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The Drone Wars: 9/11-Inspired Combat Leans Heavily on Robot Aircraft

The U.S. Defense Department has added thousands of automated aircraft added to its fleet over the past decade to support operations in Afghanistan, Iraq and Pakistan as concerns of drone accuracy persist

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PREDATOR:
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PREDATOR:

General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc.'s Predator drones were introduced to combat in the mid-1990s and deployed in the U.S.'s 1999 Kosovo air campaign for surveillance and reconnaissance.

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COURTESY OF U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO/LT COL LESLIE PRATT, VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
REAPER:
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REAPER:

About 40 turboprop-powered General Atomics MQ-9 Reapers (a larger version of the Predator) were supposed to be entering the fleet in 2011.

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COURTESY OF U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO BY PAUL RIDGEWAY
GLOBAL-HAWK:
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GLOBAL-HAWK:

Northrop Grumman's RQ-4 Global Hawks are the largest RPAs in the Air Force's fleet with wingspans of 35-to-40 meters.

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COURTESY OF U.S. AIR FORCE PHOTO/MASTER SGT. JASON TUDOR
SENTINEL:
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SENTINEL:

The Air Force also uses the Lockheed Martin RQ-170 Sentinel, a "stealthy reconnaissance aircraft whose existence has only recently been acknowledged by the Air Force," according to a Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report published in June....[More]

HUNTER:
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HUNTER:

The Army operates three medium-sized models of unmanned aircraft, one of which is the Northrop Grumman MQ-5B Hunter.

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COURTESY OF NORTHROP GRUMMAN
SHADOW:
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SHADOW:

Another medium-sized Army drone is AAI Corp.'s RQ-7B Shadow 200.

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COURTESY OF THE U.S. MARINES, VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
BROAD AREA MARITIME SURVEILLANCE (BAMS):
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BROAD AREA MARITIME SURVEILLANCE (BAMS):

The Navy is testing two new types of RPA, one of which is the long-endurance Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) aircraft, a Global Hawk variant.

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COURTESY OF NAVAL AIR SYSTEMS COMMAND
FIRESCOUT:
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FIRESCOUT:

The Northrop Grumman MQ-8B Firescout is an unmanned helicopter that the Navy is testing.

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COURTESY OF NORTHROP GRUMMAN
NANO AIR VEHICLE (NAV):
thumb: NANO AIR VEHICLE (NAV):

NANO AIR VEHICLE (NAV):

DARPA contracted AeroVironment, Inc., to design and build a flying prototype "hummingbird-like" aircraft. In February 2011 AeroVironment introduced its 16-centimeter-long Nano Hummingbird, capable of climbing and descending vertically, flying sideways left and right, flying forward and backward, as well as rotating clockwise and counter-clockwise under remote control and carrying a small video camera....[More]

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  1. 1. Monita 11:24 AM 9/2/11

    It is impressive how technologically-advanced our society has become. However, I would be more impressed if all that money and effort were allocated to life-enhancing purposes instead of the purposes of destruction and killing. These drones are technologically amazing and worthy of admiration. However it is very sad to see the motivations and purposes behind this technology.

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  2. 2. Monita 12:17 PM 9/2/11

    It is cool that Scientific American can quote its 1849 article on this topic!

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  3. 3. Copernic 03:40 PM 9/2/11

    I've always wondered what these drones have against wedding parties. They really despise them. Amazing piece of technology, though.

    A little satire on the subject. http://www.thechicagodope.com/2010/11/11/cia-admits-drone-strike-killed-six-in-wisconsin-wedding-party/

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  4. 4. michaelbix 03:46 PM 9/2/11

    I'm highly impressed by the U.S. Army's planning document (pdf - "Unmanned Aircraft Systems Roadmap 2010-2035") you link to. It shows in great detail the intention to introduce UAV's to the United States (acronym NAS - National Air Space); shows how they intend to use them for information-gathering, "homeland defense," and to help with emergencies and disasters; and even proposes eventual coordinated "swarms of nanos" in urban environments (equipped with face recognition) and larger UAV's capable of "non-lethal" weaponry.

    No mystery here. Looks like Congress will appropriate the money, too.

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  5. 5. Ronald Patrick Marriott 08:44 PM 9/2/11

    Great more funds for dead civilians

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  6. 6. Chryses in reply to Monita 05:28 PM 9/3/11

    The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) was also instrumental in the creation of the internet. Who knows? Perhaps someday this technology will become equally beneficial to everyone.

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  7. 7. eco-steve 10:16 AM 9/4/11

    What is the most revolting is that the US uses its outrageous military spending solely to defend its wealthy few.

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  8. 8. tommythetoilet 11:54 AM 9/4/11

    Remember that all this technology the government and military develops is open for abuse.

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  9. 9. Chryses in reply to tommythetoilet 12:50 PM 9/4/11

    Reality check: ALL technology is open to abuse.

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  10. 10. Raghuvanshi1 12:26 AM 9/7/11

    Using thousand of Drone air plans in Iraq,Afghanistan and Pakistan and murdering millions of innocent people why not U.S.lingering there without success?What is wrong with U.S. foreign policy? Why above countries still fighting with U.S.?

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  11. 11. electric38 02:45 AM 9/7/11

    Where is the data on the cost (per drone)?
    Once a drone is shot down or captured, won't it go straight to other countries for dismantling and duplication (at 1000th of our cost)? Similar to what is already happening to military robotics.

    Can these drones be used to spy on our own citizens? Can they be used by the military to forward their own agenda (as far as funding and congressional voting)?

    How many of other drones were purchased by the CIA and the other American backed companies that operate independently of "military orders", but carry out war with their own means and agenda?

    Aren't these the same drones now being used by our own border patrols (Mexico). What is their impact on the drug cartels and the overall war on drugs? Are the facial recognition cameras simply noting the players? Are they afraid of stepping on American financing toes? Are they using the information to stop the flow, or just using it to get their own piece of the "financial kickback" pie?

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  12. 12. rcschneider 04:58 PM 9/8/11

    Shooting down a US pilot engaged in wartime activities is considered an act of war. Would shooting a pilot operating a drone be considered murder or an act of war if the pilot is in the US? I am concerned that we have inadvertently brought the battlefield to our shores.

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  13. 13. bucketofsquid in reply to eco-steve 05:06 PM 9/8/11

    You are commenting on the internet so like it or not, by global standards you are part of the wealthy few.

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  14. 14. bucketofsquid in reply to Raghuvanshi1 05:11 PM 9/8/11

    Your numbers are way off - the USA has killed tens of thousands and not millions and the majority of those were not unarmed civilians. The USA is not at war against Iraq or Afghanistan. We are at war with a group of Saudi Arabian religious zealots and probably indirectly with the religious dictatorship of Iran. Compared to nuking Japan or firebombing Dresden, this has been a very civilized set of wars. The real barbarous animals here are the ones that deliberately target children and turn Mosques and Madrassas into military targets.

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  15. 15. bucketofsquid in reply to rcschneider 05:13 PM 9/8/11

    Very good point but really, we are already at war with people targeting our country that have already stated clearly that civilians are their main objective to kill. It would be different if we were fighting a real country.

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  16. 16. Ahimsa_Fruitarian 06:23 PM 2/5/12

    I like robots because they do nothing wrong unless made to do wrong. It all looks to me to be evolution on the time-line of Earth , - which I believe is the most important perspective - we must look at the time-line of the Earth before judging things. The biggest problem has been lack of peace in nature - even before humans came along and nothing in nature had the power to fix the problem. I want robots to set up new designer ecosystems. That means the opportunity for peace in nature. I am not arguing for a principle, rather a sustainable environment that allows advancement of science so we can survive and have capacity to live fully. The bottom line is that the current problem is if robots are supported only for work in civilizations rather than work in ecosystems. Look, if you had the best designer ecosystem - what would it not do for you?
    Any sceptics or supporters of my theory should answer this important question.

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  17. 17. Ahimsa_Fruitarian 06:43 PM 2/5/12

    I like robots because they do nothing wrong unless made to do wrong. It all looks to me to be evolution on the time-line of Earth , - which I believe is the most important perspective - we must look at the time-line of the Earth before judging things. The biggest problem has been lack of peace in nature - even before humans came along and nothing in nature had the power to fix the problem. I want robots to set up new designer ecosystems. That means the opportunity for peace in nature. I am not arguing for a principle, rather a sustainable environment that allows advancement of science so we can survive and have capacity to live fully. The bottom line is that the current problem is if robots are supported only for work in civilizations rather than work in ecosystems. Look, if you had the best designer ecosystem - what would it not do for you?
    I invite all to answer this important question.

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  18. 18. euroflycars 04:06 PM 2/6/12

    "The September 11, 2001 attacks initiated a flurry of advances in military technology over the past decade that has helped the U.S. and its allies redefine modern warfare."

    Yet the most sophisticated of all drones, the Predator dates back to the mid 90ties...

    "The U.S. Army's drone armada alone has expanded from 54 drones in October 2001..."

    Did you take into account the four drones that flew respectively into the WTC towers, the Pentagon, and into the ground in Pennsylvania?

    In the hopefully not too far away future, US drones will have to face World revolution based on the civil society's myriads of personal ultra-light, electrical tiltrotor aircraft.

    Should the revolutionaries not be able to outnumber the US drones, they will nevertheless beat them economically because these personal aircraft will grant the civil society much more even than the economic value currently granted by the motorcar they will substitute over time, plus the huge savings from abandoning intercity motorway infrastructure construction and maintenance.

    Not only will military drones weigh heavily on the State budget, but with the announced (or already mass-produced?) hypersonic drones capable of dropping six tons of bombs on any big city of the globe within less than two hours, a threat of yet incomparably greater magnitude is arising:

    As we know from WW2, a bomb carpet dropped on a big city creates the same fire storm as happened in Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- yet without the environmental aftermath of a nuclear blast.

    Strategically, this type of environmentally friendly mass-destruction potential will lead to a DRAMATIC LOWERING OF THE DECISION-FOR-ACTION THRESHOLD -- with the risk of nuclear escalation nonetheless to follow!

    Teheran, mon amour...

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  19. 19. collettedesmaris in reply to bucketofsquid 05:43 AM 4/19/12

    The United States has not declared war on any of the countries you speak of - they are indulging in preemptive presence in those countries because they want their oil. The overseas countries have stated that they want the U.S. military out of their countries, and the U.S. should leave and stop meddling in the affairs of other countries. They should take their military personnel back to the U.S. where they belong to protect their own country. The very reason why you say other countries want to attack U.S. is because U.S. did it to them first and won't leave.

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  20. 20. collettedesmaris 06:01 AM 4/19/12

    It has been announced "Drones Are Going Mainstream" in United States air space nationwide, for sole purpose of surveillance. They were getting resistance from FAA because of concerns FAA has about potential crashes the unmanned drones could likely have with commercial & private airplanes because drones are not controlled by air traffic controllers. It is a very valid and sensible concern. But as usual government prevailed and drones are probably flying around America as we speak. It is written they are difficult to detect, but that makes sense - how else can they spy effectively on society if easy to detect. This is a very large step forward in more loss of USA peoples freedoms, and you Americans just let it happen. Your Founding Fathers would be shamed of you Americans for what you are putting up with - when will you all finally stand up for yourselfs and say "Enough!" "No!" All of us in Europe we are stunned that you had most sublime document in all of History of world, and you just let them take it from you over last ten years without one objection. It will not be long you will understand what you lost when it is too late to do anything about it, when you look at the world from behind locked gates.

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