The Iron Man cometh: US Army commissions 'TALOS' suit with liquid armor

The fantastic fictional powers enjoyed by comic book superheroes and villains – including enhanced strength, night vision and resistance to bullets - may become a reality soon if the US military gets its way.
  As if inspired by Marvel Comics itself, the Special Operations
  Command (SOCOM) has commissioned a Tactical Assault Light
  Operator Suit, or TALOS for short, which will likely contain
  liquid armor, a substance that is being developed at the
  Massachusetts Institute of Technology, according to the official
  website of the US Army.
  
  The material can change from liquid to solid in milliseconds when
  a magnetic field or electrical current is applied, allowing a
  soldier wearing the protective suit to survive attack from heavy
  gunfire
  
  The outfit is also expected to include its own internal supply of
  heat, air and oxygen.
  
  Public discussion about creating a 21st century suit of armor for
  US soldiers increased following the US Army’s failed mission last
  week in Somalia. Members of an elite Navy SEALS unit were forced
  to retreat in the face of heavy gunfire, while attempting to
  capture an Al-Shabaab commander believed to be connected to one
  of the 1998 US embassy bombings in Africa.
  
  SOCOM, hoping to tap into a deep well of engineering talent, last
  month issued a request for ideas “from a wide
  variety of sources, not just traditional military industry but
  also from academia, entrepreneurs, and laboratories capable of
  providing the design, construction, and testing of TALOS related
  technologies.”
Super soldiers?
  US Special Operations Command chief Adm. William McRaven believes
  the technology will make US soldiers practically invincible on
  the battlefield.
  
"I'm very committed to this, I'd like that last operator that
  we lost to be the last operator we lose in this fight or the
  fight of the future, and I think we can get there," McRaven
  told industry representatives gathered at SOCOM headquarters in
  Tampa, Florida, last July to discuss the creation of the
  technology.
  
  A combat simulation video that appears on YouTube
  features a soldier donning the Sci-Fi-like body armor smashing
  through a wooden door before staring down a hail of machinegun
  fire.
  
  SOCOM hopes to incorporate a “comprehensive family of systems
  in a combat armor suit where we bring together an exoskeleton
  with innovative armor, displays for power monitoring, health
  monitoring, and integrating a weapon into that – a whole bunch of
  stuff," Lt. Col. Karl Borjes, an Army science advisor
  assigned to SOCOM, said in a statement.
  
  TALOS will contain "full-body ballistic protections," as
  well as a “physiological subsystem” that covers the skin of the
  wearer and is embedded with sensors to monitor “body
  temperature, skin temperature, heart rate, body position and
  hydration levels,” according to the government's May posting.
  
  McRaven goes beyond anything Superman could have imagined,
  envisioning that the suit wearer's "cognitive thoughts and the
  surrounding environment to display personalized information."
  And should a soldier suffer an injury despite the
  state-of-the-art suit of armor, “the TALOS would monitor their
  health and even stop bleeding using a "wound stasis" program such
  as one being developed by DARPA that sprays foam onto open
  injuries,” John Reed, a military expert, wrote in Foreign
  Policy.
  
  It is no secret that such technologies have been undergoing
  development for more than a decade. Defense contractors have been
  working on exoskeletons, for example, that would permit foot
  soldiers to carry more gear and run faster than they normally
  could on their own.
  
  Lockheed Martin has been attempting to move its Human Universal
  Load Carrier (HULC) exoskeleton to Afghanistan where it will be
  combat-tested by troops, David Axe reported in Wired last May.
  
  Not everybody, however, is so upbeat about the ‘Iron Man’
  technologies being planned for American troops.
  
“My sense is it is an uparmored Pinocchio,” Scott Neil, a
  retired Special Forces master sergeant and Silver Star recipient,
  told the Tampa Tribune. “Now the commander can shove a monkey
  in a suit and ask us to survive a machine gun, IED, and poor
  intelligence all on the same objective. And when you die in it,
  as it melts to your body, you can bury them in it!”
  Neil then offered his thoughts on what would make the best type
  of suit for US soldiers.
  
“A business suit,” he replied, arguing that after so many
  military misadventures abroad, US troops need “transitioning
  back to be ordinary Americans.”











