CNN.com - Firm�cheers loss of robot in Iraq - Apr 13, 2004 : "BURLINGTON, Massachusetts (Reuters) -- A U.S. robot manufacturer Monday hailed the destruction of one of its units in Iraq and said it showed how valuable the machines have become for the U.S. military.
iRobot Corporation learned last week from the Pentagon that one of its units, called a PackBot, was 'destroyed in action' for the first time. Its destruction meant the life of a U.S. soldier may well have been saved, the company said.
'It was a special moment -- a robot got blown up instead of a person,' said iRobot CEO Colin Angle.
The company, based in Burlington, Massachusetts, declined to provide further details on how the PackBot was destroyed in Iraq.
'The U.S. military is ... concerned that if they release too many details, insurgents will be able to take action (against the robots),' said Osa Fitch, program executive at iRobot's Government and Industrial Robotics division.
Between 50 and 100 PackBots are now being used in Iraq and Afghanistan for battlefield reconnaissance, search-and-destroy missions of explosives and ordnance disposal, while the soldiers who control them keep out of harm's way."
iRobot Corporation learned last week from the Pentagon that one of its units, called a PackBot, was 'destroyed in action' for the first time. Its destruction meant the life of a U.S. soldier may well have been saved, the company said.
'It was a special moment -- a robot got blown up instead of a person,' said iRobot CEO Colin Angle.
The company, based in Burlington, Massachusetts, declined to provide further details on how the PackBot was destroyed in Iraq.
'The U.S. military is ... concerned that if they release too many details, insurgents will be able to take action (against the robots),' said Osa Fitch, program executive at iRobot's Government and Industrial Robotics division.
Between 50 and 100 PackBots are now being used in Iraq and Afghanistan for battlefield reconnaissance, search-and-destroy missions of explosives and ordnance disposal, while the soldiers who control them keep out of harm's way."
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