(10/13/11) A Syracuse Air National Guard unit is about to begin operating an unmanned aerial vehicle, the MQ-9, out of Fort Drum. The 174th Fighter Wing already conducts MQ-9 flights in Afghanistan, flights which are controlled from an operations center at Hancock Field Air National Guard Base in Syracuse.
The partnership with Fort Drum will allow the unit to train Air Force and Air National Guard troops from around the country on flying the MQ-9. Joanna Richards went to an event last week at Fort Drum demonstrating the vehicle and has the story.
The MQ-9 looks like a small commuter
aircraft, with a wingspan of maybe 45 feet, minus any windows. A
ground crew prepares it for flight and controls takeoff and landing,
but a flight crew from anywhere in the world can take over controls
and fly it via satellite link once it reaches a certain altitude.
A ball-shaped camera underneath the
front of the MQ-9 takes surveillance video and beams it back to
controllers and ground troops in real time. Commanders can login over
the Internet to view the video as well.
A soldier on the ground wears a special
helmet that includes a small attached video screen. It looks a bit
like a rearview mirror on a bicycle helmet. Colonel Chuck Dorsey is
vice wing commander of the 174th Fighter Wing:
"You have that
little, that little camera in front of his eye can see what that ball
is looking at at say 18,000 feet. So, you can see what a huge
advantage that is for those ground troops to have that overwatch
overhead, to see what's waiting for them over the hill, to see what's
waiting for them in the next irrigation ditch as they, as they
maneuver through Afghanistan."
Major Anthony
Pasquale used a vehicle a lot like the MQ-9 in Afghanistan:
"Got a report that
there were individuals digging in a road. And we knew that there was
gonna be a large convoy of vehicles, Army convoys, coming down. Ah,
we got an asset much like this MQ-9 show up, confirm that yes, there
are three individuals, one of which is armed, digging in the road."
The troops were able to track the three
people as they went to a house. They sent Afghan Army and police
units there to see what the three people were up to:
"And they went, and
went to their house and found numerous weapons that were stored
there. So, as opposed to the old days, where maybe, maybe we do a
kinetic operation, and maybe we try and capture those individuals and
they wouldn't talk, we were able to track them back to their house
because this, as opposed to some of the fixed-wing aircraft, has a,
has a longer loiter time, so we were able to watch them, see where
they went, see who they talked to, confirm, so that the ground
commander has so much more information now to make the right decision
that's gonna support the strategic objectives."
Four MQ-9s will be kept at Fort Drum
for training flights. There are two kept at Hancock airport for
maintenance training. Flights out of Fort Drum will begin at three
per week, increasing to six by next summer.
The vehicles are small enough and fly
at high enough altitudes that they will usually be undetectable from
the ground. They will be flown most often within 30 to 50 miles of
Fort Drum, but also may fly in airspace over Lake Ontario.
Military officials say the aircraft
won't peer into the lives of civilians on the ground, something
that's prohibited by federal law. The aircraft will turn their
cameras only on random objects, they say. Sometimes military vehicles
will be sent out on the roads for the cameras to target.
Most of the students in the
training program will be sent to Syracuse from the regular Air Force
and from the Air National Guard on temporary duty for about three
months. But not all students using the MQ-9s at Fort Drum will have
to be located in Syracuse, Dorsey says.
"We could be
launching sorties here at Fort Drum that a student in New Mexico
takes control and trains, and there will also be, could be sorties
launched in Nevada that our students are training on. It's, it's a
whole new way of looking at operations, when you talk about remotely
piloted aircraft."
Eventually a $5.4 million facility to
launch and recover the MQ-9 will be built at Wheeler-Sack Army
airfield at Fort Drum.