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Author Topic: Attack of the drones  (Read 8224 times)
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« on: September 25, 2009, 10:08:11 PM »

Source: http://www.economist.com/search/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14299496

Attack of the drones

Sep 3rd 2009

Military technology: Smaller and smarter unmanned aircraft are transforming spying and redefining the idea of air power

FIVE years ago, in the mountainous Afghan province of Baghlan, NATO officials mounted a show of force for the local governor, Faqir Mamozai, to emphasise their commitment to the region. As the governor and his officials looked on, Jan van Hoof, a Dutch commander, called in a group of F-16 fighter jets, which swooped over the city of Baghlan, their thunderous afterburners engaged. This display of air power was, says Mr van Hoof, an effective way to garner the respect of the local people. But fighter jets are a limited and expensive resource. And in conflicts like that in Afghanistan, they are no longer the most widespread form of air power. The nature of air power, and the notion of air superiority, have been transformed in the past few years by the rise of remote-controlled drone aircraft, known in military jargon as “unmanned aerial vehicles” (UAVs).

Drones are much less expensive to operate than manned warplanes. The cost per flight-hour of Israel’s drone fleet, for example, is less than 5% the cost of its fighter jets, says Antan Israeli, the commander of an Israeli drone squadron. In the past two years the Israeli Defence Forces’ fleet of UAVs has tripled in size. Mr Israeli says that “almost all” IDF ground operations now have drone support.

Of course, small and comparatively slow UAVs are no match for fighter jets when it comes to inspiring awe with roaring flyovers—or shooting down enemy warplanes. Some drones, such as America’s Predator and Reaper, carry missiles or bombs, though most do not. (Countries with “hunter-killer” drones include America, Britain and Israel.) But drones have other strengths that can be just as valuable. In particular, they are unparalleled spies. Operating discreetly, they can intercept radio and mobile-phone communications, and gather intelligence using video, radar, thermal-imaging and other sensors. The data they gather can then be sent instantly via wireless and satellite links to an operations room halfway around the world—or to the hand-held devices of soldiers below. In military jargon, troops without UAV support are “disadvantaged”.

The technology has been adopted at extraordinary speed. In 2003, the year the American-led coalition defeated Saddam Hussein’s armed forces, America’s military logged a total of roughly 35,000 UAV flight-hours in Iraq and Afghanistan. Last year the tally reached 800,000 hours. And even that figure is an underestimate, because it does not include the flights of small drones, which have proliferated rapidly in recent years. (America alone is thought to have over 5,000 of them.) These robots, typically launched by foot soldiers with a catapult, slingshot or hand toss, far outnumber their larger kin, which are the size of piloted aeroplanes.

Global sales of UAVs this year are expected to increase by more than 10% over last year to exceed $4.7 billion, according to Visiongain, a market-research firm based in London. It estimates that America will spend about 60% of the total. For its part, America’s Department of Defence says it will spend more than $22 billion to develop, buy and operate drones between 2007 and 2013. Following the United States, Israel ranks second in the development and possession of drones, according to those in the industry. The European leaders, trailing Israel, are roughly matched: Britain, France, Germany and Italy. Russia and Spain are not far behind, and nor, say some experts, is China. (But the head of an American navy research-laboratory in Europe says this is an underestimate cultivated by secretive Beijing, and that China’s drone fleet is actually much larger.)

In total, more than three dozen countries operate UAVs, including Belarus, Colombia, Sri Lanka and Georgia. Some analysts say Georgian armed forces, equipped with Israeli drones, outperformed Russia in aerial intelligence during their brief war in August 2008. (Russia also buys Israeli drones.)

Iran builds drones, one of which was shot down over Iraq by American forces in February. The model in question can reportedly collect ground intelligence from an altitude of 4,000 metres as far as 140km from its base. This year Iranian officials said they had developed a new drone with a range of more than 1,900km. Iran has supplied Hizbullah militants in Lebanon with a small fleet of drones, though their usefulness is limited: Hizbullah uses lobbed rather than guided rockets, and it is unlikely to muster a ground attack that would benefit from drone intelligence. But ownership of UAVs enhances Hizbullah’s prestige in the eyes of its supporters, says Amal Ghorayeb, a Beirut academic who is an expert on the group.

Eyes wide open
How effective are UAVs? In Iraq, the significant drop in American casualties over the past year and a half is partly attributable to the “persistent stare” of drone operators hunting for insurgents’ roadside bombs and remotely fired rockets, says Christopher Oliver, a colonel in the American army who was stationed in Baghdad until recently. “We stepped it up,” he says, adding that drone missions will continue to increase, in part to compensate for the withdrawal of troops. In Afghanistan and Iraq, almost all big convoys of Western equipment or personnel are preceded by a scout drone, according to Mike Kulinski of Enerdyne Technologies, a developer of military-communications software based in California. Such drones can stream video back to drivers and transmit electromagnetic jamming signals that disable the electronic triggers of some roadside bombs.

In military parlance, drones do work that would be “dull, dirty and dangerous” for soldiers. Some of them can loiter in the air for long periods. The Eagle-1, for example, developed by Israel Aerospace Industries and EADS, Europe’s aviation giant, can stay aloft for more than 50 hours at a time. (France deployed several of these aircraft this year in Afghanistan.) Such long flights help operators, assisted with object-recognition software, to determine normal (and suspicious) patterns of movement for people and vehicles by tracking suspects for two wake-and-sleep cycles.

Drones are acquiring new abilities. New sensors that are now entering service can make out the “electrical signature” of ground vehicles by picking up signals produced by engine spark-plugs, alternators, and other electronics. A Pakistani UAV called the Tornado, made in Karachi by a company called Integrated Dynamics, emits radar signals that mimic a fighter jet to fool enemies.
UAVs are hard to shoot down. Today’s heat-seeking shoulder-launched missiles do not work above 3,000 metres or so, though the next generation will be able to go higher, says Carlo Siardi of Selex Galileo, a subsidiary of Finmeccanica in Ronchi dei Legionari, Italy. Moreover, drone engines are smaller—and therefore cooler—than those powering heavier, manned aircraft. In some of them the propeller is situated behind the exhaust source to disperse hot air, reducing the heat signature. And soldiers who shoot at aircraft risk revealing their position.

But drones do have an Achilles’ heel. If a UAV loses the data connection to its operator—by flying out of range, for example—it may well crash. Engineers have failed to solve this problem, says Dan Isaac, a drone expert at Spain’s Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology, a government research agency in Madrid. The solution, he and others say, is to build systems which enable an operator to reconnect with a lost drone by transmitting data via a “bridge” aircraft nearby.

In late June America’s Northrop Grumman unveiled the first of a new generation of its Global Hawk aircraft, thought to be the world’s fastest drone. It can gather data on objects reportedly as small as a shoebox, through clouds, day or night, for 32 hours from 18,000 metres—almost twice the cruising altitude of passenger jets. After North Korea detonated a test nuclear device in May, America said it would begin replacing its manned U-2 spy planes in South Korea with Global Hawks, which are roughly the size of a corporate jet.

Big drones are, however, hugely expensive. With their elaborate sensors, some cost as much as $60m apiece. Fewer than 30 Global Hawks have been bought. And it is not just the hardware that is costly: each Global Hawk requires a support team of 20-30 people. As the biggest UAVs get bigger, they are also becoming more expensive. Future American UAVs may cost a third as much as the F-35 fighter jet (each of which costs around $83m, without weapons). The Neuron, a jet-engine stealth drone developed by France’s
Dassault Aviation and partners including Italy’s Alenia, will be about the size of the French manned Mirage fighter.

Small drones, by contrast, cost just tens of thousands of dollars. With electric motors, they are quiet enough for low-altitude spying. But batteries and fuel cells have only recently become light enough to open up a large market. A fuel cell developed by AMI Adaptive Materials, based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, exemplifies the progress made. Three years ago AMI sold a 25-watt fuel cell weighing two kilograms. Today its fuel cell is 25% lighter and provides eight times as much power. This won AMI a $500,000 prize from the Department of Defence. Its fuel cells, costing about $12,000 each, now propel small drones.

Most small drones are launched without airstrips and are controlled in the field using a small computer. They can be recovered with nets, parachutes, vertically strung cords that snag a wingtip hook or a simple drop on the ground after a stall a metre or two in the air. Their airframes break apart to absorb the impact; users simply snap them back together.

With some systems, a ground unit can launch a drone for a quick bird’s-eye look around with very little effort. Working with financing from Italy’s defence ministry, Oto Melara, an Italian firm, has built prototypes of a short-range drone launched from a vehicle-mounted pneumatic cannon. The aircraft’s wings unfold upon leaving the tube. It streams back video while flying any number of preset round-trip patterns. Crucially, operators do not need to worry about fiddling with controls; the drone flies itself.

Send in the drones
Indeed, as UAVs become more technologically complex, there is also a clear trend towards making their control systems easier to use, according to a succession of experts speaking at a conference in La Spezia, Italy, held in April by the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI), an industry association. For example, instead of manoeuvring aircraft, operators typically touch (or click on) electronic maps to specify points along a desired route. Software determines the best flight altitudes, speeds and search patterns for each mission—say, locating a well near a hilltop within sniping range of a road.

Next year Lockheed Martin, an American defence contractor, begins final testing of software to make flying drones easier for troops with little training. Called ECCHO, it allows soldiers to control aircraft and view the resulting intelligence on a standard hand-held device such as an iPhone, BlackBerry or Palm Pre. It incorporates Google Earth mapping software, largely for the same reason: most recruits are already proficient users.

What’s next? A diplomat from Djibouti, a country in the Horn of Africa, provides a clue. He says private companies in Europe are now offering to operate spy drones for his government, which has none. (Djibouti has declined.) But purchasing UAV services, instead of owning fleets, is becoming a “strong trend”, says Kyle Snyder, head of surveillance technology at AUVSI. About 20 companies, he estimates, fly spy drones for clients.

One of them, a division of Boeing called Insitu, sees a lucrative untapped market in Afghanistan, where the intelligence needs of some smaller NATO countries are not being met by larger allies. (Armed forces are often reluctant to share their intelligence for tactical reasons.) Alejandro Pita, Insitu’s head of sales, declines to name customers, but says his firm’s flights cost roughly $2,000 an hour for 300 or so hours a month. The drones-for-hire market is also expanding into non-military fields. Services include inspecting tall buildings, monitoring traffic and maintaining security at large facilities.

Drone sales and research budgets will continue to grow. Raytheon, an American company, has launched a drone from a submerged submarine. Mini helicopter drones for reconnaissance inside buildings are not far off. In China, which is likely to be a big market in the future, senior officials have recently talked of reducing troop numbers and spending more money developing “informationised warfare” capabilities, including unmanned aircraft.

There is a troubling side to all this. Operators can now safely manipulate battlefield weapons from control rooms half a world away, as if they are playing a video game. Drones also enable a government to avoid the political risk of putting combat boots on foreign soil. This makes it easier to start a war, says P.W. Singer, the American author of “Wired for War”, a recent bestseller about robotic warfare. But like them or not, drones are here to stay. Armed forces that master them are not just securing their hold on air superiority—they are also dramatically increasing its value.

Source: http://www.economist.com/search/displaystory.cfm?story_id=14299496
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luckee1
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« Reply #1 on: November 10, 2009, 02:33:03 PM »

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/8352631.stm
Page last updated at 15:18 GMT, Tuesday, 10 November 2009
Drones scour the sea for pirates

The difficulties faced by EU vessels catching pirates in the Seychelles

By Will Ross,
BBC News, The Seychelles

Sleek and sinister-looking, the latest weapon against piracy could have flown directly out of a science fiction film.

The US military has deployed its Reaper unmanned drones to scour the Indian Ocean with their all-seeing, infra-red eye.

Somali pirates are attacking farther and farther from home; previously safe areas are now very much within range.

The farthest attack from shore has just taken place - an oil tanker managed to evade two skiffs some 1,000 nautical miles (1,850km) off Somalia - 400 nautical miles (741km) north-east of the Seychelles.

In total, close to 200 crew members are being held hostage for ransom and hardly a day passes without news of another attack.

The drone is controlled remotely and can fly up to 18 hours at a time.

Its camera is capable of zooming in on suspected pirates from heights of up to 15,200m (50,000ft).

"It has multiple zooms and is very good for the mission for scanning very large areas," said Cdr Gregory Hand of the US military, as he watched one of the three grey drones taxi along the runway besides the turquoise waters of the Seychelles.

"These aircraft have the capability of carrying weapons, but there are currently no plans to place weapons on them," he says.

Radar signature

Despite the current lack of firepower, deploying the same sophisticated military hardware that targets al-Qaeda in Afghanistan and militants in Somalia shows just how serious the problem of piracy is being taken.

The deployment of the MQ 9 Reaper is an initiative of the US Africa Command (Africom) which is based in Stuttgart, Germany.

African countries were reluctant to host an American military base partly due to fears that the continent would be further militarised.

The deployment of these remote controlled drones will be taken by some as evidence that Africom does not necessarily need a huge base in Africa to get its work done.

The pirates may not be aware they are being watched as the drones fly high, are difficult to spot and we are told they essentially have no radar signature.

Lucrative industries

It is hoped that the data collected by the US drones will make it easier for the international anti-piracy task force to capture the pirates red-handed.

"One of the major problems we face is the fact that you need sufficient evidence to bring these people to trial and justice. We all know they are pirates but proving they are is another thing," said Joel Morgan, who heads the Seychelles government's anti-piracy drive.

Because of the lack of evidence, three sets of suspected pirates have so far been released and flown home to Somalia - an expensive and risky process.

For the Seychelles government, protecting the lucrative tourism and fishing industries is a priority but with limited resources it cannot patrol the half a million sq miles (1.3 million sq km) which make up its exclusive economic zone.

Too late

It was from the Seychelles that the British couple Paul and Rachel Chandler set off in their yacht last month bound for Tanzania.


Within 24 hours they had been taken by pirates and from then on a rescue operation was deemed too dangerous.

Arriving too late at the scene of an attack is a common problem for the international anti-piracy fleet.

A few kilometres away from the airport in the Seychelles main port, a Belgian warship was docked.

Bristling with weapons and carrying a helicopter on board, it might make this appear like a David and Goliath scenario.

While the Louise-Marie has had some success, capturing pirates is fraught with problems.

"We rushed to the scene of an attack on a fishing vessel. We found a small boat or skiff with four men on board.

"We saw them throw something overboard so we took them on the ship for further investigation," says Cdr Jan De Beurme.

He suspects they had thrown weapons overboard.

He is sure they were pirates as they were operating such a small boat hundreds of kilometres off the coast.

But without evidence, the prosecutor in Belgium said they had to be set free.

"As their engine was broken we had to repair it. Then we returned to the Somali coastline and put them back in the water.

"So in fact we saved the lives of four suspected pirates," he said.

Huge scale

Although the drones may also be used for other surveillance work, it is possible that the photographic data they record could provide the necessary evidence to ensure more pirates are locked up.

he Seychelles Defence Forces have had some success in locating and tracking pirates.

On board one of these surveillance flights you get a real sense of the scale of the challenge.

The ocean stretches away for hundreds of kilometres in every direction.

During a two-hour flight, our unarmed plane swooped to take a closer look at a cargo ship, a catamaran and several small fishing vessels but we found nothing suspicious - no weapons, skiffs, fuel drums or ladders used to scale the sides of ships.

"Our presence gives the crews some confidence. The pilot talks to the ships on the coastguard channel and we can advise them about any dangers around," said Capt Jean Attala of the Seychelles Coastguard as we flew past some of the more than one hundred idyllic palm-fringed islands.

Raising stakes?

Self-defence is being encouraged.

The Seychelles government has signed agreements with several European countries allowing fishing trawlers to carry weapons to defend against pirate attacks.

Japan and Thailand have also requested permission to arm their boats operating in Seychelles waters.

But while there have been calls for tougher action against the pirates, some analysts warn that more guns at sea could raise the stakes and put the hostages' lives in more danger.
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No2NWO
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« Reply #2 on: January 22, 2011, 07:50:58 PM »

Domestic use of aerial drones by law enforcement likely to prompt privacy debate

By Peter Finn
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, January 22, 2011; 8:56 PM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/01/22/AR2011012204111.html

It's about a 3 page article. This is abbreviated. Follow the link for complete article.  Wink

AUSTIN - The suspect's house, just west of this city, sat on a hilltop at the end of a steep, exposed driveway. Agents with the Texas Department of Public Safety believed the man inside had a large stash of drugs and a cache of weapons, including high-caliber rifles.

As dawn broke, a SWAT team waiting to execute a search warrant wanted a last-minute aerial sweep of the property, in part to check for unseen dangers. But there was a problem: The department's aircraft section feared that if it put up a helicopter, the suspect might try to shoot it down.

So the Texas agents did what no state or local law enforcement agency had done before in a high-risk operation: They launched a drone. A bird-size device called a Wasp floated hundreds of feet into the sky and instantly beamed live video to agents on the ground. The SWAT team stormed the house and arrested the suspect.

"The nice thing is it's covert," said Bill C. Nabors Jr., chief pilot with the Texas DPS, who in a recent interview described the 2009 operation for the first time publicly. "You don't hear it, and unless you know what you're looking for, you can't see it."

(They are now using Drone openly on the citizens of the United States!!!!)

/disgust
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Tsul777
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« Reply #3 on: January 22, 2011, 08:14:05 PM »


The RQ-16A T-Hawk unmanned aerial vehicle hovers over a group of coalition forces and civilians in a display highlighting some of its abilities at Kandahar Airfield Jan. 14, 2011. Technicians from Honeywell International invited coalition forces to a demonstration to help promote greater use of the device throughout the armed forces. (Photo by: Spc. Jonathan W. Thomas)

Coming soon to a law enforcement agency near you!
Night vision equipped for those meddling kids!
T-Hawk training is cheap too! $90,000 for a two week course. From your friends at Honeywell Int.
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« Reply #4 on: January 22, 2011, 10:11:13 PM »

Great..................   HK (hunter-killers) with Globalist operators.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHe24u0Cu2Q

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdA-ZYzIqi8&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vti5Pau-nbY&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpRuYhIvjkw&feature=related


If they have their way Earth will be the new Nebulos.

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No2NWO
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« Reply #5 on: February 08, 2011, 01:05:38 AM »



New, stealthy Navy drone makes its maiden flight
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41463911/ns/technology_and_science-tech_and_gadgets/

US Navy test-flies new Drone Stealth Bomber
http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/109845/20110208/2-stealth-bomber-x-47b-ucas-d-edwards-air-force-base.htm

The Navy's fearsome robotic stealth fighter takes to the skies
http://dvice.com/archives/2011/02/the-navys-fears.php
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« Reply #6 on: February 14, 2011, 06:54:29 PM »



Is the Pentagon’s Drone Spending Spree Over?



If you manufacture unmanned spy planes, you might have expected more money out of the defense budget request unveiled today. The Pentagon is asking for barely more money in fiscal 2012 than Congress is currently providing it: $4.8 billion, despite what comptroller Robert Hale called an “insatiable demand” among the services for spy gear.

Next year’s budget asks for $1.7 billion for the high-altitude Global Hawk class of drones, the Air Force drone that can climb to 65,000 feet for long distances. That’s the same amount of money that Congress approved in fiscal 2010 for the program.

But there’s a significant increase in money for Predator-class drones, like the Reaper that the Air Force will now buy and the Army’s version, the Gray Eagle. The military wants to spend $2.5 billion next year on buying the medium-altitude planes, up from $1.7 billion that Congress provided, which it calls “sustainment of maximum production” for the Predator class. Predators are the iconic drones that fire missiles at suspected terrorists.

Anything smaller than that — like, say the Army’s 3-foot, hand-launched Raven — is getting a funding cut. The Pentagon wants $600 million for those low-flying, low-endurance drones, compared to the $1.2 billion for them in the last funding bill Congress passed.

Now, if Congress ultimately does what Defense Secretary Robert Gates wants and passes a defense spending bill for the current fiscal year, fiscal 2011 — which it’s yet to do — then drone cash could actually drop. The Pentagon asked for $5.1 billion for drones for fiscal 2011. But it’s unknown if Congress will actually finish a defense spending bill for this fiscal year, or how much one would contain for drones. (Yes, it’s confusing.) In fiscal 2010, Congress provided $4.5 billion for drones overall.

All told, the new fiscal 2012 defense request envisions purchasing 1,395 drones, fewer than the 1,545 that Congress forked over cash to buy in fiscal 2010. But in addition, the Army says it’s going to take $300 million in money it saved by cutting overhead costs and buy new MC-12 manned spy planes; it’ll also develop a “new vertical unmanned air system,” according to budget documents released today. (A cousin of the Navy’s Fire Scout unmanned helicopter, perhaps?)

It’s a bit striking to see the military not asking for more cash to buy drones, a technology that’s exploded over the past decade. The Pentagon continues its post-9/11 trend of asking for more money for non-war costs, it’s just slowing its rate of growth and expecting to flatline by fiscal 2015. (Requested war funding money is down $41.5 billion, coming in at $117.8 billion for the next fiscal year, since U.S. troops are expected to leave Iraq by Dec. 31.) And few in the military have ever said they’ve got enough spy planes, manned or unmanned. Not to worry, though, drone enthusiasts: in the coming years, the Pentagon expects to spend much more on upgrading its unmanned systems.

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/02/cash-for-drones-levels-off-in-pentagons-new-budget/
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« Reply #7 on: February 14, 2011, 06:58:06 PM »

CIA Lawyer: How I Issued Drone ‘Death Warrants’



You can expect to see at least two people inside the secret bunkers in Virginia where the CIA pilots its lethal drones over Pakistan. One controls the distant drone, his hand on a joystick, ready to fire off a missile at a target below. Another is a CIA lawyer, watching to ensure that the operator is within his rights to attack his target. Call it a “punctilious” method to avoid civilian casualties and legal hot water, as one of those lawyers recently did — or call it the bureaucratization of a shadow war.

Tara Mckelvey gets a very rare peek inside the processes that go into the drone strikes, an undeclared air war that peaked last year at 118 missile firings, up from 33 in 2008. Her conclusion, published today in Newsweek, is that the operations ordering them are “multilayered and methodical, run by a corps of civil servants who carry out their duties in a professional manner.” But even the CIA’s former top lawyer, John Rizzo, is blunt about his involvement in what he calls “murder.”

Rizzo told Mckelvey that the process works roughly like this: the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center maintains a team of ten lawyers, who compile evidence that a prospective target constitutes a threat to the U.S. If Rizzo outlined the threshold that the lawyers have to meet, Mckelvey doesn’t report what it is, nor does she explain who asks the lawyers to compile a case on a particular target. But the CIA’s general counsel vets the case before issuing what Rizzo, who held the job during the Bush and early Obama administrations, calls a “death warrant.” The president doesn’t review the targeting list.

Although at least some cases don’t make the cut — either by CIA lawyers or senior officials, it’s unclear — Mckelvey writes that “government officials have to go through a more extensive process in order to obtain permission to wiretap someone in this country than to make someone the target of a lethal operation overseas.” It’s also worth mentioning that the Democratic-controlled Senate in 2007 refused to confirm Rizzo for the permanent general counsel job because of his legal involvement in the CIA’s torture program.

What the CIA lawyers are reviewing the drone program for is a mystery. Some law professors contend that the very involvement of CIA civilians or contractors in an inherently military program like the drone strikes make their pilots “unlawful combatants,” as Georgetown’s Gary Solis tells Mckelvey. All the administration has said about its legal rationale for the strikes is that they must be “proportionate” to the threat and are “limited to military objectives,” i.e., they don’t intentionally target civilians. But as Mckelvey documents, there’s an awful lot of lawyers to review what is a murky legal standard, at least in public, for a shadow war.

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/02/behind-the-drones-lots-of-bureaucracy/
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« Reply #8 on: February 18, 2011, 03:31:41 AM »

Navy’s Killer Drone Has Its Own Music Video


How proud is Northrop Grumman of its new carrier-capable drone, the X-47B? The company remixed the video of its first flight two weeks ago to include an anthemic rock soundtrack.

Our friends at Politico’s Morning Defense are put in the mind of “the unmanned-systems equivalent of The Edge.” We can hear that in the intro, sure, but it’s even more straightforward than U2. And besides, the X-47B isn’t a spy drone, it’s a killer. Come to think of it, this kind of sounds like the Killers.

The X-47B’s supposed to make its first flight off an aircraft carrier in 2013, so maybe the crew will bump some Northrop Rock on the deck.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIq5dT7D_ic&feature=player_embedded
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« Reply #9 on: February 18, 2011, 04:02:01 AM »


http://luckybogey.wordpress.com/2010/04/
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« Reply #10 on: February 18, 2011, 04:13:23 AM »

Sorry wrong link to that

http://jasonjeffrey.wordpress.com/2009/06/09/
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« Reply #11 on: March 30, 2011, 04:51:16 PM »

What Not to Sell on eBay: Drones

Take detailed notes before your next auction. If you try to put a drone up for sale on eBay, you’d better include your legal expenses in the asking price.

Henson Chua of the Philippines is looking at 20 years in prison for starting an auction on parts for a RQ-11B Raven, which is a no-no under the Arms Control Export Act. As seller celltron8, Chua allegedly asked for $13,000 for the handheld, unarmed spy drone. Unfortunately for him, his bidder was an undercover investigator for the Department of Homeland Security.

According to an indictment issued for Chua and released on Monday, Chua put the Raven up for sale around May of last year. Now, you can’t sell military technology without a specific waiver from the State Department. And eBay took the sale off its site on May 18, since it violated internal policies against selling military items. Perhaps people initially thought it was a really expensive model airplane: the Raven, manufactured by AeroVironment, has a wingspan of under five feet and weighs barely four pounds.

But the legal hurdles associated with selling a drone apparently didn’t stop Chua from emailing his undercover purchaser that “shipping it out should not be a problem here.”

When the agent told Chua that wasn’t exactly legal, he allegedly emailed, “We got paper work for the items so i have no problem selling to you whether you’re a license broker or not.” [sic] Celltron8’s attention to customer satisfaction is reflected in his feedback. “Good seller – easy to work with would deal with again, anytime,” vouched hobbyvintage in May 2009.

He was also sufficiently conscientious to alert his buyer that “there is a chance US custom might confiscate the item with out proper documentation,” the indictment reads. But as it turns out, you can send a Raven’s nose cone through the plain old U.S. Postal Service and its stabilizer tail through FedEx without any problem, as Chua proved after getting debited $6,500 through PayPal in July.

Chua was arrested in LA on February 10. (The Department of Homeland Security didn’t disclose how Chua came to the U.S., but the indictment discloses that he held a U.S. visa.) The indictment refers to a “co-conspirator” inside the U.S. who relayed the drone parts to Chua’s undercover purchaser.

There’s no indication from the indictment how Chua got hold of AeroVironment’s tiny drone. Efforts by the DHS agent to get Chua to give up his supplier during the sale were evidently unsuccessful. Maybe he’ll make a deal in jail. But if Chua is part of some broader drone black market, relying on eBay to unload ill-gotten merchandise is hardly the stuff of Viktor “Merchant of Death” Bout.

Comments drone enthusiast and WIRED editor-in-chief — who, yes, beat me to this story — “Full waypoint-capable UAVs are illegal to sell in the US with Export Control documentation and other safeguards.  Don’t be this guy.”

http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/03/what-not-to-sell-on-ebay-drones/
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Alex for Pres. 2016
Rise and rise again, until lambs become lions.
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