Reyes currently serves as chair of the House Select Intelligence Committee and is a member of the powerful Armed Services Committee. He is a prominent promoter of UAVs, which are tested and partly developed at the
Reyes is a member of the little-known Congressional UAV Caucus, whose mission is to “educate members of Congress and the public on the strategic, tactical, and scientific value of UAVs, actively support further development and acquisition of more capable UAVs, and to more effectively engage the civilian aviation community on UAV use and safety.”
Mission of Congressional UAV Caucus
The UAV Caucus says that its mission includes "actively support[ing] further development and acquisition of more capable UAVs" and "more effectively engag[ing] the civilian aviation community on UAV use and safety."
Members of the caucus state that they:
Members of the caucus state that they:
- Acknowledge the overwhelming value of UAVs to the defense, intelligence, homeland security, and the scientific communities;
- Recognize the urgent need to rapidly develop and deploy more UAVs in support of ongoing operations;
- Work with the military, industry, NASA, the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and other stakeholders to seek fair and equitable solutions to challenges created by UAV operations in the U.S. National Air Space (NAS);
- Support our world-class industrial base that engineers, develops, manufactures, and tests UAVs creating thousands of American jobs;
- Support policies and budgets that promote a larger, more robust national security UAV capability.
One business beneficiary of Reyes’
enthusiasm for drones is Aerospace Missions, a small company that after
setting up in El Paso has received
a steady stream of $1 million earmarks by Reyes from 2005 through 2009 to
develop miniature sensors for UAVs.
As a member of the Air and Land Forces Subcommittee of the House
Armed Services Committee, Reyes notes that the subcommittee is “responsible for
funding key programs of importance” to Ft. Bliss and the nearby White Sands
Missile Range and Holloman Air Force Base, including the Future Combat Systems,
F-22 fighter aircraft, and Predator UAVs.
“As I serve on the House Armed Services
Committee and the Intelligence Committee, I have been involved with the
development of UAVs and know the importance of the intelligence they provide,”
said Reyes in response to questions about his close relationship with Aerospace
Missions and other UAV contractors.
UAV proponents, including UAV manufacturers and high-tech
advocates within DHS, have not been above using the controversy over the border
fence created by the Secure Border Fence Act of 2006 to promote UAVs for border
security. This was a major theme at the 2008 Global Border Security Conference
and Technology Expo in Austin .
Michael Rosenberg of E.J. Krause, the conference organizer,
said: "Our goal is to bring together government and industry leaders to
consider technology and policy strategies that move beyond the fence. The
government's demand for advanced border technology is increasing and we are
committed to providing a unique opportunity for government officials in
homeland security and law enforcement to see first-hand what solutions are
available to them.”
Another conference speaker was Rick Morgan of Aerospace Missions
Corporation, the UAV development company surviving on congressional earmarks by
Rep. Reyes and other members of Congress.
Congressional UAV proponents are not working
alone. There’s a newly created industry association to parallel the UAV Caucus called the
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Systems Association
(UAVSI), which has its own congressional advocacy committee and sponsors
events. In close cooperation with members of the Congressional UAV Caucus,
UAVSI sponsors an annual UAVSI Action Day on Capitol Hill, and congressional
tours of UAV manufacturing facilities.
The principal
market for UAVs is the military. Drone purchases accounted for
more than one-third of the Air Force’s proposed 2010 aircraft budget. While the Predators have thus far been favored by DOD and DHS,
other military contractors, notably Northrop Grumman and Lockheed Martin are
seeking to makes more inroads into this booming market with its own UAVs.
Congress has passed a flurry of
laws and budget authorizations to foster UAVs. Shortly after DHS was created
Congress in 2003 directed DHS to study the feasibility of using UAVs, and has
repeated this directive in numerous instances since then. The 2003 DOD
Authorization Act (P.L. 108-136) required the president to issue a report “on
the use of unmanned aerial vehicles for support of homeland security missions.”
As part of the 2007 appropriations
bill Congress urged DHS to work with the FAA to implement a pilot program that
would use UAVs for surveillance on the northern border.
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