Military history is filled with serious planning, rigorous doctrine, and methodical development. But it's also filled with experimentation - some brilliant, some desperate, and some so bizarre that they read like rejected movie plots. These aren't urban legends or debunked myths. These are real programs, funded by real governments, pursued by serious people who believed they might actually work.
What makes these experiments fascinating isn't their strangeness - it's understanding why they happened. Wartime urgency creates conditions where almost any idea gets a hearing. The pressure to find an edge, any edge, over adversaries means that even unlikely concepts receive funding and testing. And sometimes, the strange ideas actually work. Dolphins really do detect mines. Dogs really were trained to carry explosives (with tragic results). The line between visionary innovation and absurd failure often only becomes clear in hindsight.
The following ten experiments represent documented programs that actually received government funding and serious testing. Some were abandoned after proving impractical. Others were overtaken by better technology. A few were simply ahead of their time. All of them reveal something important about how military organizations think about innovation, risk, and the boundaries of what's possible.


