08/26/10
From New York Times
Navy Drone Violated Washington Airspace

Fire Scout drone helicopter like the one that that violated
airspace in Washington on Tuesday, at air show in Britain.
Drone has entered "Seek and Destroy" autonomous
mode before.
Testing is to move to remote Pacific test range for public safety.
| By ELISABETH BUMILLER with my assistance WASHINGTON — The skies over the nation’s capital are crowded with presidential aircraft, military flyovers and the Delta shuttle, but this month a strange new bird was briefly among them: a United States Navy drone that wandered into the restricted airspace around Washington before operators could stop it. Navy spokesmen could
not say Wednesday if anyone on the ground was alarmed by the drone —
officially an MQ-8B Fire Scout Vertical Takeoff and Landing unmanned
aerial vehicle — which looks like a small windowless helicopter and
was flying at 2,000 feet. The Navy did say that the drone buzzed the
capitol repeatedly before operators were able to re-establish
control and guide it back to its base in southern Maryland. An unnamed drone pilot/operator, who is not authorized to speak for Patuxent River NAS or for the Navy, disclosed that the drone involved in the D.C. airspace violation was not the surveillance version, but was an armed reconnaissance variant, designed to operate in "swarms" behind enemy lines. The scores of the drones, if not hundreds, are to be launched against enemy rear areas, logistics lines and headquarters. they are to perform armed reconnaissance, attacking targets of opportunity which they will identify by a highly classified intelligence algorithm. They are intended to operate autonomously, with minimal guidance from drone operators who will be controlling as many as a dozen of the aircraft. Testing of the drones from Patuxent River NAS has been strictly one drone under the positive command of one operator, but there have been several incidents of the drone's autonomous controls taking command and (usually) heading toward Washington. Intelligence officers are testing the software to determine if the detectors/measurements of un-American activity are set too sensitively. Until the problem is resolved, further drone testing is to be moved to the Pacific Missile Test Range on Kauai.
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