US
to sell $1.2bn in spy drones to S. Korea
The
Pentagon has informed Congress of its plans to sell four Global Hawk
high-altitude spy drones to South Korea. Under the deal Seoul’s
surveillance capabilities would be greatly improved, even though the
US DoD itself wanted to retire the aircraft.
25
December, 2012
The
US Department of Defense wants to sell four of the Block 30 version
of the RQ-4 Global Hawk aircraft to Seoul under the Foreign Military
Sales program. It formally notified Congress of the proposed deal,
which is estimated to worth $1.2 billion, reports the
Pentagon-affiliated Defense Security Cooperation Agency.
The
deal would include “associated equipment, parts, training and
logistical support”. The military says it would go in line with the
transition of intelligence gathering mission from the US-led Combined
Forces Command to South Korea’s own troops in 2015. South Korea
hosts almost 30,000 American troops, which take on many tasks
requiring use of advanced technology.
The
RQ-4 Global Hawk is Northrop Grumman’s unmanned reconnaissance
aircraft currently operated by the US and Germany. It fills in the
same role as Cold War era Lockheed U-2 all-weather intelligence
gathering.
Congress
may block the deal, but diplomatic sources told the Korean news
agency Yonhap that American lawmakers are likely not to oppose the
sale.
Previously
the US was apparently reluctant to provide Seoul with the advanced
spying capabilities of the Global Hawk, the agency says. The drones
can survey landscape with its radar and optical sensors through
clouds while flying up to 20km high.
The
Block 30 model however may not be the best value for the Korean
money. The US Air Force announced in January that it wanted to retire
its fleet in 2013 and instead buy more advanced Block 40s.
The
military said that Block 30 version was more costly to operate that
the manned U-2 spy plane, while inferior in terms of sensor
capabilities. Retiring the drones would save $2.5 billion over five
years, the Pentagon said, which would come in handy in the times of
budgetary restraints.
The
notion however was blocked by the legislators. Under the final
version of this year’s defense authorization bill Block 30 models
will remain in operation until at least 2014.
Political
analyst Nile Bowie says the pending deal between Washington and Seoul
could escalate the conflict with neighboring North Korea – which
fiercely guards its territory.
“We
have to remember that North Korea has warned many times about its
territorial integrity. If South Korean drones penetrate North Korean
airspace it could potentially start a huge conflict,” he told RT.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.