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Drones a growing threat to military

Actions range: Bagging and tagging to blasting

- Tom Vanden Brook and Cybele Mayes-Osterman Military · Drone Strikes · Drone Technology · Warfare and Conflicts · World Politics · Politics · Tech · Washington · East Coast · United States of America · United States Armed Forces · United States Department of Defense · United States Army · Earth · Department of Homeland Security · U.S. Federal Aviation Administration · United States House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence · Special Forces · United States Army Special Forces · F-22 Raptor · New Jersey · Jersey · US Military Academy · New Mexico · Texas · Executive Office of the President of the United States · White House · United States Navy · United States Air Force Academy · Liberty · Northern Command · Langley · White Sands, New Mexico · Mexico · Eglin Air Force Base · Florida · Zap · Langley Air Force Base · Picatinny Arsenal

WASHINGTON — Drone sightings like the more than 5,000 reported in recent weeks that have captivated and freaked out East Coast residents, have been commonplac­e at sensitive U.S. military sites across the country, according to defense officials.

There have been hundreds, perhaps thousands, of drone incursions at remote military installati­ons, drawing little public attention. But they have disrupted sensitive operations, according to the Pentagon officials who spoke to USA TODAY on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military operations.

A critical concern: Foreign adversarie­s have identified a “seam” in the U.S. response to drone surveillan­ce. U.S. military forces have the authority to take down drones, blasting them from the sky or severing their navigation­al links by radio jamming, if the aircraft penetrate airspace over a base and pose a threat.

Yet once outside that airspace, the drone becomes the responsibi­lity of local law enforcemen­t. In the vast, sparsely populated areas that are home to many military installati­ons, the response is often too little, and way too late, according to a Defense official who has dealt with incursions.

Another senior official said the Pentagon had been too passive in the face of the growing threat. This official offered a solution to an unidentifi­ed drone: Zap it, put in a bag and exploit it for clues about its origin and intent.

The Air Force, in fact, has done so. Drones have “been taken down” by Air Force personnel in recent years, said Ann Stefanek, an Air Force spokeswoma­n. She declined to provide further details, citing operationa­l security concerns.

Yet legal concerns and worries about debris causing damage or death on the ground have hamstrung the response.

The military has a “robust air defense system in place to defend against the potential of hijacked airlines,” but the same can’t be said for drones, said David Deptula, the dean of the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies and a retired three-star Air

Force general.

“Just as no one thought about airliners causing harm before 9/11, we need to recognize the negative potential and the lethal potential of drones that we’re seeing around the world in their use for military and hostile purposes,” he said.

In a joint statement Monday, the Department­s of Defense and Homeland Security, the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion urged Congress to enact legislatio­n “that would extend and expand existing counter-drone authoritie­s to identify and mitigate any threat that may emerge.”

The statement also downplayed the current drone hysteria, noting that most of the reports have turned out to be lawful commercial, hobbyist and law enforcemen­t drones, crewed aircraft and helicopter­s. Even stars have been mistakenly reported as drones.

But lawmakers are also paying attention – members of the House Intelligen­ce Committee received a closeddoor briefing on the issue on Tuesday.

What surveillan­ce could reveal

Spy drones could collect sensitive informatio­n on U.S. military activities that could tip off adversarie­s to future deployment­s, one military official said. For example, aerial surveillan­ce could show the movement of ammunition from arsenals to port as the Pentagon prepared for war. A drone could also provide real-time video of the rapid response of Special Forces soldiers out of Fort Liberty.

In recent years, drones swarmed the site of a planned military exercise, forcing U.S. Northern Command, responsibl­e for protecting the homeland from attack, to delay the exercise, the official said.

A hostile drone flying within around 200 feet of a military base could have a much higher-resolution look at military assets than satellites or other airborne technologi­es, Deptula said. F-22 fighters, the most sophistica­ted warplanes in the Air Force fleet, may have been the target of mysterious waves of drones that soared over Langley Air Force Base in Virginia last year, Deptula said.

“If you get up real close to those aircraft, you can detect and observe shapes and constructi­on techniques that you might not be able to detect from an overhead satellite,” he said.

Other sensitive points that hostile drones could surveil include America’s electric grid and telecommun­ication sites. An adversary could try to find “the linchpins and nodes upon how the power distributi­on system is aligned and distribute­d,” he said.

Drone incursions in NJ, ‘elsewhere’

The joint statement issued Monday acknowledg­ed drones had penetrated restricted airspace over military installati­ons in New Jersey and “elsewhere.” In New Jersey, some were spotted over the Picatinny Arsenal, an active weapons research and developmen­t facility owned by the Army that sprawls across nearly 6,000 acres.

Other sites of drone incursions include White Sands Missile Range, according to the military official, the Army’s only land range for testing longdistan­ce missiles, explosives and artillery. The tract, 100 miles long and 40 miles wide, straddles New Mexico and Texas. Its airspace is controlled by the Pentagon, one of only two sites in the country where the FAA does not have jurisdicti­on. The White House is the other.

Drones have surveilled Eglin Air Force Base in Florida, the official said. And remotely operated vessels have also been suspected of surveillin­g U.S. Navy facilities.

New strategy to counter drones

If a drone was deemed a threat, officials have several “active and passive” measures they could take to respond, like using the military’s own drones to take it down, redirectin­g it, or interferin­g with its navigation­al signal, Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, told reporters.

Ryder said at a Tuesday news conference that Picatinny Arsenal and Naval Weapons Station Earle, another New Jersey base where drones were spotted, have received extra drone detection and defense equipment, including Dronebuste­rs, a handheld instrument that jams drone signals.

Some of those methods are covered in a new strategy to “counter” drones that was signed by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin earlier this month.

Although the full plan is classified, it aims to improve the military’s ability to detect and track drones and delegate responsibi­lity for taking out a threat, according to the Pentagon.

The military doesn’t have the same authority to track and take down drones over bases within U.S. borders as it does overseas or in combat zones.

“We don’t collect intelligen­ce on American citizens,” Ryder said.

Drones have already taken lives at U.S. military bases abroad. In January, a drone attacked Tower 22, a U.S. base in Jordan, killing three American soldiers and wounding more than 40. A one-way drone, which is programmed with a target and doesn’t need direction in midair, was used in the attack.

The current drone mania also echoes the Chinese spy balloon incident that riveted the country in 2023.

The Pentagon monitored the balloon, bristling with spyware, as it passed over sensitive military sites on its transit across the U.S. An F-22 shot the balloon down off the South Carolina shore days after it first crossed into Alaska.

 ?? MEG POTTER/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Drone incursion sites include White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico and Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.
MEG POTTER/USA TODAY NETWORK Drone incursion sites include White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico and Eglin Air Force Base in Florida.
 ?? PETER ACKERMAM/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Hundreds, and maybe thousands, of drones fly over military bases every year, officials say.
PETER ACKERMAM/USA TODAY NETWORK Hundreds, and maybe thousands, of drones fly over military bases every year, officials say.

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