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Arriving on battlefield: iPhones, Android devices

Lt. Gen. Michael Vane, director of the Army Capabilities Integration Center, said the military is testing the deployment of smartphones to soldiers in the field.

Joshua Norman
Joshua Norman is a Senior Editor at CBSNews.com.
Joshua Norman
2 min read

Imagine the many ways smartphones have integrated into most people's daily lives: talking, texting, e-mailing, video watching, game playing, researching, shopping, and so on.

Now imagine the possible ways in which having an iPhone or an Android on hand might make a soldier's life in combat easier. Lt. Gen. Michael Vane, director of the Army Capabilities Integration Center, said the military is testing the deployment of smartphones to soldiers in the field, the Army Times reports.

iPhone
The iPhone may soon be among the smartphones deployed to combat soldiers under a new program by the U.S. military designed to streamline communications and intelligence gathering. James Martin/CNET

"One of the options potentially is to make it a piece of equipment in a soldier's clothing bag," Vane said.

Army-issued smartphones are already in the schoolhouse and garrison, in the hands of some students at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., Fort Lee, Va., and at Fort Sill, Okla., under an Army program called Connecting Soldiers to Digital Applications, the paper reports. CSDA's next step, already underway at Fort Bliss, Texas, is testing for the war zone.

With smartphones, soldiers could communicate with one another in multiple ways, watch airplane drone video live in the field, quickly go through maps, and share intelligence reports, just to name a few possible uses.

While military officials said they are considering all brands of smartphones, those handheld devices aren't the only technology being considered to revolutionize combat deployment, the Army Times reports.

"We're looking at everything from iPads to Kindles to Nook readers to mini-projectors," said Mike McCarthy, director of the mission command complex of Future Force Integration Directorate at Fort Bliss. "What we're doing is fundamentally changing how soldiers access knowledge, information, training content and operational data. The day you sign on to be a soldier, you will be accessing information and knowledge in garrison and in an operational environment in a seamless manner. We're using smartphone technologies to lead this."

This story originally appeared on CBSNews.com.