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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated

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From: FJB3/27/2012 12:03:20 PM
1 Recommendation   of 793890
 
The drone threat — in the US

March 27, 2012

kurzweilai.net

[+]The Switchblade is a self-guided cruise missile designed to fit into a soldiers rucksack (credit: AeroVironment)

Drone proliferation raises an issue that has received too little attention: the threat that they could be used to carry out terrorist attacks.

President Obama signed a sweeping aviation bill in February that will open American airspace to “unmanned aircraft systems,” a.k.a. drones.

The technology exists to build drones that fit into a backpack and are equipped with a video camera and a warhead so they can be flown, cruise missile style, into a target. In fact, in September 2011 it was announced that the U.S. Armyhad signed a nearly $5-million contract with a California company, AeroVironment Inc., for the purchase of its Switchblade drones.

A Switchblade launches from a tube roughly 2 feet long, sprouts wings immediately after exiting the tube and is then controlled by an operator who looks into a shoe-box-shaped viewer displaying video from the drone. It is equipped with an electric motor that is quiet even when running, and that can be switched off to enable a completely silent glide in the final moments of an approach.

The day will come when such drones are available to almost anyone who wants them badly enough — including terrorists.

In fact, there is ample evidence that terrorist groups have already experimented with drones.

So what can we do to reduce the risk? One good place to start is the “model aircraft” provision in the new aviation law, which allows hobbyists to operate drones weighing up to 55 pounds with essentially no governmental oversight.

By what logic, for example, do we prevent airline passengers from taking 8-ounce plastic water bottles through security checkpoints, while permitting anyone who so desires to operate a 50-pound, video-guided drone, no questions asked?

Writer John Villasenor is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a professor of electrical engineering at UCLA.
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