Add caption |
For the
first time ever, a fighter jet-sized drone piloted entirely by computer landed
on a modern aircraft carrier.
The
successful touch down paves the way for unmanned aircraft to operate alongside
traditional airplanes, providing around-the-clock surveillance while also
possessing strike capability. Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus was clearly aware
of the import of the historic moment.
'Your
grandchildren and mine will be reading about this historic event in their
history books.'
-
Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus
"It
isn't very often you get a glimpse of the future,” Mabus said in a statement.
"The operational unmanned aircraft soon to be developed have the
opportunity to radically change the way presence and combat power are delivered
from our aircraft carriers."
The X-47B
experimental aircraft took off from Naval Air Station Patuxent River in
Maryland before approaching the USS George H.W. Bush, which is operating off
the coast of Virginia. The drone landed by deploying a tailhook that caught a
wire aboard the ship, bringing it to a quick stop, just like normal fighter
jets do.
The
maneuver is known as an arrested landing and has previously only been done by
the drone on land at Patuxent River. Landing on a ship that is constantly
moving while navigating through turbulent air behind the aircraft carrier is
seen as a more difficult maneuver.
"Your
grandchildren and great grandchildren and mine will be reading about this
historic event in their history books. This is not trivial, nor is it something
that came lightly," said Rear Adm. Mat Winter, the Navy's program
executive officer for unmanned aviation and strike weapons.
The X-47B
will never be put into operational use, but it will help Navy officials develop
future carrier-based drones. Those drones could begin operating by 2020,
according to Winter. Four companies are expected to compete for a contract to
design the future unmanned aircraft, which will be awarded in Fiscal Year 2014.
The two
experimental aircraft that have been built for the first round of testing will
be retired and placed in museums at Patuxent River and at Naval Air Station
Pensacola in Florida.
The move
to expand the capabilities of the nation's drones comes amid growing criticism
of America's use of Predators and Reapers to gather intelligence and carry out
lethal missile attacks against terrorists in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Yemen.
Critics in
the U.S. and abroad have charged that drone strikes cause widespread civilian
deaths and are conducted with inadequate oversight. Still, defense analysts say
drones are the future of warfare.
The X-47B
is far bigger than the Predator, has three times the range and can be
programmed to carry out missions with no human intervention, the Navy said.
While the
X-47B isn't a stealth aircraft, it was designed with the low profile of one.
That will help in the development of future stealth drones, which would be
valuable as the military changes its focus from the Middle East to the Pacific,
where a number of countries' air defenses are a lot stronger than
Afghanistan's.
0 comments :
Post a Comment