Feral Jundi

Monday, March 29, 2010

Aviation: Drones Slowly Becoming The New ‘Virtual Fence’ On Border

   So are we actually shutting down the virtual fence, or are we just using a different method of creating a virtual fence? I also want to highlight another ongoing saga involving drones and a call for troops.  In Texas, governor Perry has been fighting to get more drones and more troops on the border in order to stop the spill over of violence, and has met a lot of resistance from the feds on this.

    Over the last year, this has been more political than anything, seeing how Perry is Republican and the Administration and Congress is mostly Democrat. Increasing border security activities goes against any kind of immigration reform or amnesty initiatives, because it sends a mixed message to the U.S. citizenry.  The narrative is this– ‘Do we want to stop illegal immigrants from crossing the border so we can stop them from killing Americans or bringing over drugs/supporting the cartels, or do we want them coming over and giving them a free pass so we can get cheap labor? I side on the idea that people should come to my country legally, and go through the same process that all immigrants have gone through who have come to the US.  Why the Mexican immigrant is a special case, is beyond me. Especially when drug cartels are taking advantage of these immigrants and a weak border, and flooding my country with their drugs.

   But back to border security.  As soon as Americans die, either on the border or on either side of that border, I think politics tends to go out the window, and reality sets in. The attack on diplomats and the astronomical increase in deaths across the border in places like Juarez, have presented a reality where border security might start getting the attention it needs.  Our use of drones will probably increase along the border, as will our assistance to the Mexican government in stopping the cartels. American deaths are game changers, and those acts will only put the war back into the ‘drug war’. The bitter irony is American deaths have already been high do to drug overdoses or drug related crimes in the US. I guess it takes killings on the border to really drive home the point.-Matt

——————————————————————

Drones silently patrol U.S. borders

By Ed Lavandera

March 12, 2010

Fort Huachuca, Arizona (CNN) — It’s a frigid, dark night in the mountainous border region of southeast Arizona. A group of 31 suspected illegal immigrants are walking up and down rocky ridges toward Tucson, Arizona. They’re wearing small backpacks and stop to rest every few minutes.

This isn’t a scene unfolding before the eyes of Border Patrol agents on the ground. It comes from a video image provided by a Predator B unmanned aircraft 19,000 feet overhead. In fact, the nearest Border Patrol agents are far away.

Jerry Kersey is the Customs and Border Protection agent in charge of this night’s Predator mission. He and his two-man crew relay the information to Border Patrol agents from a small trailer 40 miles from the scene.

Kersey directs the agents on the ground, who are wearing night-vision goggles.

“Stop! Stop! They’re to your right,” Kersey firmly dictates over a radio transmission. “They must see you. The group is running.”

Over radio headsets, you can hear the agents running through the rugged terrain.

“It makes them much more effective when we’re able to say, ‘Hey, this is a group. You need to come get these guys,’ ” Kersey told CNN during a recent night mission.

It’s also the reason a growing chorus of lawmakers and politicians are calling on the office of Customs and Border Protection to dispatch more Predator aircraft to patrol the border regions.

Supporters of the idea say the Predator’s multimillion-dollar price tag — the camera alone can cost more than $2 million — is worth it. The drone patrols remote areas of the border where ground agents don’t have consistent access.

“They can be very useful in providing eyes in the sky to make sure that we keep America safe,” said U.S. Rep. Henry Cuellar, a Democrat representing the Texas border town of Laredo. “This will be something that provides law enforcement extra support.”

Cuellar says he wants to see Predator aircraft help track down illegal immigrants and drug smugglers and provide intelligence on Mexican drug cartels operating along the border.

Right now, Predator aircraft monitor some border regions on a limited basis.Customs and Border Protection says it has six of the unmanned aircraft: There are three Predators in Arizona, two in North Dakota, and one is being tested for maritime anti-narcotics duty in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

The agency will get its seventh drone this spring. That one is expected to go to Corpus Christi, Texas. Right now, none of its drones fly over Texas, the agency said.

The pilotless Predator B can fly up to 240 knots (276 mph) at altitudes up to 50,000 feet, according to the Customs and Border Protection Web site.

But there are questions about safety. A federal government study reported that the Predator is prone to crashing.

“Serious safety and technical issues need to be addressed if the program is to be expanded domestically,” a May 2008 congressional report said. “… It is noted that UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles] suffer accident rates up to hundreds of times higher than manned aircraft.”

In Arizona, since the drones started flying there in 2006, one Predator has crashed because of pilot error and another had a hard landing that caused damage. But David Gasho, the director of aviation operations at Fort Huachuca, says those problems have been worked out and the program is much safer now.

“When people’s lives and property are at risk, we don’t push the envelope,” Gasho told CNN. “We’ve actually started accumulating a pretty good safety record compared to a wartime picture.”

There are also logistical concerns in flying the aircraft all along the border regions. The Department of Homeland Security would have to coordinate with the Federal Aviation Administration to make sure the drones don’t interfere with private and commercial aircraft.

And despite their high cost, the Predators do have limitations.

Just as Border Patrol agents moved in to capture the group of 31 suspected illegal immigrants, thick clouds moved over the mountains at the worst possible moment. The Predator’s camera view of the scene was lost.

As ground agents asked for more directions to reach the running suspects, the agents controlling the Predator could no longer tell them where to go.

The Border Patrol did manage to capture 18 of the suspects, but 13 others got away.

Jerry Kersey cursed a little but took it in stride. It’s part of the job.

“You got elements out there you can’t control,” he said, but tomorrow is another day, and we’ll be right back at it, trying to get more.”

Story here.

—————————————————————

Drones may be sent soon to help with border security, Napolitano says

March 20, 2010

By CHRISTY HOPPE

AUSTIN – The federal government may soon send unmanned aircraft to scour West Texas and the state’s coastal waters in an effort to boost border security, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said in a letter to the governor sent Friday.

Perry had formally requested the assistance a week ago. The need also was underscored in a phone call that Democratic nominee Bill White had with Napolitano on Thursday.

Homeland Security has six drones and is working with the Federal Aviation Administration to get the necessary clearance to begin flying over Texas, Napolitano wrote.

Before operations start, ground control stations, pilots, sensor operators and maintenance support have to be allocated. She said that the governor would be kept apprised of the progress.

“This is encouraging news, and we are hopeful that this technology and additional federal resources will be deployed to Texas as soon as possible,” said Perry spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger.

Perry has complained that the federal government has not done enough to secure the border, especially in light of escalating drug violence in Mexico border towns.

Story here.

No Comments

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

Powered by WordPress