DHS
wants to use spy drones domestically for 'public safety'
The
United States already uses surveillance drones on its borders, but
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said during a hearing on
Wednesday that flying unmanned aircraft inside the US could be the
next step to ensuring “public safety.”
RT,
26
July, 2012
Sec.
Napolitano weighed in on the topic of unmanned aerial vehicles during
this week’s Committee on Homeland Security and suggested that
implementing UAVs for domestic surveillance could the next step in
the United States’ amazingly accelerating drone program.
The
Federal Aviation Administration is currently considering ground rules
that will outline how the FAA can govern domestic drone use, and by
2020 they expect to see 30,000 UAVs soaring through US airspace.
Speaking before a House panel on Wednesday, though, Sec. Napolitano
suggested that deploying UAVs proactively to put an extra set over
locales nowhere near America’s border may in fact be the next move.
“With
respect to Science and Technology, that directorate, we do have a
funded project,” she said. “I think it’s in California, looking
at drones that could be utilized to give us situational awareness in
a large public safety [matter] or disaster, such as a forest fire,
and how they could give us better information.”
In
a transcript of the secretary’s testimony made available after her
address, Napolitano admits that the US has expanded their use or
surveillance drones on America’s border with Canada in recent
years, now letting UAVs monitor 950 miles of Washington State’s
boundary line.
Despite
growing opposition from the American public of drones largely
centered over privacy objections, the United States has continuously
ramped up its drone program in recent years, both domestically and
abroad. During the Hackers on Planet Earth conference in New York
City earlier this month, activists with the Electronic Frontier
Foundation said that US military now owns around 7,500 drones, which
makes up around one-third of the Air Force’s entire arsenal.
“The
FAA can give drone licenses to any agency that can prove that they
can use them safely,” the EFF’s Trevor Timm told the crowd.
Despite dozens of permits being handed out to law enforcement
agencies and educational institutions in recent years, though,
neither the security nor safety of these aircraft are believed to
have been fully examined. In just the last few weeks, a Texas
professor hacked a UAV in front of representatives from the DHS and,
separately, a military drone crash-landed just outside of Washington,
D.C.
Despite
these incidents, the FAA and DHS are still spearheading an
accelerated drone program. Given Sec. Napolitano’s latest
statements, though, the domestic use of drones for proactive
surveillance could be coming more sooner than previously though.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.