(Excerpted from a new investigative report published by CounterPunch magazine, March 2013).
Projected drone squadron locations for U.S. military drones, 2017 (DOD)
Tom Barry
The Department of Homland Security takes a broad view of the scope of drone
operations. Yet DHS is not alone in breaking down the barriers that have
traditionally—and constitutionally—separated domestic law enforcement and national
security operations.
The Pentagon could easily dispute CBP’s contention that its UAV program represents the leading edge in the opening up
the homeland to drones.
The Congressional Caucus on Unmanned Systems, which was
founded in 2009 by Rep. Buck McKeon (R-Calif.), has encouraged the Pentagon to
work with the Federal Aviation Agency to open national airspace to military and
other UAVs.
Currently, military drones are restricted to defined
military airspace around military bases, unless operating with special waivers
or COAs (Certificates of Authorization) issued by the FAA. Rep. Duncan Hunter
(R-Calif.), a leading member of the drone caucus, sponsored an amendment to the
National Department of Defense Authorization Act of 2009 that authorized the
creation of an interagency US Executive Committee under Pentagon sponsorship to
increase drone access to national airspace.
“It is vital for DOD and the FAA to collaborate closely to
achieve progress in gaining access for unmanned aerial systems to the National
Airspace System to support military requirements,” stated the Hunter amendment
to the 2009 National Defense Authorization Act. With the Pentagon in the lead,
the US Executive Committee aims to “enable increased and ultimately routine
access of Federal UAVs engaged in public aircraft operations into the NAS to
support operational, training, development, and research requirements of FAA,
DOD, DHS, and NASA.”
In its Final Report to Congress on Access to National
Airspace by Unmanned Aerial Systems (October 2010), the office of the
Undersecretary of Defense noted that the Hunter amendment “recommended that the
DOD and the FAA form an Executive Committee to act as a focal point for
resolution of issues on matters of policy and procedures relating to US access to the National Airspace System (NAS).” Furthermore, “The sense of Congress was that progress has been lagging in
the integration of US into the NAS for operational training, operational
support to the Combatant Commanders, and support to domestic authorities in
emergencies and natural disasters.”
The Pentagon has its own motivations for increasing UAV
access to the national airspace, including expanding the airspace available for
drone training operations. In addition to training, in its October 2010 report
DOD set forth its objectives: the DOD needs to be able to respond rapidly to
operational tasking, typically from a COCOM such as the United States Northern
Command (NORTHCOM).
Many of these tasked missions relate to homeland defense,
homeland security, and defense support to civilian authorities. This includes
border and port surveillance, maritime operations, counterdrug operations, and
disaster or special event support.
The US military has an expanding UAV presence within the
nation’s borders, and it is eager to expand the airspace available for training
and other missions. The 2010 report of the newly created UAV Executive
Committee reported that the Pentagon was projecting that the number of UAV
units or squadrons based in the continental United States will increase to 197
in 2015 from 146 in 2009, while the number of bases where these units are
stationed will increase 62%—from 63 to 105 bases.
The Pentagon insists that opening the national airspace to
drones is essential to the “sustainability” of the continued development of the
US military’s UAV capacity. In its April 2012 Report on Future Unmanned Aerial
Systems Training, Operations, and Sustainability, the Pentagon clearly states
its case and its strategy for complete access to national airspace by military
UAVs: “This need for airspace access to test new systems, train operators, and
conduct continental United States)-based missions has quickly exceeded the
current airspace available for military operations. The situation will only be
exacerbated as units return from overseas contingencies.”
According to DOD, “The end state will be routine NAS access
comparable to manned aircraft for all DOD US operational, training, and support
missions.” In its Unmanned Systems Integrated Roadmap FY2011-2036, the Pentagon
insisted in “having robust US Airspace Integration capabilities for all classes
of US airspace is fundamental to flexible worldwide US deployment.
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