Customs & Border Protection Considered Weaponizing Drones [View all]
Source: Electronic Frontiers Foundation
JULY 2, 2013 | BY JENNIFER LYNCH
Customs & Border Protection Considered Weaponizing Drones=
A Customs & Border Protection (CPB) report, released in response to EFFs Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the agency, shows CBP has considered adding weapons to its domestic Predator drones.
The report, titled Concept of Operations for CBPs Predator B Unmanned Aircraft System and submitted to Congress on June 29, 2010 shows that, not only is the agency planning to sharply increase the number of Predator drones it flies and the amount of surveillance it conducts by 2016 (detailed further in a separate blog post tomorrow), but it has considered equipping its Predators with non-lethal weapons designed to immobilize targets of interest. (p. 63).
Predator drones, manufactured by General Atomics for the US military and first flown in Bosnia in 1995, have been designed to carry weapons in addition to surveillance equipment like live video and thermal imaging cameras and Synthetic Aperture Radar. The Predator B drone flown by CBP is popular due to its ability to fly at high or low altitudes for up to 27 hours without refueling and its capacity to carry nearly 4,000 pounds of surveillance equipment or weapons. In fact, General Atomics markets them as providing a long-endurance, persistent surveillance/strike capability for the war fighter.
However, this is the first weve heard of any federal agency proposing using weapons on drones flown domestically. That CBP has, without broader public discussion, considered this stepcombined with the fact that the agency (with Congress blessing, if the immigration bill is approved (pdf, p. 92)) is planning to sharply increase the number of drones it fliesshould cause serious concern for Americans.
Read more: https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2013/07/customs-border-protection-considered-weaponizing-drones