Drones reshaping Iraq's battlefields

Posted 7/6/2006 10:36 PM ET

By Tom Vanden Brook
USA TODAY

http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/techinnovations/2006-07-06-uavs-iraq_x.htm


WASHINGTON — The use of unmanned surveillance planes over Iraq has soared, 
revolutionizing the way U.S. troops wage war and crowding the skies above Iraq.

The Army says that before the Iraq war started in March 2003, it had 14 
unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs); it now has about 700 in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, most of them small.

In 2003 and 2004, the Army flew the aircraft about 1,500 hours per month, 
the Army says. In the past year, the aircraft flew 9,000 hours a month.

The unmanned scout planes and sensor systems have made it easier to spot 
insurgents and roadside bombs, thus saving American lives, Pentagon 
officials and experts say. Using the aircraft, troops can often get an 
instant picture of what lurks behind the next hill or building. "One can 
argue that the standard equipment for a Marine or infantryman now is the 
helmet, rifle, boots and UAV," says Christopher Bolkcom, a defense expert 
for the Congressional Research Service.

Pilotless aircraft have changed fighting much as night-vision technology 
did in the 1980s and 1990s, says Col. John Burke, project manager for the 
Army's UAV program. "It's very seldom that you see a revolution in warfare 
like this."

The increased use of drones led to a midair collision with a helicopter in 
2004, the Army says. No one was hurt. Bolkcom says there have also been 
several near misses. "Collision avoidance is an issue that they haven't 
quite gotten the hang of yet," says John Pike, a military analyst at 
GlobalSecurity.org.

The aircraft are more common because they're easier to use. An 18-year-old 
soldier can learn how to launch and fly a Raven and avoid midair collisions 
in eight hours, Burke said. The controls look "very much like a PlayStation 
controller," he says.

In previous wars, troops found the enemy by patrolling until they bumped 
into them, Pike said. Now U.S. troops can peek beyond the horizon. "They 
have gone bonkers over them because they work."


---------------------[BOXED FEATURE]---------------------

THE AIRCRAFT IN ACTION

The Raven, a hand-launched aircraft with a 4-foot wingspan, spotted an 
insurgent roadblock that had prevented Iraqis from reaching a polling 
place. U.S. tanks and armored vehicles then cleared the intersection.

A Shadow aircraft, which is larger than the Raven, detected an insurgent 
position and identified it with a laser pointer. An Apache attack 
helicopter locked on to the laser target and killed the insurgents.

Insurgents had been lobbing mortar rounds at U.S. troops for several days, 
but their precise location was unclear. A drone allowed U.S. crews to watch 
the area for three days. When the insurgents resumed firing, the Army 
killed them with artillery fire.

Source: U.S. Army


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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