Australia
moves to buy $3b spy drone fleet
The
Defence Force is quietly resurrecting plans to buy seven huge
maritime surveillance spy drones at a cost of up to $3 billion.
4
September, 2012
The
unmanned aerial vehicles will be used for maritime surveillance and
intercepting asylum seeker boats.
The
decision comes despite claims that the Royal Australian Air Force's
top commanders have long opposed the acquisition of unmanned aerial
vehicles because they will put pilots out of a job and threaten RAAF
culture.
.
The $200
million Northrop Grumman RQ-4 Global Hawk reconnaissance drone is the
largest, most expensive unmanned aerial vehicle in the world today.
Its
vast wingspan of 39.8 metres can lift the craft to 65,000 feet and
stay airborne for 35 hours with a non-stop range of 16,000 kilometres
– eclipsing the endurance of similar manned aircraft.
In
2004, the Howard government was so impressed with Global Hawk that
plans were announced to buy a fleet of 12 of the spy drones for $1
billion.
But
in 2009 the acquisition was cancelled by Labor's Joel Fitzgibbon, who
was defence minister at the time.
In
May 2010, Opposition Leader Tony Abbott announced a Coalition
government would buy three Global Hawks.
Despite
this erratic political flight path, the idea of Australian Global
Hawks remained in bureaucratic mothballs until July this year, when
the latest Defence Capability Plan was quietly released.
Buried
in the document were plans to bring forward by three years the
acquisition of "high altitude, long endurance" unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs).
The
RAAF now wants seven large UAVs flying by 2019.
The
favoured option is a new, maritime surveillance version of the Global
Hawk - the MQ4C Triton.
The
estimated cost of the project is between $2 billion and $3 billion.
Triton
had a shaky take-off in June 2012, when a demonstration version of
the maritime drone crashed just three days before the official
unveiling ceremony at Northrop Grumman's Californian factory.
A
company spokesman insists the demonstrator that went down was an old,
worn-out Global Hawk, bearing little resemblance to the new, improved
Triton.
When
it takes to the skies for the first time later this year, Triton will
appear to be a slightly larger version of its cousin, Global Hawk.
However,
leading American intelligence analyst and author Matthew Aid says
they are two very different drones.
"Global
Hawk was designed for pin-point imagery or eavesdropping on land
targets, by over flight, or by flying obliquely up to 450 kilometres
off an enemy’s coastline," he said.
"Triton
was designed for broad area maritime surveillance – following ships
from high altitude."
The
US Navy expects to start flying the first of 68 Tritons on order by
2015.
Some
will be based on the US territory of Guam to cover the Asia-Pacific
region, while another detachment will fly out of Diego Garcia to
monitor the Indian Ocean.
In
March, the Washington
Post reported that
the US is also considering basing Global Hawk/Triton on Australia's
Cocos Islands.
The
US Navy claims a single Triton 24-hour surveillance mission can cover
nearly 7 million square kilometres of ocean – identifying every
vessel in one vast sweep of the ocean.
But
Mr Aid remains unimpressed.
"Triton
does not have anywhere near the range or payload capability of the
Global Hawk, and from what I can gather its imaging sensors are
nowhere near as good," he said.
Worth questioned
The
Royal Australian Air Force now wants Triton to support a new
generation of manned maritime patrol aircraft, the P-8A, which looks
like a converted 737 airliner.
Together,
these two systems will replace the RAAF's aging fleet of P3 Orions
that have spent decades patrolling the vast expanse of ocean
surrounding Australia - about 20 per cent of the world's sea surface.
Capable
of being armed with both missiles and torpedos, the 8 P8 Poseidons
already on order will also be capable of anti-submarine warfare.
But
is Global Hawk/Triton worth the hefty price tag of at least $200
million each?
Andrew
Davies of the Canberra-based Australian Strategic Policy Institute is
not so sure.
"That's
still a question to be answered. It can fly high and fast, but is
really expensive. Each UAV plus ground support systems costs about
$200 million each - you can buy a P8 for that," he said.
"So
they’re not cheap. The question is can you do the job with a
cheaper UAV?
"The
Mariner is the maritime version of the Reaper (flown in Afghanistan
and Pakistan). It flies slower and lower which can be a good thing as
it can drop down and take a closer look at asylum boats for instance,
with decks covered by tarps.
"The
Mariner is much cheaper, priced in the tens of millions."
In
2006 the Mariner was put through its paces in a trial off Australia's
North West Shelf.
Mariner
supporters say it offers 80 per cent of the capability of a Triton
for one-tenth of the cost.
That
is a powerful argument in Canberra these days, where the Defence
budget has just been slashed by $5.5 billion.
Unlike
the high flying unarmed Triton, the Mariner is also designed to carry
missiles.
Mr
Davies says low cost and an armed capability will be a big plus when
flying into regional uncertainty.
"It's
about the Indian Ocean and securing our sea lanes," he said.
"In
the Indian Ocean we see growing competition between the navies of
China, India and the US. US attention is now pivoting towards this
part of the world."
Other
experts argue there is a far more urgent, humanitarian task to
perform – border protection.
As
Australia's refugee boat crisis escalates and with the
Navy reportedly
stretched to breaking point intercepting asylum seekers,
drones could provide a timely solution in saving more lives.
Kym
Bergmann, the editor of Asia Pacific Defence Reporter and a former
defence industry executive who worked on UAV projects, says Global
Hawk should have been in Australian service years ago.
He
claims this did not happen because RAAF pilots feared UAVs would
threaten their jobs and traditions.
"Early
in 2008 the new Labor [Defence] Minister [Joel Fitzgibbon] had some
sort of brain snap and made a very dramatic announcement to the
effect that the acquisition of Global Hawk was going to be deferred
for a decade," he said.
"At
the time as a relatively inexperienced minister, he was stampeded by
some of the advice that was coming from the Air Force in particular.
"It
was because [the RAAF] really preferred the idea of having a manned
aircraft.
"It's
because a manned aircraft is flown by guys with moustaches and flying
allowances, rather than being operated by hyper intelligent nerds
sitting in front of computer terminals, which is essentially how you
operate a Global Hawk."
Mr
Bergmann claims the RAAF senior commanders dropped their opposition
to Global Hawk/Triton only after they were promised the P8 planes
that still need pilots to fly them.
"It's
been quite a dramatic conversion. They’ve now become enthusiasts
for the technology, when in fact for the previous decade they'd done
everything that they could to resist it," he said.
He
says Australia urgently needs a maritime UAV capability and that
Global Hawk/Triton is the drone for the job.
"It's
highly likely that we're going to see more asylum seekers coming to
Australia, there's going to be the possibility of increased
transnational crime, there's going to be the possibility of increased
illegal activities," he said.
"The
high-resolution cameras and synthetic aperture radars mean that from
an altitude of 60,000 feet at a distance of several hundred
kilometres, you can use both your radar and your camera to give you
crystal clear imagery right down to very, very small boats.
"You
can really get down to rowing boat sizes. The quality of the
imagery is quite phenomenal."
A
growing number of younger RAAF officers now enthusiastically endorse
a rapid expansion of the drone fleet.
Since
2009 the Air Force has been flying leased, Israeli-owned Heron
surveillance drones in support of Australian troops in Afghanistan.
Displaying
the zeal of a convert, Wing Commander Jonathan McMullan, an RAAF
pilot-turned-drone commander, recently returned from Afghanistan,
declared: "The capability? It's like crack cocaine, a drug for
our guys involved."
Rise of civilian drones
Tonight
on ABC1, Foreign
Correspondent sounds
the alarm on the swarms of private and government drones gathering in
American skies and surely bound for the rest of the world.
Some
of the drones have live streaming cameras and the ability to carry
other payloads, and tens of thousands of them are expected to take to
the sky.
But
who's at the controls? Potentially anybody.
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