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by Ed Adamczyk Washington DC (UPI) Aug 19, 2020
Ukraine's NATO-funded disposal of old and obsolete ammunition resumed this week after the project was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, the alliance said. Ukraine acquired vast amounts of weapons and ammunition after the Soviet Union withdrew from Warsaw Pact countries in the 1990s. NATO's Trust Fund Demilitarization Project has been working since 2005, at the request of Ukraine's government, to reduce the accumulation of unstable and potentially dangerous munitions. A second phase of the project, which will dispose of 29,600 tons of ammunition, 2.4 million antipersonnel mines and 1,500 tons of other unserviceable ordnance by the end of the year, began in 2011 but was halted to deal with the pandemic, NATO reported on Tuesday. The project, led by the United States, improves Ukraine's internal security and safety of its population, officials have said. The European Union, Belgium, Finland, Germany, Japan, Italy, Ireland, Luxembourg, Norway, Switzerland, and Turkey are also sponsors of the effort, one of 10 NATO trust funds supporting Ukraine. A 2019 NATO report said that $32.1 million has been earmarked for the project.
Army develops vibration-based system for land mine identification Washington DC (UPI) Aug 18, 2019 The Army has developed a new system for land mine identification that it says will greatly reduce false alarm rates. Vadum, Inc., North Carolina State University, the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Army Research Office all collaborated to develop the Vibration-ENhanced Underground Sensing system - or Venus, the Army said on Tuesday. Instead of detecting the electromagnetic signature of the mine, which can be confused with other buried metal objects or with wet or magnetic patch ... read more
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