment was tucked inside a memo obtained by CBS News detailing how a mini-drone had detonated, causing injuries to an Army Special Forces soldier.
In a March memorandum, a civilian U.S. Army employee — with more than 20 years of experience in uniform and as a civilian employee evaluating and monitoring safety experience in the service — cautioned that while U.S. Army Special Forces units are adept at improvising solutions in the field, the broader drive to counter unmanned aerial threats has imposed pressures that could undermine long-established safety standards.
“We fully understand Special Forces’s ability to innovate and create tactical solutions to accomplish a mission set or task,” the memo states, but it goes on to say that the safety specialist believes that the Defense Department “is in such a rush to solve future and enduring threats related to unmanned aerial systems” that “basic explosive safety principles are being ignored,” and “will ultimately lead to a greater risk associated with mishaps or accidents.”
Drones have been used for decades by the U.S. military, particularly during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But the Russia-Ukraine conflict has dramatically expanded the battlefront for drone warfare, and what has emerged is the understanding that the U.S. military will need to find a way to quickly and cheaply scale up its production of lethal drones.
Late last year, the Pentagon requested information from the defense industry to gauge its “willingness and ability” to make roughly 300,000 drones, following President Trump’s executive order calling for more unmanned aircraft systems to be produced.
The March assessment was written by an explosive safety specialist with the command safety office at Fort Polk in Louisiana, where the Army’s Joint Readiness Training Center is located.
The memorandum was sent by the specialist to the director of safety at U.S. Army Special Operations Command at Fort Bragg in North Carolina.
The warning appeared in a letter detailing an incident in which a small explosive device attached to a drone detonated inside a building at the Army’s Joint Readiness Training Center.
Army Col. Allie Scott of the U.S. Army Special Operations Command told CBS News that the comments from the safety investigator in the memorandum appear to be his opinion and not based in fact.
Scott confirmed the authenticity of the memo and research of the safety report and said the soldier involved in the blast returned to duty shortly after sustaining the injuries from the blast.
CBS News reached out to the explosive safety specialist and the office he works for at Fort Polk but no reply was returned. CBS News also contacted the U.S. Army’s Combat Readiness Center at Fort Novosel, Alabama, which serves as the central authority for safety, risk management and accident prevention.
A spokesperson for the center told CBS News it did not receive a request to investigate the incident, explaining that for an incident to be investigated by Army center, it must “meet the threshold in regard to a dollar value of damages to equipment and/or a permanent injury or death.”
The blast occurred when a Special Forces soldier assigned to the Army’s 3rd Special Forces Group attempted to disconnect the device during troubleshooting, resulting in minor injuries, including lacerations to the arm and face and a concussion. Photographs included in the memo, taken inside a cluttered workspace, show a damaged drone and scattered equipment on a table, underscoring how close the incident came to causing more serious harm.
The investigator believes the detonation may have been triggered either by static electric charge or hazards of electromagnetic radiation to ordnance, possibly caused by an improperly secured relay switch that allowed current to pass through the drone’s carbon fiber frame.
The device involved, an XM183″MiniBlast” pyrotechnic cartridge, was made by Houston-based PR Tactical Corporation, which specializes in producing pyrotechnic explosives for U.S. military training exercises.
Contacted by CBS News, Fred Laughlin of PR Tactical Corporation said the company would not comment before seeing the full report.
The XM183 “MiniBlast” cartridge is designed to replicate the sights and sounds of combat on the modern battlefield. Used during unit exercise, the round is part of a broader system of battlefield effects simulators intended to immerse soldiers in realistic conditions without the use of live munitions.
The memorandum noted that the XM183 “MiniBlast” cartridge has been assessed as having a medium-level hazard risk because it can produce dangerous fragments or shrapnel and can accidentally ignite or detonate.
It also noted that the U.S. Army’s Combat Capabilities Development Command had not provided a “full material release” for the XM183 “MiniBlast.”
Under Army regulations, a “full material release” is the formal determination that a material is safe for use, capable of meeting its operational requirements and sustainable through the Army’s logistical system when it’s employed under approved conditions.
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