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X-45 Makes Debut Flight

jonerik writes "The Associated Press (by way of MSNBC) reports the debut flight on Wednesday of Boeing's X-45A, the first unmanned aircraft designed from the start to carry weapons. According to the article, the X-45 - one of two being tested - flew for 14 minutes and will be able to carry 3,000 pounds of guided bombs. If eventually purchased by the Pentagon, expect to see it in service sometime between 2007 and 2010. The plane's relatively cheap cost ($10-15 million per aircraft), ease of maintenance, and lack of an onboard pilot will likely make it a staple of future U.S. war plans."

530 comments

  1. Perfect by Robert+Hayden · · Score: 2, Funny

    Perfect for today's nintendo generation of twitch-reflex script kiddies.

    1. Re:Perfect by sillyopolis · · Score: 1

      Ah, but it's really much simpler... ... one would not exist without the other.

  2. Does it come with R2-D2? by cliffy2000 · · Score: 1

    Well, an unmanned plane MUST have some method of self-repair! According to Lucas' mythos, ONLY a robot can do so! R2-D2... the way to the future.
    (What's that you say? Reagan's "Star Wars" was a space defense system, not the basis for our planes of the future? Bah!)

  3. Too late I would guess by MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM · · Score: 0

    Your X-45 toys are futile. The terrosists have already won.

  4. In a related story... by slackergod · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Pentagon announced their new "Skynet" project.

    1. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep,humour aside; this is the closest thing we have to a hunter-killer.

      Combine it with a few neural networks designed for recognizing "the enemy" and neutralizing the enemy and an optimized, mini version of that 747 onboard laser and things'll get scary.

    2. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "this is the closest thing we have to a hunter-killer"

      "We?" Is that the human race perchance? If so why would we need such a thing?

      and things'll get scary
      Are "things" not scary enough already?

    3. Re:In a related story... by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2

      You don't need neural networks - all you need is FOPEN

      The automatic target detection algorithms have already been written and are being tested by various parties receiveing funding from DARPA and the various branches of the military. SAR delivers the data needed to not only identify targets but to find them even when they are hidden, and relay the coordinates to a ground station.

      There is a lot of this work going on that is in the public domain (like the link above) and much, much more that is classified.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    4. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      uh, maybe becuase it accomplishes the same mission as a manned aircraft but without risking a pilot? of course there is the problem that this weapon is really designed to fight yesterday's wars, but hey.

    5. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "but hey."

      Indeed.
      One could look upon such a weapon as being very cowardly in a bygone era, but in such enlightened days it'll be a godsend to all mankind.

    6. Re:In a related story... by puckhead · · Score: 1

      Would that era be pre-throwing stick?

      --
      Watching Cowboy Bebop in my jammies, eating a bowl of Shreddies.
    7. Re:In a related story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The kind of people who think tooling around in formations wearing uniforms and following a chain of command would consider such a weapon cowardly.

      It upsets their applecart. It's common knowlege that conventional Army types dislike Tactical nukes. It renders their little manouveres and games obsolete!

    8. Re:In a related story... by eam · · Score: 2

      Great, now someone will grow an army of clones to fight our battle droids.

  5. X45 by 10+Speed · · Score: 2, Funny

    is the x45 a flying version of the x10 camera?

    1. Re:X45 by 10+Speed · · Score: 1

      how long until we see x45 popunder advertising?

    2. Re:X45 by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes. In fact, I believe the article is wrong. This plane is designed not to destroy, but to bring hope to the hopeless.

      Large-breasted, scantily clad women are the bomb, and, at about 100 pounds each, this plane will be able to carry 30 of them. The payload will be dropped as a form of humanitarian aid at enemy Star Trek conventions, Linux User Group meetings, Magic: The Gathering marathons, and other places which haven't a hope of seeing the fairer species any other way.

      Let's hope this does the trick. (They say mass-sterilization efforts are the next and last resort, but I say it'd be a moot point.)

      - A.P.

      --
      "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    3. Re:X45 by DemiKnute · · Score: 1

      The fairer species? Dude, you need to get out more, women are really a lot like you, and are even of the same species, too.

      --
      .
  6. Cyberdyne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now I know where SkyNet got those drone designs from...

  7. Cheaters. by Renraku · · Score: 2

    I can see it now. Other countries are going to start screaming about how unfair it is that we don't have to risk pilots to bomb stuff. It would be nice, however, if the pilots actually had a cockpit wherever they were stationed to control the drone. Controlling a drone with a small joystick and a few flight controls in front of a B&W television is just annoying. Besides, it would take the fun out of warfare.

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    1. Re:Cheaters. by Software · · Score: 2
      Controlling a drone with a small joystick and a few flight controls in front of a B&W television is just annoying.
      I hear you. Every time I have to launch the space shuttle from a command line, I'm also very annoyed :-) Seriously, though, from the article:
      Its pilot -- who may fly several planes at once -- would remain on the ground, out of harm's way.
      I don't know how they plan to control several planes at once (KVM switch?), even though they're semi-autonomous. Whatever setup they use, it can't be a full cockpit; a pilot can't move from cockpit to cockpit in the time required for battle situations. Just unstrapping the seatbelt would take a lot of time :-)

      Drones (and this really is an enhancement of a drone, though a big enhancement) have been flying for a while, so I imagine the Air Force has got this worked out.

    2. Re:Cheaters. by Malc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Fool: when was warfare supposed to be fun? It's all about imposing your will on somebody else, probably at the expense of pain and suffering to them, or even both of you.

    3. Re:Cheaters. by Hir0aki · · Score: 0, Troll

      The American people have become increasingly intolerant to casualties of war.
      I currently work with and for the DoD, and this specific fact is always resident in the field commanders mind. Risk avoidance, "force protection", and unmanned vehicles of all sorts assist that commander in protecting his/her forces while still being able to accomplish the mission at hand. Don't ever underestimate the U.S. Armed Forces awareness of the American public. Yes there will still be casualties, but if this style of technology can protect lives, how can it be a band thing?
      The technoglogy at use here has already proven itself in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Kosova, Isreal, and a myriad of other less known conflicts. I for one love the idea and the concept of being able to best your enemy on the field, while getting as many of my countrymen home as possible.

    4. Re:Cheaters. by Ian+Peon · · Score: 2
      It would be nice, however, if the pilots actually had a cockpit wherever they were stationed to control the drone. Controlling a drone with a small joystick and a few flight controls in front of a B&W television is just annoying.


      Note that this is a robot, not a mindless drone. Remembering some of the military systems in use a few years ago (when I was stationed on-board a ship) I would guess that the controls to this plane would be more along the lines of "turn left to 030, increase altitude, attack this target, return home, land", and much less like a sim that you may be used to.

      Over the last few years, the US has become allergic to ANY casualties, and therfore has made more use of cruise missles to destroy targets in dangerous situations. The 9/11 events have changed that view somewhat, but the military would still like to avoid loss of life (at least on OUR side), and the resulting bad press that a downed pilot can bring. Remember that cruise missles are preprogrammed to fly autonomously to a location and strike a target. This may be thought of as a cheaper alternative.
    5. Re:Cheaters. by zootread · · Score: 0

      This technology will be a bad thing when:
      1) Someone else develops / acquires the same technology and goes on a bombing spree around the U.S.
      2) Someone cracks this technology and is able hijack the planes and go on a bombing spree around the U.S.

      #1 is inevitable and is no reason to not create such technology. #2 is something that I really hope doesn't happen but is always a possibility.

      --
      Zoot!
    6. Re:Cheaters. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not exactly you can expect the big powers (and later the smaller ones) to follow suit! how tough would it be for someone who can alreayd build advanced planes to put a computer to control the hydraulic etc. in a plane?

      so in future war pilots won't die in bombing raids but it will still be as dangerous for the countries involved (specially for their civilian populations on the ground)

    7. Re:Cheaters. by packeteer · · Score: 1

      on MOST real flight missions the planes fly in formation and/or predefined routes... so really a pilot could have his controls sent to a couple of planes at once

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    8. Re:Cheaters. by (outer-limits) · · Score: 1

      The only difference between this and a suicide bomber is the bomber.

      --

      Microsoft - Where would you like to go today, Maybe Jail?

    9. Re:Cheaters. by sql*kitten · · Score: 2

      Fool: when was warfare supposed to be fun? It's all about imposing your will on somebody else, probably at the expense of pain and suffering to them, or even both of you.

      Or preventing their will being imposed on you and your allies. If you can do that with minimal risk to yourself, how can that be bad?

      The only problem is if it becomes risk free to launch attacks.

    10. Re:Cheaters. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they would have to target woman and children INTENTIONALY to qualify as a HOMICIDE BOMBER.

      it still bogs my mind that some people actualy respect what these low life pieces of shit do!

      STOP equating terrorists to REAL MILITARY personel/weapons. they are nothing of the sort. they(TERRORISTS) are no better then a rabid dog... all though i'd at least pause before i put the rabid dog down. and i'd probably feel a twinge of remorse after i blew its brains out.

    11. Re:Cheaters. by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      Generally these UAVs are given a preset mission that includes targets to "shoot" (with cameras generally but in this case with weapons) at what time. The "pilot" is actually a payload operator who can make target adjustments during flight and there is generally an AV (air vehicle) operator who can take manual control of the aircraft in the event of a malfunction but this is generally only required during landing although automatic take-off and landing (ATOL) is making this much less of a requirement. That is why the pilot (AVO) can fly multiple aircraft at the same time. It isn't really like flying a simulator or even a remote controlled airplane. It's more like watching someone else controlling the thing unless something goes wrong and then stepping in to fix the problem, then give control back to the bird...

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    12. Re:Cheaters. by Rick+the+Red · · Score: 2
      when was warfare supposed to be fun? It's all about imposing your will on somebody else
      My nephew is a pilot in the U.S. Air Force. He turned down an assignment where he would go to Las Vegas (hmm, I wonder what airbase we have there?) and fly airplanes from a console on the ground. His reward after a year of this was to be any assignment he wanted, and he still turned it down because a year of flying from the ground sounded too boring to him. Oh, and he flys tankers, not fighters.

      If the warfare's not "fun" (i.e., if it's boring) then you will only get people to do it by "imposing your will on somebody else", i.e., the draft. And then you don't get the best pilots, you just get drones controlling the drones. At that point, you'll probably find it easier/cheaper/better to turn it all over to computers, and then you have machines deciding whether or not to kill humans -- there's your SkyNet scenario, and I really really hope we never go there. Boeing's good at what they do, but they're not that good.

      --
      If all this should have a reason, we would be the last to know.
    13. Re:Cheaters. by (outer-limits) · · Score: 1

      US seemed to do a pretty good job of that in Vietnam.

      --

      Microsoft - Where would you like to go today, Maybe Jail?

  8. Take a Lesson From John Bonham by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I have a 1978 article from Kerrang in which he states "Who are our enemies? Who are our friends? This is a question of the first importance for the revolution. The basic reason why all previous revolutionary struggles in rock-n-roll achieved so little was their failure to unite with real friends in order to attack real enemies. A heavy riff is the guide of the masses, and no guitar solo ever succeeds when the heavy riff leads them astray. To ensure that we will definitely achieve success in our revolution and will not lead the masses astray, we must pay attention to uniting with our real friends in order to attack our real enemies. To distinguish real friends from real enemies, we must make a general analysis of the rockin' status of the various classes in rock-n-roll society and of their respective attitudes towards the revolution.

    No wonder AC/DC sucked so bad after he died!

    1. Re:Take a Lesson From John Bonham by Hack+Shoeboy · · Score: 0

      Bonham... AC/DC... (?)

      --

      IN TEH FUCHAR, LITERSY WLIL EB OPSHANAL!!!!!111
  9. Cool... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and if things go wrong, they can just steer the plane into its target.

    1. Re:Cool... by Stoutlimb · · Score: 2

      The Russians have done this since air warfare started.

  10. Now they will bomb even more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Now they don't even have to risk a pilot or an expensive plane to bomb something.

    Thus we will see more bombing done by the US.
    Not a very nice thing according to me.

    (The US army seems to have the same magic ability as the Isreali to automatically detect terrorists)

    1. Re:Now they will bomb even more by thetbone · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So, you're saying the reason the US doesn't bomb everything in sight is because they would "have to risk a pilot or an expensive plane" to do so?

    2. Re:Now they will bomb even more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As things stand right now yes.

      The requirements for ending up on a US target list appears to be pretty vague.

      Pretty much like the requirements to be put on the suspected terrorist list. Luckily for the US there is need to supply evidence supporting the accusations.

    3. Re:Now they will bomb even more by Hack+Shoeboy · · Score: 0

      YUO aer a BRILYANT analist of WROLD AFARS. DID yuo go too collage or soemthig? I wihs I were as 1337 as YUO!

      --

      IN TEH FUCHAR, LITERSY WLIL EB OPSHANAL!!!!!111
    4. Re:Now they will bomb even more by thetbone · · Score: 1

      And you probably call Americans stupid.

    5. Re:Now they will bomb even more by (outer-limits) · · Score: 1

      That list of 'evil' countries gets longer every month. Watch out when it gets to you.

      --

      Microsoft - Where would you like to go today, Maybe Jail?

  11. Now I find myself wondering... by Robotech_Master · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...where's Isamu Dyson when you need him?

    --
    Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    1. Re:Now I find myself wondering... by G.+Waters · · Score: 1



      Don't you mean cheif Guld Goa Bowman?

    2. Re:Now I find myself wondering... by G.+Waters · · Score: 1

      Don't you mean cheif Guld Goa Bowman?

  12. Much better! by Devil's+BSD · · Score: 1

    This seems to be a lot better than that Predator thing that carries a whopping one Hellfire missile. I like the reconfigurable control station, since not everyone likes their controls in the same spots, having played MANY flight sims. But best of all, having no pilot means it can be manuvered much more, even subjected to maybe 10, 11, 12 G's without the controller blacking out. MiG-29? Bring it on!
    "I just hope it runs open source, otherwise you won't know if you or the plane crashed."

    --
    I'm the Devil the Windows users warned you about.
    1. Re:Much better! by O.F.+Fascist · · Score: 1

      I thought the predators could carry 2 hellfires, I've seen pictures of the first armed testflights and they had one on each wing.

    2. Re:Much better! by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      The Predator was not originally designed to deliver ordinance. That it has been modified to do so, and do it w/some degree of accuracy is pretty impressive.

      It was built for surveilance.

      UAVs are following the same development path as piloted aircraft. They start out as observers. Then they start carrying limited payloads to attach the ground. Then they become armed to attack one another. But the curve is greatly accelerated as this is the second time around.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    3. Re:Much better! by g1zmo · · Score: 1

      The Predator can carry 2 air-to-air missles. Originally, it wasn't designed to carry any armament at all, but to carry out recon-type missions. The missles were, I believe, added specifically for Operation Enduring Freedom. I could be wrong about that though.

      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    4. Re:Much better! by O.F.+Fascist · · Score: 1

      They are Hellfires are air to ground missiles.

      They are usually the primary antitank missiles that Apache helicopters carry.

      Also I believe they were being armed prior to Operation Enduring Freedom, a few months before Sept 11th I believe I heard reports of thier testing armed predators.

      However OEF was thier first combat use.

    5. Re:Much better! by g1zmo · · Score: 1

      /me slaps forehead

      I didn't mean to type air-to-air. I don't think unmanned aircraft are quite at the point yet where they can engage in air-to-air combat. There will be no Predator dogfights anytime soon.

      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    6. Re:Much better! by (outer-limits) · · Score: 1

      Um... if you look at the current state of world affaird, I believe the Russians are now you allies.

      --

      Microsoft - Where would you like to go today, Maybe Jail?

    7. Re:Much better! by (outer-limits) · · Score: 1

      Should that be called, Operation Enduring Lets Keep the Arms Industry Happy?

      --

      Microsoft - Where would you like to go today, Maybe Jail?

    8. Re:Much better! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the Russians are not the only ones with MiGs.

    9. Re:Much better! by proj_2501 · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but they sold planes to lots of people. Syria uses a bunch of Russian equipment. Maybe not MiGs, but SAMs and the Su planes.

    10. Re:Much better! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the learning curve was pretty rapid, from a first flight by the Wright brothers in 1903* to reconnaissance planes in 1908 and full-fledged military production and plane-to-plane combat with Sopwith Camels in WWI (1914-1918).

      *Two wrongs don't make a right, but two wrights made an airplane.

  13. I think it was best said on The Simpsons by decipher_saint · · Score: 5, Funny

    "The wars of the future will not be fought on the battlefield or at sea. They will be fought in space, or possibly on top of a very tall mountain. In either case, most of the actual fighting will be done by small robots. And as you go forth today remember always your duty is clear: To build and maintain those robots. Thank you."
    -- Military school Commandant's graduation address, "The Secret War of Lisa Simpson"

    --
    crazy dynamite monkey
    1. Re:I think it was best said on The Simpsons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And look: There *is* a war being fought with robots, and on top of very tall mountains. In Afghanistan...

    2. Re:I think it was best said on The Simpsons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has been posed in Analog before; it's an interesting argument.

      Basically, consider the treaty on peaceful use of space as a dumb idea. While it was intended to prevent orbiting nukes and the like (a worthy goal), think how much more civilized things would've been on Earth if the Cold War had been duked out beyond the asteroid belt.

      Put your world leaders out there, and even the 'terrorists' will be less inclined to attack civilians. If your culture cares enough to go to war, you'd have to develop a space program (and presumably learn something in the process of developing it; NASA would never have succeeded if it was run as a covert op).

      Of course, the current 'problem' with 'terrorism' is that it's all about taking shortcuts; once rockets or teleportation devices are cheaply available, we'd need to find a new barrier-to-entry for civilized warfare.

    3. Re:I think it was best said on The Simpsons by SHEENmaster · · Score: 1

      Doesn't everything come from the simpsons? Honestly, the only better source to quote from is the hitchhiker's guide.

      In truth, the unix fortune program is the master of a quoteable sources. That is why I made a web interface to fortune.

      --
      You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
  14. No cockpit? by SirKron · · Score: 5, Funny

    Since there is no cockpit maybe they should paint one on the tail end to confuse our enemies' pilots. It works for fish with "eyes" on their tails.

    1. Re:No cockpit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean something like the Canadian F-18 Hornet's "false cockpit" paintscheme?

    2. Re:No cockpit? by brer_rabbit · · Score: 1

      just curious, but what is the point of that false cockpit paintscheme? Did they paint Tom Cruise giving someone the finger?

    3. Re:No cockpit? by danro · · Score: 3, Funny
      Yeah, I can see that...
      Ground control, we have a have a bogey dooing mach 1 in reverse!
      Hmm... don't think that would fool anyone.
      --

      "First lesson," Jon said. "Stick them with the pointy end."
    4. Re:No cockpit? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      You think it's funny, but the Canadians do just that. See?

      I think the Aussies do the same with their F-18's.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    5. Re:No cockpit? by peddrenth · · Score: 1

      Apparently that's worked well for a long time; I believe many French planes have a false cockpit painted on the underside, while ships have bow-waves painted on, or even painted pictures of smaller ships. Although they're easier to see, they're harder to target.

  15. need a new game from the airforce by frankmu · · Score: 1

    we need a new, free game from the airforce to go along with the game from the army. next up, run your own nuclear aircraft carrier remotely from the navy!

    --
    Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.
  16. I wonder... by antirename · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it has any stealth features? Or if "partially autonomous" means automatic fire avoidance or flying map of the earth? Hopefully that's all it is. If, on the other hand, that means that it can pick it's own targets if it needs to, it had better not run on windows... that would be a blue screen to remember.

    1. Re:I wonder... by thetbone · · Score: 1

      Wow, how witty. Mod this one WAY up.

    2. Re:I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The operational UCAV air vehicle will be a stealthy, tailless, 29-foot-long airframe with a 44-foot wingspan. (from teh intarweb link).

  17. Cowardly by Meowharishi · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    And we wonder why our enemies call us cowards. Unmanned recon aircraft is one thing but I believe there should be a human physically ID'ing a target -- IN the cockpit -- before they press the button to release the bombs.

    But wtf does my opinion mean..

    The days of the intrepid dog fighting pilot have been over for some time anyway... I suppose this is just a natural extension of that.

    --
    mje0w!!!1!
    1. Re:Cowardly by Malc · · Score: 2

      It could make dog fighting more interesting: this thing could potentially pull more Gs and for longer than current planes as there is no need to worry about the pilot blacking/redding out.

    2. Re:Cowardly by thetbone · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      "And we wonder why our enemies call us cowards"

      Actually, we don't wonder. Name calling and acts of terrorism are about the only things they can do.

      Anyways, how is avoiding casualties while fighting a war cowardly? Should you always try to have some of your own soldiers die, so you aren't considered cowardly?

    3. Re:Cowardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No no, haven't you been paying attention? Carpet bombing from 30,000 ft is actually where the real heroism's at.
      Now if you take on the world's largest military power using light arms, or blow yourself to sushi for your religious convictions... well, the civilised world will righteously condemn such cowardly acts. Get with the times mate!

    4. Re:Cowardly by Planesdragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The days of the intrepid dog fighting pilot have been over for some time anyway... I suppose this is just a natural extension of that.

      Kindly name a country that can field a force capable of taking on either the Air Force or the Navy. heck, we can limit it to just one Navy carrier group.

      (If that country's on the UN Security Council, put it down and try again.)

      When we started using cruise missles, we were called cowards. When we started using tanks, we were called cowards. When we started using machine guns, regular guns, pike squares, and siege warfare, we were called cowards. When we started using arrows for war or just plain throwing sticks, we were called cowards.

      "Coward" is a word that should be limited to people who refuse to take risk and fail--not those that refuse to take a risk they can find a way around, and win.

      The only reason our enemies call us cowards is because, if we were to fight them on their own terf, they'd have slightly better than a snowball's chance in hell against us.

    5. Re:Cowardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Very interesting point. The Military is always claiming that Force Protection is one of the most important things they do. They try to make military personnel and structures hard to hit and destroy. Does this strategy make civilians a better target? Well I think that it is a catch 22. Civilians may be easier to kill and destroy, but that greatly upsets the population of the US. Look at what happened to the USS Cole. When it was attacked yes the citizens were mad, but there was a lot of questioning about "why was the Cole there', and 'why are we involved in the Mid East?' However when the WTC was attacked the citizens reacted with 'lets kill everyone responsible'. How do you balance having a Legitimate Military target, vs. protecting the Troops who are defending US interests?

    6. Re:Cowardly by neocon · · Score: 0

      Leaving aside the fact that we're not `carpet bombing' anyone, but in fact putting men a whole lot braver than you and I on the ground, in harm's way, to designate targets so that civilian deaths are kept to a minimum, what exactly are you objecting to? That our pilots don't kill themselves? That we (rightly) consider attacks designed to maximize civilian casualties cowardly? What's your beef?

    7. Re:Cowardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And we wonder why our enemies call us cowards. Unmanned recon aircraft is one thing but I believe there should be a human physically ID'ing a target -- IN the cockpit -- before they press the button to release the bombs.

      Great idea. You can go first.

    8. Re:Cowardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This 'thing' will not do any dog fighting. It is a bomber. It will presumably be too small and fast to be attacked easily in any case.

    9. Re:Cowardly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Kindly name a country that can field a force capable of taking on either the Air Force or the Navy. heck, we can limit it to just one Navy carrier group

      So, our enemies will just find other ways to fight, like turning civilian planes into bombs.

      Then we call them cowards. The winners write the history.

    10. Re:Cowardly by (outer-limits) · · Score: 1

      Now this is exactly what Jack Ripper needed in Dr Strangelove. No problems with having to set up secret codes, closing down bases etc.

      --

      Microsoft - Where would you like to go today, Maybe Jail?

    11. Re:Cowardly by Qrlx · · Score: 1
      First off, we have "carpet bombed" plenty in Afghanistan, you're just not hearing it on the news. Carpet bombing is pretty much all a B-52 is good for. Reference: here, halfway down the page under heading "B-52s begin carpet bombing." Watch the RealVideo if you don't believe me.

      Second, U.S. troops are not particulary in harm's way. I back that statement up by the incredibly short casualty list. You're not really in harm's way when you've got night vision goggles and the Command, Control, and Communications infrastructure to call in air strikes on some guy launching mortars and broadcasting in the clear on a walkie-talkie.

      I don't agree we designate targets to civilian deaths to a minimum; even if we did, what is that acceptable minimum? Are the at least 500 civilians killed in Yugoslavia acceptable? Like the time bombed the TV station? Or used cluster bombs in cities? References here and here. What about the thousands of civilian deaths in Afghanistan?

      Do you think that the attacks on the World Trade Center were designed to maximize civilian casualties? I would argue that the World Trade Centers are a "dual use" target. Indeed bin Laden did want to kill Americans, but why not kill more by crashing a few big jets into sports stadiums? No, the WTC was also an icon of the West, and as such was an incredibly valuable target symbolically. Same for the Pentagon (not too many civilian deaths there) and the White House.

      Don't like my "dual use" analogy? Then try reading the famous Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilites from the Defense Intelligence Agency. It very technically explains how, if their water treatment facilities are destroyed in the Gulf War (which we did), and UN sanctions kept in place,
      1. "IRAQ WILL SUFFER INCREASING SHORTAGES OF PURIFIED

      2. WATER BECAUSE OF THE LACK OF REOUIRED CHEMICALS AND
        DESALINIZATION MEMBRANES. INCIDENCES OF DISEASE, INCLUDING
        POSSIBLE EPIDEMICS,WILL BECOME PROBABLE..."
      Casualties from that one eclipse 9-11, though it might not seem in since they occur over a generation, not in a single day.

      So, you see, it's not all so cut-and-dry as The Evil One vs. Mom and Apple Pie.

      My beef is people like you, who are ignorant about the fact that we have killed more of their civilians than they did on Sep. 11. Rationalize it all you want, civilians die in wars. We don't have any claim to the moral high ground just because we lost 3,000 civilians last year. Remember Dresden? Reference: Go read Slaughterhouse Five by Kurt Vonnegut

      How does all this relate to the X-45? Well, a couple times now a CIA "pilot" of a Predator fired off a Hellfire missile at someone he thought was an Al Qaeda rock star. Well, they missed . Now, with the X-45, when they miss, their misses will have far greater collateral damage. And what is the CIA doing pulling the trigger in the first place? They're not part of the Armed Forces. Who is going to fly these X-45s? Where is the accountability? When U.S. Marines accidentally bombed Canadian troops [link has summary of friendly-fire deaths too] there's a pilot we can hold accountable. Accountability will be a rarer commodity when X-45s hit the wrong targets.

      Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Morir
    12. Re:Cowardly by jonerik · · Score: 2

      Kindly name a country that can field a force capable of taking on either the Air Force or the Navy. heck, we can limit it to just one Navy carrier group.

      During a 1999 exercise in the Negev Desert, the Israeli Air Force (flying F-16s) pummelled an American force made up of US Navy F/A-18s and F-14s. You can find a short write-up on the exercise here.

    13. Re:Cowardly by neocon · · Score: 1

      I'd like to respond to some of your points, since plenty of what you're reporting is flat out wrong (and the mods should probably take note of that):

      • we have "carpet bombed" plenty in Afghanistan -- nonsense. Even the Taliban didn't bother to claim this one, as it's obviously untrue, so why do you? We dropped many bombs on troop positions in the field, but always in close coordination with ground forces in the area to ensure maximal accuracy. See, among many other references this article for more.
      • Carpet bombing is pretty much all a B-52 is good for -- your information is about two decades out of date. With modern GPS technology, a properly equipped B-52 can drop even a `dumb' bomb in a 10-meter diameter circle, based on coordinates radioed in from the ground realtime.
      • Second, U.S. troops are not particulary in harm's way. -- wow, I'm floored by this whole paragraph of yours. You're complaining that US troops are too well equipped, and you're upset that they don't put themselves in more danger? How odd.
      • What about the thousands [cursor.org] of civilian deaths in Afghanistan? -- these numbers have been discredited so many times, I'm getting tired of posting this link, but for one more time, see the section on civilian casualties at the end of this article for details.
      • Do you think that the attacks on the World Trade Center were designed to maximize civilian casualties -- yes, I do. But don't take my word on it -- Mr. Bin Laden says the same thing in his tapes.
      • I would argue that the World Trade Centers are a "dual use" target -- so it's clear for any readers who may not have realized the bankrupcy of your position -- are you really arguing that the September 11 attacks were acceptable?
      • Casualties from that one eclipse 9-11, though it might not seem in since they occur over a generation, not in a single day. -- care to provide a reference to that one? No, I suppose not, since you apparently stopped reading after that article. As is well known, the plants in question have been rebuilt as part of the oil-for-food program which the US signed on to. But it certainly is true that there are people starving in Iraq -- what you miss is that they starve because Mr. Hussein diverts the relief shipments he receives to pay for palace-building and other megalomaniacal schemes. See this article for more on Mr. Hussein.
      • My beef is people like you, who are ignorant about the fact that we have killed more of their civilians than they did on Sep. 11. -- ignorant of your half-baked conspiracy theories, sure. Again, please read the spectator.co.uk article above.
      • Rationalize it all you want, civilians die in wars. We don't have any claim to the moral high ground just because we lost 3,000 civilians last year. -- no, we have the moral high ground because we are a free nation which was brutally attacked by terrorists, and are fighting to defend ourselves. The moral ground doesn't get much higher than that.
    14. Re:Cowardly by neocon · · Score: 1

      By the way, for more on how Saddam Hussein is diverting international aid to build palaces while his people starve, see this article from The New Republic (hardly a mainstream or conservative publication, by the way).

    15. Re:Cowardly by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      1. Perhaps we should define the term "carpet bombing." My first link included this RealVideo clip where Mr Pentagon Spokesman makes the following statement: "If the targets are large or widedespread, then it would seem logical that we might find largbe bombers with large loads are capable of attacking it just as effectively s a number of smaller tactical jets." That sounds like carpet bombing to me. What do you think carpet bombing means?

      2. A B-52 would almost never be called upon to drop a single bomb within a 10-meter circle. If they are so accurate, then why did we invent cruise missiles? And even if we can, consitently and reliably, drop a single bomb within a 10-meter circle from altitude, a B-52 carries 30 tons of bombs, which, when all released over target, tend to product the "carpet" effect.

      3. Did I complain that U.S. troops are too well equipped? No, I simply pointed out the disparaty. I suppose by your definition, I'm In Harm's Way when I drive to work because my little japanese car could potentially be crushed by that big truck. It rarely happens, though. Similarly, U.S. casualties rarely happen, last I checked there's more friendly fire deaths in combat than enemy fire deaths. Hmm, maybe you're right, anytime troops are deployed, they are In Harm's Way because you never know when some renegade National Guard pilot is going to ignore orders twice and decide to bomb the Canadians anyway.

      If you're looking for someone who is complaining that U.S. troops are too well-equipped, that would be NATO.

      4. Fine, we haven't caused 4,000 or 11,000 civilian deaths in Afghanistan. The numbers you provide are between 600 and 5,000. So, let me repeat my question? What about the civilian deaths in Afghanistan (and Yugoslavia?) Is 600 to 5,000 civilian deaths in Afghanistan accetpable? That'a a lot of bombs that missed the 10-meter circle if you ask me. What about use of cluster bombs in cities in Yugoslavia? Was that planned to minimize civilian casualties? Your non-response is that since my number was off (and who will ever know the exact number) then my argument is invalid. Unless you actually believe that air wars produce NO civilian casualties, in which case I would refer you to back to Dresden.

      5. You are absolutely correct that WTC attacks were attacks on a civilian population. I was trying to make the point that it wasn't *just* an attack on a civilian population. It had deep symbolic significance. It was an attack on civilians, but also an attack on the perceived Excesses of the West.

      6. I'm saying that the "dual use" standard knowingly puts civilians at risk. The attacks of 9/11 are just about as morally bankrupt as the destruction of Iraq's water supply in the Gulf War. Both led to tremendous civilian casualties, and had a much larger impact on the civilian populous than the military.

      7. Believe it or not, I read that Atlantic article a few months ago. Post-Gulf War civilian deaths have nothing to do with the destruction of Iraq's drinking water, and that the "food for oil" program makes up for the medicine and technology which is banned by the sanctions. That must be why UN officials have resigned in protest over the sanctions. Maybe we would have finished the job in '91 if we actually cared about civilians. George Bush's post-War speech urging the Iraqi people to revolt, backed up with exactly 0 tanks, pretty much shows how little we cared.

      8. We are a free nation which was brutally attacked by terrorists. So we don't have to concern ourselves with civilian casualties?

      What about the many brutal regimes the U.S. has supported over the years, butchers like Pinochet and Suharto? Wake up, we have no moral high ground in the world. Neither does anyone else. Maybe Mother Teresa and Gandhi.

      The problem with having the moral high ground is that your morals are unique to you and not really a basis for a rational foreign or military policy. Morally, Osama bin Laden is just as entitled to his belief of Death to America as I am to my belief that he should rot in a collapsed cave somewhere near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border. None of that will ever convince us that the other is "right."

      Now, clearly the 9/11 attacks were brutal and horrible. I submit that ANY TIME that civilians are killed it is a horrible thing. And the U.S. government does it ALL THE TIME. It's far easier and politically convenient to incur a few unfortunate foreigner civilian casualties (that our own military only barely acknowleges) than to send the boys home in body bags.

      That, my friend is the definition of moral bankruptcy. But that's just my definition of moral bankruptcy, yours may be completely different.

      The facts remain, though. We did carpet bomb Afghanistan. We did kill civilians in Afghanistan and Yugoslavia. To me that is an outrage; to you it's not.

    16. Re:Cowardly by neocon · · Score: 1

      I'd like to respond to a few of the points you make here:

      • "...we might find largbe bombers with large loads are capable of attacking it just as effectively s a number of smaller tactical jets." That sounds like carpet bombing to me -- does it? Carpet bombing means dropping of large quantities of bombs indiscriminately over a large area without using guidance techniques to ensure that only military targets are aimed for. We have simply not done this at any point during the current campaign.
      • A B-52 would almost never be called upon to drop a single bomb within a 10-meter circle. If they are so accurate, then why did we invent cruise missiles? -- oh no, we would never invent two weapons capable of hitting the same target, would we? Please see the nando times article I linked in my previous post.
      • Is 600 ... civilian deaths in Afghanistan accetpable? (Qrlx apparently did not read the article very carefully, as he suggests the discredited number `5000' as a possible number of casualties) -- I certainly welcome your suggestion for how we could eliminate al Qaeda without causing any civilian casualties at all, but back here on earth we have done our utmost to avoid such casualties, while our enemies have done their utmost to maximize them. So again, your suggestion that there is some sort of equivalence here is absurd.
      • I was trying to make the point that it wasn't *just* an attack on a civilian population. It had deep symbolic significance. It was an attack on civilians, but also an attack on the perceived Excesses of the West. -- and again, you speak as if this made the attacks the equivalent of attacks on military targets of nations which have attacked us. Do you really believe this?
      • I'm saying that the "dual use" standard knowingly puts civilians at risk. -- but your definition of `dual use' is `considered by others to be a symbol of our culture'. Are you really suggsting that because a madman like Osama Bin Laden considered the WTC to be a symbol of America, we were `knowingly putting civilians at risk' by letting people work there? Really?
      • Maybe we would have finished the job in '91 if we actually cared about civilians -- I certainly agree that we should have, but to claim that civilians are suffering because of our actions and not because Mr. Hussein is funneling off relief money to pay for palaces and tanks is nonsense. Please see the article from The New Republic which I posted earlier in this thread.
      • We are a free nation which was brutally attacked by terrorists. So we don't have to concern ourselves with civilian casualties? -- no, as I've pointed out repeatedly, we are going to great lengths (and putting our men on the ground at grave risk) to avoid civilian casualties. To pretend that because some civilians are inadvertently hit means that we should not be fighting is nonsense unless you can propose some other way to adequately defend ourselves.
      • The problem with having the moral high ground is that your morals are unique to you and not really a basis for a rational foreign or military policy -- no, no they are not. That the attacks of September 11 were morally wrong is an objective fact, not a `point of view' which is open to debate, and about which all opinions are equally valid.
      • Morally, Osama bin Laden is just as entitled to his belief of Death to America as I am to my belief that he should rot in a collapsed cave -- no, he is not. To pretend that the belief that America should be destroyed is morally equivalent to a belief that it should not is nonsense.
      • None of that will ever convince us that the other is "right." -- the fact that this is true does not change the fact that one of us is right and the other isn't. If I couldn't convince you that two and two make four, they still would. But I notice that you put the word `right' in sneer quotes. Perhaps you believe that there is no such thing?
      • I submit that ANY TIME that civilians are killed it is a horrible thing. -- while true, that doesn't make it an equally horrible thing for us to hit civilians by accident while attempting not to do so as it is for them to intentionally kill as many civilians as possible.
      But again, we have a larger disagreement here. You seem to believe that it is unacceptable for the US to defend itself. Can you justify this position?
    17. Re:Cowardly by Qrlx · · Score: 1

      Hi neocon, just got back into town so I apologize for the delay.

      The debate over "carpet bombing" is getting to the level of "That depends on what your definition of 'is' is."

      You've said something else which strikes me as odd: "To pretend that the belief that America should be destroyed is morally equivalent to a belief that it should not is nonsense." I'm not trying to say that the two beliefs are equivalent. But which belief is "right" is going to depend on who you're talking to. Most Americans will tell you that the "right" belief is to defend America. Most Al Qaeda will tell you that the "right" belief is Death to America. Both sides have their convictions, their moral reasons for their beliefs. In their minds, they're both "right."

      "That the attacks of September 11 were morally wrong is an objective fact" How can this be? Show me the morals that are writ in stone. Morals are incapable of being objective. As they exist only in the mind of an indivudial, they necssarily are going to be different from person to person.

      Look, we're both seem pretty knowledgeable about this dirty business called War, and that one way or another many innocents die when they're in the wrong place at the wrong time. My lesser problem is that America peridoically chooses to defend herself by bombing the bejeezus out of [INSERT COUNTRY NAME HERE.] The greater problem is that these events are always couched in some moralistic framework of Us vs. Them, Good vs. Evil, and I'm not buying it. Like "Liberating Kuwait." Kuwait was never "free" (and still isn't) in the first place! Or remember when the USSR was "The Evil Empire." How silly is that? It's an immature comic-book view of foreign affairs. And then look around at our allies in the world, Pakistan is a military dictatorship, Saudi a repressive Kingdom and religious state. How come they aren't so morally objectionable?

      That's what really galls me, it's SO OBVIOUS that if you are playing nice with the US it doesn't matter what kind of country you're running (witness Tinanamen Square, that same regime enjoys MFN Trade Status). So long as you play ball with the US, you'll never be Evil.

      Doesn't that offend your sensibilites, just a little bit? There is such a difference between our rhetoric and the way the world works. I just wish that, for once, we would cop to it and say "We didnt' get rid of Saddadm because he's the Devil we know." or "We prefer to work with military dictatorships is the third world because their countries are more stable and thus more appealing to American business interests." We all know that's the way it works, how come noone is willing to come out and say it?

      As for America's right to defend herself, I really don't have too much of a problem with routing the Taliban and Al Qaeda. It might reduce the threat 30% for the next five years. But it will not remove the threat. And I have problems when we take at face value the adivce of some Afghani informant with his own agenda providing the target list. I also have a problem with DU weapons, and with land mines and cluster bombs. But I'm an idealist :-)

      One last thing: Let's say you had it in for the U.S. Would you send your military to invade the most powerful nation on Earth? Nope, you'd resort to terrorism. Not trying to say that it's right, or morally acceptable, but were you of the mindset that it's time to acutally attack America, terrorism would be your only viable option. Unless you can think of another, I certainly can't. Of course, we've been thinking the same thing for 50 years what with our stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, and fascination with the rucksack nuke. Kinda makes the terrorists job easier; we already built the stuff, all they have to do is get their hands on it.

    18. Re:Cowardly by neocon · · Score: 1

      Just to respond to a few points here:

      • The debate over "carpet bombing" is getting to the level of "That depends on what your definition of 'is' is." -- I don't thinks so. Words have meanings, and by the commonly understood meaning of `Carpet Bombing' or by any dictionary definition of `Carpet Bombing' which I have been able to locate, we are doing nothing of the sort. If you are going to use a private, personal meaning of a commonly used phrase, the onus is on you to explain that when using the term.
      • You've said something else which strikes me as odd: "To pretend that the belief that America should be destroyed is morally equivalent to a belief that it should not is nonsense." I'm not trying to say that the two beliefs are equivalent. But which belief is "right" is going to depend on who you're talking to. -- not at all. One of these two beliefs is right in a real and objective sense, and one is not. The fact that some people believe the wrong one is right does not make the two views equivalent any more than it would make `2+2=4' and 2+2=5' equivalent if some people believed the latter.
      • Morals are incapable of being objective. As they exist only in the mind of an indivudial, they necssarily are going to be different from person to person. -- and here we come to the crux of our disagreement. I would posit that this claim is simply false. Necessarily, there is, in fact, some objective moral truth to which we all strive, for if we do not accept this, then you have no grounds to possibly make the other claims in your post. You (rightly, of course) object to the massacre at Tianenmen, but how can you sustain this claim if morals are relative and the Chinese claim that their brutality is justified by their morality? No, your post practices a far better morality than it preaches.
      For more on this theme, you may wish to check out my recent journal entry on the subject (and respond there).
  18. cheap, unmanned bomber by EricBoyd · · Score: 1

    The holy grail! Now we will be able to rain down death on our opponents without risking the neck of even one of our own! Glorious glorious day!

    Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon

    --
    augment your senses: http://sensebridge.net/
    1. Re:cheap, unmanned bomber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh..missles have been able to do that since WWII. Did you sleep in history class or something?

    2. Re:cheap, unmanned bomber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Why the sarcasm? War isn't a game where you
      tweak the rules to make it close and exciting.

    3. Re:cheap, unmanned bomber by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you under the impresson that war is supposed to be "fair"? Do we need to give the enemy an equal chance to kill our people so you won't feel squeamish about winning? The U.S. military's job, never forget, is to kill people and break things at the direction of it's civilian masters.

  19. yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    now the americans don't have to risk the oh so important americans to kill thousands more innocent people. COOL. According to Bush, I am a terrorist.

  20. "Expected to see it in action..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I expect to never see it in action.

  21. Low shipping costs? by Bob+Kronkel · · Score: 0

    if these things can transport large crates and weopons, maybe we could eventually have fleets of these constantly flying things back and forth from certain points, making shipping cost lower. If this technology was reliable and cheaper, and we build thousands of them, you could ship a lot of stuff constantly for pretty cheap i'd say. Imagine looking into the sky and seeing a lane of flying wings carrying stuff. That'd be cool. I wonder how much they can carry? that could be a problem though.

    1. Re:Low shipping costs? by nounderscores · · Score: 1

      Somebody mod this up! A peaceful use for this technology (since it is said to be able to voice synth and communicate with normal air traffic controlers) would be to make cheap fed ex deliveries to places all over the world. They could be sent to their destinations with a single mouse click, unload 3000 pounds of goods and refuel and take off again, since there's no pilot fatigue.

  22. Automated Planes. by codeguy007 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hey with these things they will be able to continue to nuke the planet after everyone is dead.

    1. Re:Automated Planes. by LastToKnow · · Score: 1

      I wanted to mod this as funny, but that isn't right. we need a (+1 my god, he's right. we're idiots)

    2. Re:Automated Planes. by Bios_Hakr · · Score: 2

      Everyone will not die. The dead, however, will be the lucky ones. Ever see "Threads", or "The Day After"?

      --
      I'd rather you do it wrong, than for me to have to do it at all.
    3. Re:Automated Planes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or kill terrorists without risking american lives since the rest of the world isn't going to do it.

    4. Re:Automated Planes. by dumpster_d · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, this is not the case ;)

      The EM pulses of nearby nukes trash computers [better than the nuke trashes people].

      If you want to down the entire USAF contingent of these in your hemisphere--simply detonate a ~10MT nuke in the ionosphere and they'll drop like flies hit with Raid.

      (Note: the US actually did this as a test w/a 5MT nuke in the '60s--made an aurora borealis that slid across the entire planet, stopped radio communications for most of the world for a few hours, scrambled radar images, and blew out [the much LESS sensitive] computer circuits from California to Japan. After that, they decided it was a bad idea.)

    5. Re:Automated Planes. by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      Most military hardware is now protected against EMP, at least the critical systems (e.g. the onboard coffee maker might stop working, but the navigational system will still work).

    6. Re:Automated Planes. by fstanchina · · Score: 1

      I once read a short sci-fi novel roughly like this: automated bombers are still flying many years after the war started, even if they are out of ammo, and the survivors are kept away from the cities by robotic cops with no human control. One guy finally manages to reach into the city and regain control. Sorry, can't remember author (I think Asimov but I could be wrong) or title.

    7. Re:Automated Planes. by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      NOOOO! NOT THE COFFEE!

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    8. Re:Automated Planes. by Jboy_24 · · Score: 1

      My God... I went without coffee when Bernie Ebbers decided we didn't need it, now that the new guy brought it back.. All i need is a friken nuke to take it away again..

      But hey, they found that mice loaded with caffeine are 75% more likely to survive a lethal dose of radiation, maybe there are EMP protected coffee makers in teh US Army?

    9. Re:Automated Planes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's what +1 Insightful is for.

  23. Crackers? by quantaman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unlike the crewed planes it may replace, the X-45 would be partially autonomous. Its pilot ? who may fly several planes at once ? would remain on the ground, out of harm?s way.

    I wonder what is to stop someone from cracking the communications protocol and effectivly hijacking the plane. It seems like similar less advanced spy planes are already being used in Afghanistan but if these become standard I could very well see an enemy putting a significant amount of resources into cracking the encryption. Does anyone know enough about the system to know whether there is a significant risk of a 3rd party taking over one of these planes during a flight?

    --
    I stole this Sig
    1. Re:Crackers? by Oroborus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd be more worried about someone jamming the communications between the pilot and the plane.

      Modern warplanes are hardened against electronic attack, but it's virtually impossible to overcome signal jamming. So the only real countermeasure is to include enough autonomic control to the plane to allow it to complete a mission without direction.

      But it's highly unlikely that such a control system would be allowed to select and attack targets without human verification. Would you want to be a ground soldier in combat with loose-cannon planes flying overhead? I sure wouldn't. (And before anyone jumps in and says the allies will all have some sort of signal to prevent them from being blown to smithereens, remember this is in combat with full-force electronic jamming in play)

      Jamming a signal is simple, compared to intercepting it. And as the US military becomes increasingly reliant on its advanced communication network to wage war, it will become a simple way of levelling the playing field for the bad guys.

    2. Re:Crackers? by pknut · · Score: 1

      The military has extensive use of secure communications channels. Modern warfare *demands* such capabilites. How is else the submarine commander going to know if the orders to nuke some third world country come from a valid source? Ok, so I'm being facetious, but still, if good crypto is implemented *properly* then it can be very secure.

    3. Re:Crackers? by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The NSA has probably developed algorithms as good as what's in PGP. The military is no stranger to doing key management.

      Far easier than taking over, and almost as effective, would be jamming the communications link. The X-45 would be of questionable value in a major war with a sophisticated opponent.

    4. Re:Crackers? by jonabbey · · Score: 2

      I wonder how effective jamming would be if they took advantage of ultra wide-band/spread spectrum techniques, along with satellite linkages. Seems as though it would be hard to jam that stuff.. all the plane needs to do is look up and use a few gHz of frequencies, and you'd be hard pressed to block that.

    5. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not really that knowledgeable on the subject but from what was said in yesterday's post "Unlimited Airwaves" it would seem that jamming should be overcomeable.

    6. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear the communications systems run Microsoft Windows so the inherantly superior security of closed source will naturally deter any hack attempts.

    7. Re:Crackers? by thetbone · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't lose too much sleep, I bet the designers thought of that already. It's fairly safe to assume that communications security is one of the lesser technical challenges in this aircraft.

      Also, "significant amount of resources" is a very relative term when talking about military matters. ;)

    8. Re:Crackers? by alen · · Score: 4, Informative

      First the encryption the military uses is way advanced of anything in PGP or the civilian sector. Second this will most likely use frequency hopping radio technology. The US Army has had frequency hopping radios with encryption since the 80's. Any crypto the military uses first has to be approved by the NSA. And I haven't heard of anyone hacking into the NSA's classified systems yet.

    9. Re:Crackers? by ryepup · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unless they are complete morons, the thing will be programmed to head home if it ever loses it's connection.

      Even if all the targets are pre-programmed, and the thing needs no guidance, there needs to be a way to at least call it back. Everyone has hopefully seen Dr. Strangelove

      That would be a security hole in itself, because if someone could tap into the communications and give the callback signal, then the things would be useless anyway.

      Maybe the military has some quantum computing up thier sleeve...

    10. Re:Crackers? by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      Yup, the enemy will just install RF lighting in all their parking lots causing signal loss to the planes causing them to only strike French and Chinese embassies.

    11. Re:Crackers? by therealmoose · · Score: 0

      a DOS-style attack would be almost as devastating, as it would render the play immobile and might make it crash. $10-15 million isn't that expensive in the grand scheme of things, but to lose it over a cheap transmitter would really be a bad thing.

    12. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless they are complete morons, the thing will be programmed to head home if it ever loses it's connection.

      What were the frequencies used by the GPS navigation system again?

      What is to stop a cracker from altering these signals into a new destination of, say Redmond, Washington?

    13. Re:Crackers? by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 1

      I would hope that they use a ridiculously large key, something on the order of 1048576 bit encryption and would take the timespan of a few universes to crack. Of course there's always quantum encryption...

    14. Re:Crackers? by ozbird · · Score: 2

      I think you're reading too much into "fly". The communications between the ground and aircraft are likely to be minimal, with a "pilot" only keeping an eye on the aircraft's progress and sending an update to the program loaded on the ground if it proves necessary. The "pilot" certainly couldn't "fly several planes at once" if it were just a glorified RC plane.

      Jamming relies on their being a signal to jam, and I'm sure this was factored into the design.

    15. Re:Crackers? by asolipsist · · Score: 1

      #1. Jamming the signal would probably be very difficult since im sure the military uses extremely advanced radio communications using spread specturm, hidden signals, probably also uses microwave and optical communication etc and the source of the 'jam' would probably earn a visit from a cruise missle PDQ.
      #2. The reason these things took so long to come out is because they need to be smart enough to fly themselves. even if you jammed the signal, who cares, its already programmed to do its objective, think cruise missles.

      A better question would be is the x-45 worthwhile. Its like comparing the cost of an electric razor as compared to disposables if you're probably only going to shave 10 times. For 15 mil you can buy 10 or so cruise missles, with prices falling and capabilities rising faster than standard aircraft. Do you really think each of your UCAV's are going to fire over 10 times? I'd prefer the pay as you go approach with cruise missles rather than the much more complicated UCAV idea (UCAV has to come back and land!). If you buy a UCAV, you are locked into its static capabilities for a much longer period than if you just fired missles as you go. Of course they probably have recon value, but as a weapons platform, really what's the point.

      "Instead of building new weapons, i think we should be getting more use out of the ones we already have" - Jack Handy :)

    16. Re:Crackers? by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 2

      Sounds like a perfect opportunity for a "home-on-jam" mission. Our current HARM (High speed Anti-Radiation Missle) missle homes in on radar emissions, but can also be set to home in on jammers. The jammer then has two options: stop the jamming or run away very, very fast. Cruise missles can be similarly equipped, and with a cluster munitions dispenser even a widely disperse array of jammers could be easily, cheaply, and (most importantly) safely taken out.

      Even turning off the jammer (or radar) would be somewhat pointless, as nearly all of our anti-radiation missles store the location of the last known emitter and home in on it anyway. A little less accurate, perhaps, but with a 500kg warhead you can miss by quite a bit and still take out your target.

      Wish we'd had these when I was in the Marines.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    17. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You think they'd tell us if one of their algorithims was cracked? Unlike the FBI the NSA doesn't report to the public. Osama would probably know before Joe Blow public.

    18. Re:Crackers? by Druid+Squirrel · · Score: 1

      I wonder what is to stop someone from cracking the communications protocol and effectivly hijacking the plane.

      This situation sounds like a canonical use for a one time pad. Before the plane takes you generate sufficiently many gigabytes (or terabytes, or whatever) of randomness, put one copy on the plane, and keep one copy on the ground. Then whenever you want to communicate with the plane you xor your outgoing message with the (next unused section of) the stream of random bytes. When the plane gets the encoded message, it xors it with its copy of the random bytes (again at the appropriate offset), which results in the original message. Provided your random numbers are truly random, this results in a virtually unbreakable code.

    19. Re:Crackers? by SnarfQuest · · Score: 1

      I'd guess that the planes use a spread-spectrum for frequency jumping communication system (signal is sent over a large frequency band). To co-opt the signal would require you to know just how the frequencies are being used, as well as all the information about the encryption on top of that.

      Jamming works by putting enough power (noise) at the communication frequency to hide it in the noise. Spread spectrum requires a lot more power to succussfully jam, because you must pump power across enough of the band to hide most of the signal.

      --
      Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
    20. Re:Crackers? by Glorat · · Score: 2

      The cryptographical protocol would almost certainly rely on symmetric key crytography technology on which there is so much theory about block ciphers and cipher modes, the NSA is sure to make an uncrackable code.

      The reason I can say this with such confidence is that when you get to implant both crypto hardware at both ends of the communications line, you are in a much better state compared to software encryption of your email with key exchange problems etc. etc.

      Heck, who's to say they can't store a pair of one time pads at both controller and plane that has enough data to encrypt comms for a flight. After the flight, the one time pad is changed. That's uncrackable crypto

    21. Re:Crackers? by anto · · Score: 1

      And then Someone works out that a $100 microwave missing its door looks exactly like a jammer source to your remote pilot (or your cruise missle) in fact you can turn the power down & get it to pulse for more effect.

      Before you know it your dropping multi-million dollar munitions on microwave ovens in fields all over the place. If you wanted to get really snazzy you might build a wood shack over the microwave to make it really look the part as the pilot eye balls it. How many days of taxes do you want to pay to kill a microwave?

      Basically *smart* weapons are just as avoidable as *dumb* ones - sooner or later real humans end up on the ground making actual human decisions.

    22. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, the enemy will just install RF lighting in all their parking lots causing signal loss to the planes causing them to only strike French and Chinese embassies.

      And this is a bad thing?

    23. Re:Crackers? by cnkeller · · Score: 2
      Does anyone know enough about the system to know whether there is a significant risk of a 3rd party taking over one of these planes during a flight?

      Who's to say there is a pilot at all? Perhaps the system will be pre-programmed before flight and use onboard GPS to take off, accomplish the mission, and land. I guarantee you that autonomous flight is being looked at, mostly likely in conjunction with flying via remote pilot.

      --

      there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

    24. Re:Crackers? by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 2

      That whole microwave oven thing was Serbian/MGB disinformation from the Kosovo campaign. Just so you know.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    25. Re:Crackers? by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      As good as PGP? You think so? Really?

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    26. Re:Crackers? by anto · · Score: 1

      My point is the costs of creating something that looks like a jammer device to a *semi* intelligent AI type interface *may* be significantly cheaper than the cost of the device.

      There are very cheap scanners available that will help you pinpoint frequencies such devices operate on - once you have a *rough* idea of frequencies create some very powerful broadband transmitters (the microwave is just one possible example) and litter them about everywhere - either you disrupt communications with the device or better still get it to try and bomb the device causing interference - meaning you can't then drop that same bomb on a legitimate target.

    27. Re:Crackers? by Zaak · · Score: 1

      The GPS navigation signals are protected by encryption as strong as the guidance of the planes would be. It would be just as hard to deceive them about their position as it would be to just take them over. Not to mention that the planes will certainly have inertial navigation as well, which is immune to outside deception.

    28. Re:Crackers? by andrewski · · Score: 2, Funny

      That sounds like terrorist talk to me.

    29. Re:Crackers? by Zaak · · Score: 1

      Quantum encryption wouldn't help. It is very low bit rate, and depends on a very clean transmission medium to allow detection of individual photons. It is used for long-distance provably secure key exchange. These planes would receive their keys before they're launched.

    30. Re:Crackers? by espo812 · · Score: 1
      1048576 bit encryption and would take the timespan of a few universes to crack
      This is pointless. Because there is no perfect encryption (save the one time pad), the trick is to use a key that is big enough to withstand attack longer than the usefulness of the data. Data to fly this plane is only useful for hours or a day at the most - so using a key that big will only limit how much data you can transmit (because it will take forever to encrypt/decrypt).
      --

      espo
    31. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The X-45 would be of questionable value in a major war with a sophisticated opponent.

      The fact that effort is being put into developing this should tell you something about what our leaders expect of future wars...

    32. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      as good as what's in PGP
      hahahahaha
      try REDICULOUSLY BETTER
      don't forget the NSA is the WORLDS largest employer of mathematicians

    33. Re:Crackers? by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      A better question would be is the x-45 worthwhile. Its like comparing the cost of an electric razor as compared to disposables if you're probably only going to shave 10 times. For 15 mil you can buy 10 or so cruise missles, with prices falling and capabilities rising faster than standard aircraft. Do you really think each of your UCAV's are going to fire over 10 times? I'd prefer the pay as you go approach with cruise missles rather than the much more complicated UCAV idea (UCAV has to come back and land!). If you buy a UCAV, you are locked into its static capabilities for a much longer period than if you just fired missles as you go. Of course they probably have recon value, but as a weapons platform, really what's the point.

      What you're ignoring is the importance of being able to have your attack vehicle loiter over an area and attack targets of opportunity. Cruise missiles are pre-targeted, they fly to the target and explode. An unmanned combat plane can fly in circles over the battlefield hitting targets when it spots them. That's the big advantage.

    34. Re:Crackers? by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      "as good as what's in PGP"

      Frankly, it'd rather frighten me if our military communications were secured by "pretty good" encryption...

    35. Re:Crackers? by canadian_right · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The article also mentioned "line of sight" control systems. This would imply some sort of narrow beam (laser?) system that would be much harder to crack or jam.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    36. Re:Crackers? by Slashamatic · · Score: 2
      Um nope. The military uses a lot of standard stuff like Fortezza (uses the Capstone algorithms)as well as other stuff. Interestingly enough the military has had a traditional fondness for stream ciphers but hasn't made so much use of block ciphers which is one of the main differenceds between military and civilian cryptography.

      The technologies in deployment are far from cutting edge because it takes so long for technologies to be deployed. As far as frequency agile communications are concerned, they are jamming and intercept resistant, but they are hardly jamming or intercept-proof.

      The last point is that equipment in action over enemy terroritory can be lost, so any hardware is vulnerable to capture.

    37. Re:Crackers? by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      A jamming decoy with a wood shack built around it would suggest to a flesh and blood pilot that it was a jamming system worthy of having munitions dumped on it. If you go to such effort to build a decoy it is probably going to fool some live pilots some of the time, the only view of the target they've got is a small TV monitor linked up to their weapon's guidance system.

      I think you're also missing the point of these UCAV systems, they are meant to deal with people making decoy targets. Say you're in the desert looking for Scud missle trucks and there are a couple decoys all over the place. You're in an F-111F (which would now probably be an F/A-18 since the F-111 was retired) with a load of GBU-12s. Which Scud site do you take out? Taking out the wrong one means people on your side are going to end up dead. Now enter UCAVs which can be semi-autonomous, you can assign each one to a different potential target lowering the possibility of a miss and casulties on your side. Having several F/A-18s go up in a sortie means a greater chance of one of them getting shot down and not only do you lose the equipment but you've got a pilot either dead or captured. No one is going to be heart broken because a UCAV got shot down hitting a decoy. Someone is definitely going to care when a real pilot is shot down hitting a decoy though.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    38. Re:Crackers? by proj_2501 · · Score: 2

      Who is to say that a cruise missile could never do that?

    39. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The militairy uses spread spectrum communications, which are almost impossible to block. You have to jam the entire range of possible fequencies.
      Meanwhile a HARM missile is heading for your easily detected jammer.

    40. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jamming a signal....where there's an in theres an out- and tracking the source of targeted interference is quite handy, and invitation to be dealt with. Fuck it I say nuke the entire middle east- fuckin shit hole backwards freedom hating bigots:))

    41. Re:Crackers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why use an unmanned combat plane? A recon is a recon, which is so small and slow, the enemy fighter jet would have hard time finding them. Use the recon to guide different sizes cruise missiles to finish to job. And for the recon, you can send thousands up the sky.

    42. Re:Crackers? by sql*kitten · · Score: 3, Informative

      First the encryption the military uses is way advanced of anything in PGP or the civilian sector.

      I'd be very suprised if that was true. Would the military trust something that hadn't been reviewed by the academic sector, published in journals, etc? Trying to keep the algorithm secret simply doesn't stand up to modern cryptanalysis, if that algorithm isn't rock-solid to start with. You can download the source code and documentation to the new AES, which is the Federal standard for data encryption.

      If the NSA are keeping anything secret, it will be that they have algorithmic attacks on popular techniques (and/or computing techniques and power to brute-force them), not new techniques of their own.

    43. Re:Crackers? by Zathrus · · Score: 2

      Cruise missiles can't attack multiple targets - single payload release and you're done. Also if you have to recall the mission you're out 1.5M with a cruise missile - the only recall is to destroy it. With a UCAV you just tell it to come home.

      The loitering and attacking targets of opportunity is also a good point (as made by someone else), and it's not something a cruise missile can do, period. If you have a UCAV circling an area it may be able to spot and take out a target in under a minute. If you have a Predator surveying the area, identify a target, and then launch a cruise missle it's a 5-10 minute delay -- more than enough time for a target to move from one safe spot to another, or to disappear entirely into unobservable terrain.

      A good bit of this, of course, depends on the payload of a UCAV. If it only has 1 or 2 bomb bays/missile racks then it's not much better than a cruise missile. If it has 4-6 then it has a good bit of versatility above and beyond cruise missiles.

      Oh, and finally, a UCAV is still piloted. Which means that it can react to changing conditions far better than a cruise missile can. It's really, really, REALLY hard to have a cruise missile hit a moving target - since they're programmed prior to launch. A UCAV would have no problems targeting and eliminating a tank, motorcade, or ship.

    44. Re:Crackers? by Ummite · · Score: 1

      It would be real easy to install one time pad, since the plane come often at home. Just consider that part as easy. The hard part would be to be able to be autonomous in a signal jam. I suppose variable frequency reception and multiple simultaneous reception on different frequencies could solve that problem.

    45. Re:Crackers? by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      Not to simply replicate the 'skynet' post above, but I would see it as a very small step to say "OK, logically these are jammable. Therefore, we should equipment them with simple autonomous systems that allow them to, for example, loiter while the system is jammed."

      2 years later:
      "If they loiter while jammed, they'll be easy targets. Let's give them some minimal AI to allow evasive maneuvers."

      1 year later:
      "Well, if we have AI competent to continue the mission while jammed (i.e. attack) why not let that be the standard?"

      There is no DOUBT these things should be called the X-45 "Saberhagen".

      --
      -Styopa
    46. Re:Crackers? by bkr1_2k · · Score: 1

      You've missed a vital piece of information, the UCAV isn't going to be picking its own targets. The targets will be determined by other forms of intelligence which can generally determine to a high degree of accuracy whether that $100 microwave is a real radar site or not. The US uses plenty of signals intelligence and imagery intelligence assets to determine what is a valid target before sending planes in to bomb said targets. These assets can determine power levels, frequencies, and if you've ever looked at a "Jane's" book, you'll know that we have all the information we need about most radars to determine if they are a threat or not. We know what weapons systems they are associated with and how to neutralize them.

      --
      "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
    47. Re:Crackers? by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 2

      Ah, I see you too have fallen for the urban legend of the microwave oven jammer. I believe this was started sometime during the Serbian conflicts. It's a sham, a fabrication. Furthermore, it's ludicrous.

      First, military radars and jamming devices operate on known frequencies. Even frequency agile systems operate within known boundaries. So do microwave ovens, albeit completely different ones. Nobody's going to mistake a leaky oven for an air search radar.

      Second, microwave ovens do not have the radiative power to even attempt such a stunt. They are designed to work in a very small, enclosed space. Pointing an open oven at the sky will not produce enough of a signal to even warrant attention. You forget that microwave ovens do NOT heat food, they heat water molecules contained in the food. The atmosphere is thick with water vapor and would disperse any radiation long before it reached a plane at altitude.

      Smart weapons are NOT as easily avoidable as dumb ones. Just ask Saddam -- while you still can!

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    48. Re:Crackers? by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

      I would imagine that they use some kind of spread spectrum communications system, possibly with frequencies rotating at set intervals. Doesn't make it impossible to jam - just makes it more difficult.

      You would have to do a lot of homework to fully take over a plane using that system. Or have inside information. However, you might be able to confuse it long enough to have a ..hard landing.. without that. I wonder how well it can fly without information being streamed to it about what to do next ? :)

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    49. Re:Crackers? by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      Because a cruise missile doesn't have a "Return to base" capability. If no target presents itself, you either crash it into a target that may no longer be there, or you ditch it, which kills civilians, which is the antithesis of the cruise missile.

      Either way, the X45 seems a better way to go.

  24. Who's gonna get the blame? by Bollie · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Wham. Another terrorist bites the dust. Who scored the kill? Was it:
    1. The Ender'esque kiddie controlling the plane,
    2. the coders on the control system for the plane,
    3. the engineers who built the plane,
    4. the engineers who built the bomb,
    5. or the taxpayer who paid for the whole shebang.

    Not really funny if you think that 50 cents of your last tax payment may have gone to an actual, honest-to-goodness kill "in the field".

    Extremely not funny if you think of any "accidents" that might happen.

    What's that line about swords into ploughshares again?
    1. Re:Who's gonna get the blame? by kaustik · · Score: 1

      "Wham. Another terrorist bites the dust. Who scored the kill?
      ...
      or the taxpayer who paid for the whole shebang."

      I can get hitpoints for paying taxes?

    2. Re:Who's gonna get the blame? by neocon · · Score: 0

      Now what's your point here? That I should not want my tax dollars to go to dismantling the infrastructure that made September 11 possible?

    3. Re:Who's gonna get the blame? by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 2

      Funny you should mention plowshares, this unmanned vehicle will spawn civilian uses, have no doubt of that. Aerial traffic control, weather monitoring, agricultural use, land surveys, apartment hunting, you name it. As always, it will be a number of years before any real products appear.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    4. Re:Who's gonna get the blame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you, you liberal communist bastard, and fuck the mods who modded up your political agenda. Go suck Dashle's cock some more and stop spitting his nut here.

    5. Re:Who's gonna get the blame? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny you should mention plowshares, this unmanned vehicle will spawn civilian uses, have no doubt of that. Aerial traffic control, weather monitoring, agricultural use, land surveys, apartment hunting, you name it.

      phhhbt !
      There's no reason to take the human out of the plane in these "civilian uses". The cost of the remote control will be one pilot plus the remote control systems. Not many municipalities are going to put unmanned craft in their skies for the simple reasaon of civil liability. They'd be sued to death and back if one unmanned craft belonging to them crashed and killed some kids playing in a schoolyard.
      The cruise missile may have been a fabulous investment militarily speaking, one of history's best probably, but it's already had a quarter century to spawn a useful productive civilian application... and there is no such animal yet.

      Hey America, if you want useful, productive, peaceful civilian technologies WHY THE FUCK DON'T YOU PAY FOR THEM DIRECTLY.

      Why not look directly at problems that need solving and solve them. There's no lack believe me. This fantasy about all military r&d reaping benefits for peaceful technology is a pure pile of WANK. It's the least efficient way of arriving at new products and techniques imaginable, although it's not bad as a means to getting $69 hammers and $100 toilet seats.

    6. Re:Who's gonna get the blame? by sysadmn · · Score: 1
      What's that line about swords into ploughshares again?

      You're probably thinking of Those who beat their swords into plowshares wind up plowing for those who didn't.
      Glad to help.
      P.S. You mispelled "plow".
      --
      Envy my 5 digit Slashdot User ID!
  25. Kinda Scary by FuegoFuerte · · Score: 1

    All I can say is, I'm sure glad those things are on our side. Imagine that we'll be able to mass produce these things and launch whole fleets of them with no risk of losing a single human life from the attack (on our side). Hopefully our leaders will respect the power that gives them.

  26. The bravery of being out of range by jhoger · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ah, the bravery of being out of range.

    Nevertheless, I can't imagine real pilots having the same positive impression of these devices. Human judgement counts for something.

    Will these things end up making less of these "mistaken target bombings" or is that all just garbage-in-garbage-out intelligence snafus?

    1. Re:The bravery of being out of range by NixterAg · · Score: 1

      You seem to make a link between bravery and stupidity. You can be 'brave' by bringing a knife to a gunfight but most would say you are being stupid.

    2. Re:The bravery of being out of range by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Nothing wrong with minimizing your own casualties. Of course, the people flying them better drop the whole macho attitude about how they're risking their lives for their country, etc.

    3. Re:The bravery of being out of range by silentbozo · · Score: 2

      There was a recent Wall Street Journal article on how Air Force pilots were pissed to get unmanned pilot duty after distinguished stints at flying f14s, etc. They didn't like being locked into a little box, flying a plane by remote, and they really resented the fact that they'd be locked into this duty for a year or more, while they lost out on actual airtime to their colleagues (airtime being a critical factor for advancement and promotion, not to mention basic flying skills.)

      The gist of it was, the Air Force wasn't apologizing for needing qualified pilots, even to fly by remote, and were trying to line up a few T34 trainers so the Global Hawk pilots could get some real airtime in between missions.

      Upshot - could it be someday that geeks with less than perfect vision could get wings in our nation's Air Force?

  27. Hmmm by NickRob · · Score: 2

    An unmanned plane with weapons. Call me paranoid, but I'm not sure I trust it. Anybody who has worked with computers and electronics knows how crazy the machines can go with little action taken. Processors can have rounding errors that cost countless civilian lives. With smartbombs as screwey as they are, should we trust these things?

    Give me a human pilot, with proper training they can make error judgement calls better and can use instinct and other senses to make better decisions. Plus you can yell at them and get results, yell at autopilot and it won't do a damn thing.

    1. Re:Hmmm by realdpk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, civilian lives matter a whole lot to our military. (For those that don't want to click, it's more than died in the "9/11" attack.)

    2. Re:Hmmm by I'm+Spartacus! · · Score: 1

      Today's fighters are nearly completely computer driven as it is. The F-16 is actually so UNSTABLE in flight that the human response time is unable to correct it quickly enough to avoid dumping it. The brain of the F-16 is the computer. Don't even get me started about the F-22. These planes have multiple backup systems in case of failure. The human makes the decisions, but the computers do all the work.

      The only difference here is that the pilot is on the ground instead of in the cockpit. He/she still makes all the decisions. It's not a robot, just a very expensive remote controlled toy.

      --
      "War is God's way of teaching Americans geography." -- Ambrose Bierce
    3. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well apparently they mean something. They could have finished this whole war in about 1 day by nuking the entire country. Much cheaper and easier. War sucks. Civilians get killed.

    4. Re:Hmmm by ksheff · · Score: 1

      The instability of the aircraft also makes it very nimble, much more so than a stable one that doesn't need fly-by-wire systems. They are designed that way.

      --
      the good ground has been paved over by suicidal maniacs
    5. Re:Hmmm by zulux · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you're implying that the US and her allies intedded to kill civilians, than you're an idiot. There would be millions dead if that were the case.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    6. Re:Hmmm by realdpk · · Score: 2

      By millions, are you trying to imply that the US military is _that_ competent? Because, if they were, they could have avoided killing 3000+ innocent civilians.

    7. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think they're icompetent, try starting a war with them. If you're any other nation in the world, you'll lose badly.

    8. Re:Hmmm by neocon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Those numbers have been discredited a long time ago. See the section on civilian casualties at the end of this article for details.

      More importantly, this is beside the point. In Afghanistan, we are doing our utmost to avoid civilian casualties by putting brave men in harms way, on the ground, to pinpoint targets to be hit. In contrast, the September 11 terrorists did their utmost to maximize the number of civilians killed. You don't see a difference?

    9. Re:Hmmm by elefantstn · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You don't see a difference?


      No, he doesn't, because he's motivated by ideology instead of reason.

      Not only that, but none of the dipshit kneejerkers reading this article has realized that this technology will actually reduce civilian casualties in the event of a war. Most of the misses by bombs and missiles from the US Air Force are due to the crews flying high enough to avoid antiaircraft fire. With unmanned drones, that's no longer a concern, identification is easier, and the uninted casualties are lower.

      But this is Slashdot, what do you expect?
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    10. Re:Hmmm by elefantstn · · Score: 4, Insightful
      By millions, are you trying to imply that the US military is _that_ competent? Because, if they were, they could have avoided killing 3000+ innocent civilians.


      You think it takes a lot of competence to push the launch button on a ICBM? If the US really just wanted to kill civilians, it could do it pretty quickly and easily.
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    11. Re:Hmmm by maetenloch · · Score: 1

      Professor Marc Herold's results have been pretty thoroughly debunked here, here, and here. Other studies based on reputable sources put the number of civilian casualties at no more than 1500.

      Even if the number of civilian casualties in Afghanistan were greater than the number in the 9/11 attack (or 10 times as many), there is a distinct difference between deliberately targeting civilians and civilians being killed unintentionally during attacks on military targets. So long as armies insist on fighting in populated areas, there will unfortunately always be civilian causualties.

    12. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So if I kill your family because I think it would be cool that would be bad. But if I kill your family because I'm a cop and accidently ran into their car on a chase, that would be ok.

      You say "there is a distinct difference between deliberately targeting civilians and civilians being killed unintentionally during attacks on military targets".
      So then, any civilians that were killed when a plane hit the pentagon was ok because the pentagon is a military target. The plane that crashed in PA was supposedly going to the white house. If it was, then the people that died in the plane crash has completely justified deaths.

      You, most likely, will say that the Pentagon and the While House are not military targets and even if they were, it's different. Well, even if you don't, you're still an illogical dumb fuck.
      Yes there will always be civilian deaths during a war. It would be VERY hard to prevent it. But then, maybe we need to stop doing actions that pervoke people into doing what was done. The Europeans have seen a lot of war over the past 2,000 years. Yet we ultimately think war is just part of how you operate as a country.

    13. Re:Hmmm by flacco · · Score: 2
      Most of the misses by bombs and missiles from the US Air Force are due to the crews flying high enough to avoid antiaircraft fire. With unmanned drones, that's no longer a concern

      How do figure "that's no longer a convern?" In addition to protecting the pilot, they fly at a high altitude so they get there in one piece to accomplish the mission. This doesn't change just because you take the pilot out of the picture.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    14. Re:Hmmm by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Lets assume for a moment that those inflated numbers are accurate, and that the US actually HAS killed more civilians than died on 9/11.

      #1 Civilians were the target of the 9/11 attacks. The US has gone to great lengths to avoid civilian casualties. A single well armed (non-nuclear) aircraft could easily kill more than that in one trip if the US wished to target civilans.

      #2 The 9/11 attack was only partially sucessful. The death toll could have been much higher. In an effort to avoid additional panic the US government has been happy to let this fact get swept under the rug. Other attacks were in place. Unfortunately I can't back this up - you may disregard this point if you don't believe me.

      #3 The attacks would-have/may-still continue. This you cannot reasonable dispute. The US death toll would-have/may-still rise.

      #4 Your Afghanistan death toll *includes* an unknown number of the *intended* target - namely Al-Queda and Taliban.

      #5 The US strikes are in self-defense.

      #6 Other reliable sources put the Afghanistan civilian death toll at more like one half to one sixth the US 9/11 death toll.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    15. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good to see you believe terrorists are a form of government you stupid fuck.

    16. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This new plane incorporates better stealth technology than that of the stealth fighter. This is do to the lack of a cockpit and its smaller size. You can send hundreds of this unmanned stealth aircraft flying at low altitude, and if any crash or get shot down then the remainder finish the mission without risking the lives of pilots.

    17. Re:Hmmm by RobinH · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In Afghanistan, we are doing our utmost to avoid civilian casualties by putting brave men in harms way, on the ground, to pinpoint targets to be hit. In contrast, the September 11 terrorists did their utmost to maximize the number of civilians killed. You don't see a difference?

      Ok, Rah Rah U-S-A and all that... go America.

      However, it bothers me that you seem to think that the civilians on the ground in Afghanistan are supporters of the Taliban, or Osama bin Laden. They did not vote the Taliban into power, and they did not invite Al Qaida (sp?) to their country. As a matter of fact, I believe that the people of Afghanistan (and their army, the Northern Alliance) were already fighting against Taliban rule LONG before the US or its allies ever got involved.

      Therefore, when you say that the US is doing its "utmost to avoid civilian casualties", I fail to see why America should be canonized for this. The 9/11 attackers targeted civilians because they are terrorists, and they see American civilians as their enemies. The Afghan people are not your enemies, they are your allies! It makes sense to avoid shooting your own allies, but I guess Americans don't get that.

      --
      "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    18. Re:Hmmm by Planetes · · Score: 1

      Yes, I seem to recall a few examples of this in the 40's.. like.. oh.. Dresden.. Berlin.. Tokyo.. We effectively nuked those cities with conventional weapons partially because we didn't have the technology of now, and partially because the allied governments viewed them as "acceptable" losses. Nobody was innocent in these attitudes, the germans were just as bad the blitz.

      >that this technology will actually reduce civilian casualties in the event of a war. Most of the misses by bombs and missiles from the US Air Force are due to the crews flying high enough to avoid antiaircraft fire.

      --
      Planetes
      "One World, One Web, One Program" - Microsoft Promo Ad
      "Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Fuhrer" - Adolf Hitl
    19. Re:Hmmm by ozborn · · Score: 1

      Ahh, you're obviously a real humanitarian promoting the latest warplane as a means of saving lives. Give us a break.


      A much more likely scenario is that the US will feel free to bomb more countries since immediate casualities may well be lower. Maybe the next time the US is wiping out water treatment centers in Iraq (because it now (unlike in the 80s) has the wrong type of dictator) the number of directly killed casulities will be reduced. But the majority will still be killed later as a result of the destruction, from disease and malnutrition just like they are now. And there will be more dead since this means there is even less to hold US military power in check.


      If you were serious about peace and a legitimate humanitarian you'd probably belong to any one of a number of international organizations that have promoting peace as their goal. My guess is that you are a member of exactly zero of them. You'd rather spend time justifying military spending by the world's most powerful and aggresive nation as a means of saving lives. Then you pretend you're not motivated by idealogy?! "Dipshit kneejerkers" who crazily believe that building warplanes isn't about saving lives aren't the only ones motivated by idealogy around here.

    20. Re:Hmmm by smallpaul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However, it bothers me that you seem to think that the civilians on the ground in Afghanistan are supporters of the Taliban, or Osama bin Laden.

      I re-read the post you are responding to and it said nothing remotely like that. What are you talking about?

      Therefore, when you say that the US is doing its "utmost to avoid civilian casualties", I fail to see why America should be canonized [dictionary.com] for this.

      He didn't say they should be canonized. He said that they should not be equated with terrorists. Are you replying to text in the post that is marked with an invisible tag?

      It makes sense to avoid shooting your own allies, but I guess Americans don't get that [cbc.ca].

      I'm a Canadian too. Way to use the deaths of honorable men to score cheap shots against an American that you seem not even to have a legitimate disagreement with. Its a new low for Slashdot. (but only for today)

    21. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this is Slashdot, what do you expect?

      Maybe Slashdot expects an end to this dick-sizing contests over some obscure piece of land because of economical interests. Whoever says they are protecting freedom, they are full of shit. It is either oil (Desert Storm) or just pure mindless revenge (Afghanistan). I'm sure pretty soon we'll see Iraq go down in flames again for whatever reason. But it will be televised beforehand, so keep your eyes open. Entertainment ensues!

    22. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks for the moderation! *^____^*

    23. Re:Hmmm by Graymalkin · · Score: 2

      Awww poor Iraq, what did they ever do to anybody?

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    24. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Awww poor Iraq, what did they ever do to anybody?
      The children? Yes, pray tell me, what did they do?

    25. Re:Hmmm by Kibo · · Score: 2

      I don't think these would really effect civilian casualties one way or the other. There mission would be to take out air defenses with the same weapons already in use. The things that determine whether civilians will die, placing SAM sites in school yards, or even simple malfunctioning of the weapons systems won't change. (Granted, I'm assuming roughly an equal number of things can go wrong with an X-45 as advertised and an air craft which might currently perform the same role.) Just because they're smaller and might fly lower, I'm not so sure that one will be able to read "Chinese Embassy" in time to abort the release of weapons. A bad map is a bad map.

      --
      --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
    26. Re:Hmmm by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      They were unlucky enough to be born in a country where the leader likes to place SAM sites in school courtyards.

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    27. Re:Hmmm by walkern · · Score: 1

      I'd suggest that the military will still fly their multimillion dollar planes as high as they can while still leaving a good chance for a successful target. They don't want it being shot down whether there is a pilot in there or not - it always offers the enemy a chance for propaganda to have a destroyed foreign plane on the ground.

    28. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Harboring the folks who attacked the United States on a cool quiet morninging without notice, kinda knocks you out of the innocent civilian catagory.

    29. Re:Hmmm by RobinH · · Score: 1

      He said that they should not be equated with terrorists.

      Okay... I kind of see how the original post was implying that the US is acting like a terrorist, and I agree that's stupid. However, in my experience (talking with Americans I work with), Americans in general honestly don't care when non-American civilians or American allies are killed by American actions. I actually heard comments by co-workers like "those stupid Canadians probably were in the wrong place anyway" and "they were only four Canadians, who cares?" These were taunts, but they were obviously in very poor taste. The post I replied to seems to imply this same attitude (i.e., so, we killed a few civilians - big deal, they weren't American).

      It's true that my opinions are biased (not that this separates me much from anybody on the planet). However, I stand beside my point that many people see Afghanistan as the enemy, when in reality, the people of Afghanistan are our allies.

      At any rate, we're probably waaayyy OT, so I apologize.

      --
      "I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
    30. Re:Hmmm by absurd_spork · · Score: 2
      If you're implying that the US and her allies intedded to kill civilians, than you're an idiot. There would be millions dead if that were the case.


      That's completely irrelevant. They killed civilians. Civilians are dead. That's all that counts.

      And don't tell me it couldn't have been avoided. Some of those cases were pretty absurd. Bombed a wedding party in north-eastern Afghanistan because they mistook them for terrorists. Hello? Is that how we defend the western values??
    31. Re:Hmmm by shaunbaker · · Score: 1

      Yet another wonderful instance of the US Army protecting your right to make stupid and baseless comments. I would argue that the average US Military Officer has an intellect far greater than your own. How would you know the first thing about military competence. Civilian casualties happen, it is unavoidable. And to be honest 3000 is really a very small ammount when you factor in MET-TC for this siutation. You have a civy populace which is largely intermingled with the "military" population, the line is often blurred. When "military" forces seek refuge in a civilians home and are firing from it, you can either shell the place or send in some sort of exact assualt, which do you think causes less military kills? Unless you are prepared to send that number of America's sons and daughters to be killed, i would hold off judgement. Furthermore, the military does what the civilian government orders, if you dont like it then go picket somewhere but show basic respect to the armed forces, they get payed crap to protect your right to be a moron

    32. Re:Hmmm by neocon · · Score: 1

      The problem with your argument is that the only reason that people are dying in Iraq, despite the huge amounts of money and aid being provided as part of the UN oil-for-food program is that Mr. Hussein is diverting the aid shipments to pay for palaces and tanks. (Note that that article is in The New Republic, which can hardly be described as a mainstream or conservative publication.)

      And which international organizations promote peace anyway? The UN, which kept Pol Pot in power as part of its unwanted `peace' deal, looked the other way while it's peacekeepers sold food aid for sex in Africa and ran prostitution rings in Asia? What makes you think that international organizations have some sort of moral high ground?

    33. Re:Hmmm by zulux · · Score: 2

      They killed civilians. Civilians are dead. That's all that counts.

      There are other things that count - like what accomplished. Killing 3000 civilians without cause is murder; Accidently killing 3200 civilians in a war to oust a represive regeme that kills just as many civilians in a month is regretable and sorrowfull.

      --

      Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    34. Re:Hmmm by Stoutlimb · · Score: 2

      I think the poster you replied to was trying to mean that Americans are far too trigger happy, as our good boys at the PPCLI found out. If the Americans were less trigger happy from the air, and sent in more ground troops instead, would there be less innocent deaths? I think this is the root question we have to ask, and people have come up with widely differing answers to it. It appears many on Slashdot see unmanned vehicles as adding to the American habit of shooting from a distance and (sometimes) asking questions later.

      It's a serious issue.

      Bork!

    35. Re:Hmmm by realdpk · · Score: 1

      Ok, 3000 is "really a very small amount". So what are we so upset about? I mean, they only killed around 3000 of our civilians when they attacked. It was unavoidable!

    36. Re:Hmmm by realdpk · · Score: 1

      "#4 Your Afghanistan death toll *includes* an unknown number of the *intended* target - namely Al-Queda and Taliban."

      Well, that sure makes up for it. "Hey, some of those guys might've been really bad people! Why, I think one of those children could have groen up to be the next Osama!" Please.

    37. Re:Hmmm by stantron77 · · Score: 1

      While I agree that 3000 lives is not by any means an insignificant number your post eiter deliberately or through ignorance ignores the point people are making here. The point is that flying a plane into a civilian structure, and bombing military installations are different things. Even if the same number of civilians get killed the debate is the means more than the end. The US military has tried not to kill any civilians, while the terrorists made it a point to kill civilians. The fact that civilians died is sad, and ideally wouldn't happen, but this is the real world and not everything works ideally.

      --
      "Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws." - Pla
    38. Re:Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the only thing the people of iraq don't do is overthrow their leader who used nerve gas on his own people, put civilians inside a weapons plant as a "bomb shelter" (remember 'Baby Milk Factory' in english on the ROOF) and spends UN oil for food money on tanks and new weapons...
      hmm

    39. Re:Hmmm by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      If the Americans were less trigger happy from the air, and sent in more ground troops instead, would there be less innocent deaths?


      No, dumbass. There wouldn't. Were there fewer civilian casualties in Vietnam, when the US did send in more ground troops? Stop living a fucking sheltered fantasy and take a look at the real world. Not everyone plays by the rules. Bin Laden is not going to come out onto a plain in Afghanistan and challenge Colin Powell to a knife fight.
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    40. Re:Hmmm by Stoutlimb · · Score: 2

      Ok, if the FBI found out there were some terrorists hidden in a small town in Iowa, and they couldn't root them out or find them, but they were certain they were there... Would they send in an air strike to bomb the town???

      Why should our Afghani FRIENDS and ALLIES suffer that fate, because some bad apples are hiding in their midst, and quite possibly holding the town hostage?

      This is the double standard that upsets people. Americans ARE too trigger happy when it comes to non-Americans. They don't care much if it's friends or enemies, as long as they're non-American.

      Bork!

    41. Re:Hmmm by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      Your whole argument is based on erroneous assumptions. When the US finds terrorists hiding in an Afghani village, it DOESN'T just bomb the village, like your town in Iowa situation. As an example, a US drone much like the ones described here, but less advanced, found a coterie of Al-Qaeda leadership in a meeting during the air campaign in the fall. Rather than blow up the building in which they were meeting, its commanders had it circle from a distance, wait until they got into a truck and left the town they were meeting in, and then bomb it. They didn't get some of the people in the meeting they wanted to, because they refrained from firing while there was the possibility of killing civilians. Do mistakes get made sometimes? Yes. Sometimes the FBI accidentally shoots the hostages. It happens. But the modern US armed forces are by far the most efficient at eliminating enemies and avoiding civilian casualties that the world has ever seen.

      This is the double standard that upsets people. Americans ARE too trigger happy when it comes to non-Americans. They don't care much if it's friends or enemies, as long as they're non-American.


      Now I don't know if you're ignorant, an idiot, or just slanderous.
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    42. Re:Hmmm by Stoutlimb · · Score: 2

      "Now I don't know if you're ignorant, an idiot, or just slanderous."

      Neither. I just have an opinion that is different from yours. Two people can look at the same facts, and come to completely different conclusions. I respect your opinions, try to respect mine.

      Recently my home garrison lost 4 soldiers because a US pilot was to eager with his fire button. So seeing reports of thousands of friendly fire deaths from Afghanistan doesn't surprise me in the least.

      I'm sure that sometimes they take great care in bombing, because if the collateral damage is too high, then that changes media opinion. But a few villagers in a remote area, they just couldn't give a damn about. If they treated friendly Afghans with they same care they treated US soldiers on the ground, I believe far less bombs would be dropped.

      And to match your anecdotal report of not bombing until the target left a populated area, I can recall several instances in the news of village and town areas being bombed because of suspected Al Qaeda fighters being there. I believe Al Qaeda members should be hunted down like the dogs they are. Afghanistan is not against the US, they have terrorists in their borders that they need help eliminating. People in the USA can't seem to shake the "us vs them" mentality, and that is reflected in the body count of civillians. If it were terrorists in the US, not a single bomb would ever fall within town limits, PERIOD. So why are so many bombs falling into friendly towns in Afghanistan? Why are allied Canadian soldiers being killed by trigger happy pilots?

      Remember, I am neither ignorant, an idiot, or slanderous. I have genuine concerns and issues that I'm raising as politely as possible. Insulting me would only reinforce my opinion.

    43. Re:Hmmm by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

      Identification is easier?!?

      You have obviously never looked at your picture on a security camera before... Now move the camera 12000-30000 feet away - and have it move at 300-550 mph.

      Then realize the image this thing actually transmits will probably have to be compressed in some way - take the resolution down even more.

      Then add in the usual things: rain, clouds, snow, hail, ice, sand storms, fog, smoke, exploding shells of lead....

      It's not that I don't trust technology ... I just don't trust this technology to be better than human technology.

      --
      Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
    44. Re:Hmmm by elefantstn · · Score: 2
      You have obviously never looked at your picture on a security camera before


      There are reasons these things cost $20 million each. One of those reasons is that the technology in them is slightly more advanced than in your average Kwiki-Mart.
      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    45. Re:Hmmm by ozborn · · Score: 1

      "The problem with your argument is that the only reason that people are dying in Iraq, despite the huge amounts of money and aid being provided as part of the UN oil-for-food program is that Mr. Hussein is diverting the aid shipments to pay for palaces and tanks [tnr.com]"
      This is simply not the case.
      1)Prior to the invasion of Kuwait (when Saddam was a favored US dictator) the population had a relatively high standard of living for the region, with no serious malnutrition. UNICEF in 1996 put the number of children dying *as a result of sanctions* at 4500/month. Saddamm was a brutal dictator beforehand, and remains so today. But his brutality is not what makes the population suffer the way they do.
      2)The article you showed which compares the two zones should mention the fact that under the current oil for food program, the Kurdish zone gets 13% of the oil for food money. The rest of the money doesn't go to the other 87% of the population, money is deducted before it even gets to Iraq for War Compensation, pipeline costs, etc... That leaves about 58% of the money going to 87% of the population. Also, as you know most of the bombing was concentrated in the South so there is more destruction there. There are also more NGO's operating in the north, 34 there versus 11 in the north (Education for Peace in Iraq Center)


      Which international organizations promote peace? There are plenty, and they don't have to be international. Peace Now in Israel for instance.


      As far as Pol Pot goes, the US government can hardly complain there. Nevermind their illegal and murderous carpet bombing of Cambodia which helped create him, they actually supported him in the late 70s (along with China) when they were using him as a tool against Vietnam. It was the Vietemesse who got rid of him when they invaded Cambodia, not the US.


      And while the UN has lots of problems, I doubt it's peacekeepers are any less disiplined than US troops. The point with the UN is that it is a (flawed) international organization, and doesn't attack countries left, right and center. And BTW I never claimed international organizations held a moral high ground, simply that the construction of unmanned attack fighters isn't a way to build lasting peace, particular in the hands of the dominant superpower.

    46. Re:Hmmm by Alsee · · Score: 2

      "#4...
      Well, that sure makes up for it. "Hey, some of those guys might've been really bad people!


      An unknown percentage of the people you are "counting" really WERE bad people.

      Why, I think one of those children could have groen up to be the next Osama!" Please.

      Your thorough and irrefutable counter arguments to each and every one of my obviously flawed arguments has persuaded me to run out and organize an anti-war protest in Washington...

      ...just as soon as I finish listening to my new Britteny Spears CD.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    47. Re:Hmmm by neocon · · Score: 1

      Prior to the invasion of Kuwait (when Saddam was a favored US dictator) the population had a relatively high standard of living for the region -- the problem with this argument is that while people are allegedly starving `because of sanctions', Saddam has money to a.) build dozens of new palaces, b.) pay $25,000 a piece to the families of palestinian murder-suicide bombers, and c.) rebuild his military and launch massive new weapons programs. You claim he doesn't have enough money to feed his people, but how can that be so given all these new expenditures?

      I'm also amused that you complain that there are not more NGO's operating in the south when the reason for this is that those that were there were expelled by Mr. Hussein. You can't have your cake and eat it too.

      Which international organizations promote peace? ... Peace Now in Israel for instance. -- as far as I can tell, possibly because their only platform is Israeli surrender, Peace Now hasn't achieved peace (or liberty, or security) for anyone. Compare that to the improvement in living conditions for the people of Afghanistan in the last 8 months. And that, in the end is the point. You decry the building of weapons, as if liberty and peace were things which just magically come to exist if enough people (and international organizations) want them. This isn't the case -- they are things which must be fought for, and which must be guarded vigilantly.

      Over more than two centuries the US has been the most vigilant guardian of these things going, and I am thrilled to see them gain new, more effective tools to extend this guardianship.

    48. Re:Hmmm by neocon · · Score: 1

      So, to be clear, in your opinion we should be planning our foreign policy not based on what is right to do, but based on what will appease a madman such as Osama Bin Laden? Really?

    49. Re:Hmmm by neocon · · Score: 1

      I'd certainly be interested to hear how you would respond to the attacks of September 11. Are you suggesting that we could have dismantled the infrastructure which made those attacks possible (and would make potentially far more deadly future attacks possible) without some risk of hitting civilians (a risk, I remind you, which we have done our utmost to minimize, unlike our enemies who did their utmost to maximize civilian casualties)?

    50. Re:Hmmm by ozborn · · Score: 1

      Whether Saddam is building palaces and whatever else is irrelevant to the argument of whether sanctions are killing people. He did this before the sanctions right? Nothing's changed. The variable we are talking about is the sanctions and they are killing people as confirmed by every study I know of not funded by the US government.
      As to whether Saddam is expelling NGO's that are helping the population that may well be true. He is after all a murderous dictator. But the point is that before sanctions they didn't need NGO's to maintain their previous standard of living.
      In any event, I've never supported Saddamm Hussein which is more than I can say for Pentagon, State Department, US military and eitherh Republicans or Democracts. I also don't support the current dictators of any of the Gulf States, again more than I can say for the US government.
      Peace Now does not have a platform of Israeli surrender, it does have a platform of ending the occupation. Quite a distinction. It's the US and Israel who have rejected a Palestian State, while Arafat accepted Israel's existence back in the 80s. Israel wants an end to the violence? End the occupation. While I don't support suicide bombings, what else can you expect from an occupation.
      Improvement in Afganistan? Replacing one set of warlords with another, great stuff. Wouldn't want to have elections though, another US puppet in place. Glad to see the Talbian gone, not glad to see the Northern Alliance replace them and neither are independent women's organizations in Afganistan.
      BTW I'm not decrying the building of weapons, but the US isn't the guardian of liberty and peace, unless liberty means supporting dicatorship and occupation and peace means bombing Afganistan, Sudan, Libya, Serbia and anybody else in the "axis of evil".

    51. Re:Hmmm by neocon · · Score: 1

      With due respect, if Saddam is not only building palaces but using diverted food aid money to build palaces it is meaningless to speak of sanctions being responsible for starvation in his country. We are making sure that enough money gets to him to feed his population. It is not our responsibility to also pay for him to build palaces.

      As for `ending the occupation', you miss the fact that 98% of the west bank has not been occupied for nine years now (since Oslo). To pretend that the murder-suicide bombings have anything to do with `occupation', rather than with Arafat's stated goal of annihilating Israel would be suicidal. This is why Peace Now's call for a unilateral end to Israel's self defense without a prior end to murder-suicide bombings makes no sense whatsoever.

      As for Afghanistan, are you really claiming that the people in Afghanistan are no better off than under the Taliban? Really? Before, they had one of the most repressive regimes on the face of the planet. Now, they have a regime which is at least trying to create a secular democratic government. Try telling the girls returning to school, the men shaving their beards without fear of being beaten or killed, and the women returning to the streets without fear of being caned if their shoes make too much noise if things aren't better...

  28. 3,000 lb. payload by Kargan · · Score: 1

    While that may sound like a lot, it's really not, considering an F-16 can carry up to 14,000 lbs. of ordinance, an F-18 can carry almost 18,000, and an F-15 can carry up to 23,000 lbs.

    I suppose these craft are being developed for a more supplementary role, because pilotless aircraft with all the capabilities of today's fighter/attack jets are still quite a ways off.

    It will be interesting to see, though, because pilotless planes should be able to outperform planes with pilots in them, (in theory at least) due to the human pilot not being able to deal with very high G-forces for extended periods, and other similar limitations of the human body.

    --
    Palaces, barricades, threats, meet promises
    1. Re:3,000 lb. payload by Rajesh+Raman · · Score: 1

      This UCAV is for SEAD -- Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses. So it's primary objective is to take out Surface to Air Missile (SAM) sites, controlling radars, etc. Assuming a carefully co-ordinated attack with well-identified targets, any single target doesn't need too much bang! to make it go away.

      Once the air defences are down, you can sent in the bigger birds (F/A-18, F-15), and after that the even bigger birds (B-52)

      ++Rajesh

    2. Re:3,000 lb. payload by cshotton · · Score: 3, Informative
      While that may sound like a lot, it's really not, considering an F-16 can carry up to 14,000 lbs. of ordinance, an F-18 can carry almost 18,000, and an F-15 can carry up to 23,000 lbs.

      Actually, it is a lot. The UCAV is being designed to carry a new generation of miniature cruise missle designed by Boeing, which has a 100 pound warhead that is the equivalent of a 500 pound conventional explosive bomb. The small cruise missle has about a 40 mile range, so even the UCAV can stay out of harm's way.

      No one has made this particularly clear, but semi-automomous for this vehicle is an huge understatement. The aircraft have the ability to self-deploy from bases far from the conflict site and will include a computer generated voice radio to communicate with traditional air traffic controllers as it proceeds through controlled air space to its mission area.

      Multiple UCAVs will have the ability to share target info amongst themselves and can strike each others' targets if one becomes disabled.

      Most importantly, unlike other unmanned vehicles to date, nobody flys the UCAV with a joystick. Its flight control system accepts inputs in the form of waypoints and actions to perform. All of the necessary control inputs required to reach the desired target are generated and executed by the UCAVs own computers. This is also true for threat avoidance and evasive manuevers.

      I've actually had the opportunity to operate the UCAV flight console in a simulator environment and it's actually quite boring from the operator's perspective. There's a moving map display with friend/foe data on it, several windows containing vehicle stats, and a mouse and keyboard for command input. I was able to target downtown Las Vegas with one mouse click (and contextual menu choice) and fire a stand-off missle without any additional input. The UCAV took off, flew the mission, struck the target, and returned to the base with only that info as input. It also sent back multiple side-scan radar images of the target area prior to launching its attack so it could receive confirmation from a human before completing the attack.

      Given that 5 or 6 of these things can be loaded on a C-17 and deployed to any commercial or military airport within 700-800 miles of a hot spot, the bad guys should be very afraid of these aircraft. They're stealthy, small, cheap, and can outmanuever any manned aircraft. They also don't require expensively trained pilots to operate. Just hope we don't sell them to our "friends"...

      --

      Shut up and eat your vegetables!!!
    3. Re:3,000 lb. payload by Gimpy-Joe · · Score: 1

      it doesn't matter that the payload is "only" 3,000 lbs. besides the fact that thats quite a bit you've gotta remember that these planes are cheap and unmanned, meaning one person could easily fly a dozen of them or more. So how about instead of 3 F-18's that only require three enemy missles to neutralize we send in a couple dozen X-45's. Also this could eliminate quite a bit of human error in formations and so forth.

      --
      Good luck in hell.
    4. Re:3,000 lb. payload by silentbozo · · Score: 2

      Don't forget, that conventional aircraft need to sacrifice some of their carrying capacity for life support and armor to protect the pilot. At a 3000lb payload without having to support a pilot and their required accessories (not to mention the bulk of their user interface), you can build a cheap, lightweight, almost disposable attack craft. It's pretty much guaranteed that you will have multiple UCAV units assigned to a given controller.

    5. Re:3,000 lb. payload by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then someone took the plan and contracted with the Japanese auto manufacturer to roll them out an aeroplane per minute.

  29. Unmanned hey? by zero2k · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    H@ck50r time. Now the 3l33t can prove themselves

  30. well i imagine this is what they wanted by erichj · · Score: 1

    i will concede the point that because of this drone our bombings will increase. i am however happy with this trend of "advancement" that the military seems to be going through.

    --
    erichj
  31. When will we get to try it out? by hbmartin · · Score: 0

    It would be fun to get them to hook it up to the net, and let everybody beta test it! I'll fly to Afghanistan! All of us taxpayers payed for this anyways.

    --
    Karma: Bizzare (mostly affected by varying internal caffeine levels.)
  32. I wonder if these could be launched from Carriers? by O.F.+Fascist · · Score: 1

    Right now it seems to be an Air Force only thing, but once the tech is developed I wonder if we could see alot of these being by the Navy, launched off of carriers.

    I'm sure we could fit a whole lot more of these on Carriers than we could our current strike aircraft.

  33. The Bravery of Being Out of Range by George+Michael · · Score: 1

    Inevitably brings to mind the words of Roger Waters, from The Bravery of Being Out of Range, off of Amused to Death:

    You hit the target
    And win the game
    From bars 3,000 miles away

  34. Soldiers without conscience. by RumGunner · · Score: 1

    By making the trigger farther and farther away from the victim, you dehumanize people even further.

    How long before John Conner starts sending Terminator robots back to destroy things?

    1. Re:Soldiers without conscience. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May I recommend some remedial viewing of Terminator and Terminator 2. You've got the story backwards.

  35. Communication Link should be interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In compact mission, I wonder how much bandwidth they need to feed the live video and radar information to mission control and get back commands. I hope the plane it self doesn't make decision to fire missile. How do they protect the link for the enemy for jamming the radio signal, or intersepting and sending wrong commands to the plane.

    1. Re:Communication Link should be interesting by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      This kind of link has been required for a long time w/many systems already in use that need to share information on the battlefield.

      STARS is something that does a lot of this already. (My sister in law works for Boeing and Apaches are able to share incredible amounts of data w/a wide variety of) systems.

      That site should give some good info and be a good launch pad for further digging if you are really interested in military data links.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  36. Canada's response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Canada's defense minister has announced that we'll be creating unmanned soldiers for the U.S. to practice dropping bombs on.

    Actually, in all seriousness, this might amount to a good thing. Perhaps with robotic bombers the U.S. might consider the risk of getting a closer look at targets to make sure that they're military and not civilian. Personally, I doubt it, and with the necessity to hit certain civilian facilities when conducting American-style hyperwar, it might be a moot point anyway. But still, one can dream...

  37. UCAV Research by anzha · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Along similar lines, Northrop Grumman is working on a naval uninhabitted combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) of their own. Take a look at their 'Pegasus' here.

    The idea is that these things could be placed in storage and then pulled out only for when combat is imminent: pilots would be unable to tell the difference between simulator and real combat. Obviously, some random testing of the equipment is needed, but expensive training gets a whole lot easier and cheaper.

    Finally, keep in mind, at this point they are going to be used for SEAD (supression of enemy air defenses) and precision strike, not air-to-air combat. That will be another 20 years off. Bandwidth is a killer in that application.

    --
    Do you know why the road less traveled by is littered with the bones of the unwary?
    1. Re:UCAV Research by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      pilots would be unable to tell the difference between simulator and real combat

      Not to be nitpicky. But there is not simulator- especially one that is ship board that is indiscernable from actual ACM. Pulling G's is something no simulator I have ever been in replicates.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    2. Re:UCAV Research by anzha · · Score: 2

      Not to be nitpicky. But there is not simulator- especially one that is ship board that is indiscernable from actual ACM. Pulling G's is something no simulator I have ever been in replicates

      Nice point, but the idea would be that these guys would never experience G's. The controllers I ahve seen remind me more of terrain maps from an RTS or a topo map. It's not until the end when they reach the target that video or radar feeds woudl kick in.

      --
      Do you know why the road less traveled by is littered with the bones of the unwary?
    3. Re:UCAV Research by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      I got you. You mean there would be no difference if this was all they ever flew as opposed to real aircraft. Sorry I did not pick up on that. You are correct - that would be a real advantage in my mind.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    4. Re:UCAV Research by gusnz · · Score: 2

      ...pilots would be unable to tell the difference between simulator and real combat.

      Ender's Game, here we come...

    5. Re:UCAV Research by mumblestheclown · · Score: 1
      Real aircraft?

      Don't fool yourself. Whether or not they are unmanned, These are real aircraft.

      - Airline Transport Pilot (Citation V, Falcon 50/EX, CanadairRJ, B737-200/300/800).

    6. Re:UCAV Research by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • at this point they are going to be used for SEAD (supression of enemy air defenses) and precision strike, not air-to-air combat. That will be another 20 years off. Bandwidth is a killer in that application.

      I doubt that very much. As I see it, the procedure will be this:

      • Watch one (repeat, one) superiority fighter take off automatically (as carrier based F-18's already do).
      • Watch as it autopilots itself to the combat area.
      • Press the "clear the skies" button.
      • Wait.
      • Watch it fly home.
      • Watch it land.

      Outgoing packets, one.

      Seriously, why would you want, let alone need, a human pilot in combat? Machines can respond faster, can read the input from control surfaces directly, and don't hesitate.

      Personally I find the idea repulsive, but it's the only logical progression. Of course, it's a moot point, as it's far more efficient to destroy entire airforces on the ground than to risk engaging them in the air. The fighter era is over.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  38. Why you should fear this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The absolute check against military abuse of power is the independant conscious of every warrior. The ability to decide that your leader has lost it and to switch sides or just flat out refuse to press the button. Remember the Uniform Code of Military Justice states that you do not have to follow an illegal order. A drone won't be able to make that distinction, and a lone crazy officer in control of those drones could do a tremendous amount of damage...

    1. Re:Why you should fear this by nurightshu · · Score: 2

      Just like all those "lone crazy officer"s in the ICBM silos who shot their colleagues and turned their launch keys. Ever hear of a magical thing called Two Person Integrity (TPI)? In ICBM silos, there are two key slots 14 feet apart that have to be turned within a fraction of a second (the exact value escapes me at the moment), thus assuring that two people must independently agree to launch a nuke. A similar system would work for the UCAV -- just ensure that no single person can fire up the X-45's OS or begin preflight.

      NB: TPI in ICBM silos can be defeated, one of my Security Forces friends (who actually guarded silos) assures me. According to him, he had a conversation once with a missileer LT who had worked out how to do it using his bootlaces and dog tags, the bootlaces and dog tags of his dead counterpart, and the spork from his "box nasty" (USAF dining facility box lunch). So no system's perfect. But I'd kinda get a kick out of watching some rogue butterbar put 3000 lbs. of munitions into a civilian city. Just as long as it's not mine. :)

      --
      They that would sacrifice their .sig space for that cliched Franklin quote deserve neither.
  39. I hope at the least.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..That the weapons systems aren't automated, and must be utilized by a human controller. (Which AFAIK, it seems like it's going to work that way. I just pray it *always* works that way.)

    Now, the issue of cowardice. I can't agree more. Killing a foe who has no chance of killing you cheapens war. But we've been heading down this path for a long, long time - look at Desert Storm, look at Afghanistan. Our kill to casulty ratio is so ridiculously high it isn't funny. Right now, it's due to training and equipment. It looks as it'll eventually be from equipment alone.

    What happens then? Will those who risk blood become stronger than we are? A 15m plane is a lot to risk, but it comes nowhere near the cost of a life. No matter how well trained, no matter how much the cost of these remote machines is stressed, the pilots will do things they wouldn't normally do, simply because they will not be killed for doing them.

    There's another thing. I, and maybe many of you, agree that this sort of thing cheapens war. But would you rather sacrifice machinery or men? Mm, tough decision.

  40. Saving cost by Telastyn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Basically these are cruise missles that return the returnable parts instead of destroying them. Think of these things as the space shuttle vs just big rockets.

    (only of course for the analogy to hold, you'd need to make the space shuttle carry 10x what it currently can)

    1. Re:Saving cost by Thag · · Score: 2

      Yeah, or cost less to run than the big rockets it replaced.

      Jon Acheson

      --
      All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
  41. pure water by thanjee · · Score: 3, Funny

    All we need is one general with a weird obsession about pure water and the unmanned bombers will go out causing mass destruction and risking world war three unless we can guess his recall code.

    Then again, if it is unmanned who will be there to manually unstick and release the bomb and ride it down? Maybe this is a good idea for real-life afterall, just not very exciting for a movie end sequence.

    --
    Saying your OS is the best because more people use it is like saying MacDonalds make the best food
    1. Re:pure water by RatBastard · · Score: 1

      Except that these are not self-controlled. There are pilots, but they are back on the base. The danger would end the minute they took Burpleson AFB.

      "You can't fight in here! This is the War Room!"

      --
      Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
    2. Re:pure water by jabber · · Score: 1

      Not really.. You see, as soon as they take the humans out of the silos and hook the plane controls directly into the W.O.P.R., it's all over.

      --

      -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
  42. What about enemy produced static? by tempestdata · · Score: 1

    Assuming the communications link to the aircraft would be heavily encrypted and completely undecipherable, would the enemy still be able to saturate the airwaves with noise, so as to make it impossible for ground/space stations to communicate with the aircraft. I'd imagine the AI would be quite similar to the Tomahawk cruise missiles, since they manage to work pretty much autonomously, however it seems their design includes a remote pilot. If you bring down the communications link, that plan would probably become nothing more than a $14 million cruise missile.

    --
    - Tempestdata
    1. Re:What about enemy produced static? by alen · · Score: 2

      Most likely not. Since the 80's the military has been using frequency hopping radios. Every tank, armored personnel carrier, most humvees and infantry team have one. The new ones being deployed to ground forces have a MAC address since they will be part of a battlefield TCP/IP network and relay data.

    2. Re:What about enemy produced static? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UAVs and RPVs that I worked on use encrypted spread spectrum not freq hopping. Make as much noise as you'd like, rf, like all waves, are additive, if you know where to look for the signal, it'll be there. YOU CAN"T JAM SPREAD SPECTRUM.

    3. Re:What about enemy produced static? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can use broadfield (50foot wide) beem via a laser in IR from a satelite to do the comms.

      No ground based jammer could stop that since its not even RF technically, but light.

      They already prooved LASER based comms on satelites at 2meg/sec +

      Now launch a $400m satelite that can pump out say, 100 lasers, and the planes can send back data to the sats via laser too.

      Then again who knows you could probably make quantum based comms in 15years too for .0second lag realtime comms.

  43. Costs underestimated? by singularity · · Score: 2

    While I believe that the costs will be cheaper than conventional warcraft, lines like this, from the X-45 page, get me:

    Because of their small size, lack of pilot interfaces and training requirements, reusability and long-term storage capability, UCAVs are projected to cost up to 65 percent less to produce than future manned fighter aircraft, and up to 75 percent less to operate and maintain than current systems.

    I believe there will most certainly still be training costs - someone still has to fly the planes, regardless of where the person is in reference to the plane. Granted, it will be cheaper to train, since the person can do more in a simulator and does not have to worry about airtime, but training costs are still definitely there.

    The other thing is transmitters and the actual "cockpit" (where the "pilot" would be stationed). Moving all of the controls of numerous planes to an off-plane location will require incredible amounts of technology and construction. That is also a recurring cost, as more and more remote controls would have to be built.

    I also wonder if they include things like replacement parts and ground crews in their figure that it will cost "75 percent less to operate and maintain." I think that parts and labor are going to be constant, event with new planes. Pilots are obviously an expensive part of military aircraft, but I have to wonder if simply moving the pilot to the ground is going to save 75%.

    --
    - (c) 2018 Hank Zimmerman
    1. Re:Costs underestimated? by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      I also wonder if they include things like replacement parts and ground crews in their figure that it will cost "75 percent less to operate and maintain." I think that parts and labor are going to be constant, event with new planes. Pilots are obviously an expensive part of military aircraft, but I have to wonder if simply moving the pilot to the ground is going to save 75%.


      You raise some very good points but I think that they are definitely taking into account ground crew/replacement parts, etc. Keeping fighters up is incredibly expensive and HUGE amounts of that work go into keeping men up in the air. But all that aside, every new generation of fighters is cheaper to maintain from a support perspective.

      I was at NAS Fallon once w/an F-14 squadron I worked in. We were out on the flightline launching a Tomcat. It took a minimum of 3 of us - not including all the trouble shooters, the huffer, the apu, etc. to get that thing started and running. Just a short distance across the tarmac they had some F-16s getting ready to go. One airman walks out - plugs his headphones into a jack on the nose gear -(we did everything w/hand signals) - runs some checks and they are off. No external equipment and it was all done w/a fraction of the people in a fraction of the time. I expect this trend to continue.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    2. Re:Costs underestimated? by flacco · · Score: 2
      someone still has to fly the planes, regardless of where the person is in reference to the plane

      Yeah, but you don't have to have pilots who can withstand a bazillion g's just to turn in a dogfight either.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  44. Attack of the Clones by inhalent · · Score: 1

    ...can someone say attack of the clones?

    Droid attackers controlled from a control center?

    1. Re:Attack of the Clones by Moonshadow · · Score: 2

      No, no. It's Attack of the Drones

  45. aw, rats... by happyclam · · Score: 2

    I saw the name and thought it was a flying version of the x-10 wireless camera...

    Now I'd pay for that!

    I'd even probably look at the pop-up ads.

    --
    He looked at me and said, "Kid, we don't like your kind, and we're gonna send your fingerprints off to Washington."
    1. Re:aw, rats... by dattaway · · Score: 2

      I saw the name and thought it was a flying version of the x-10 wireless camera...

      No, you would see pop-under missiles and visions of pretty women posing for your attention for perhaps just a second before the bright flash of light. Just like those invasive X10 cameras, live video would be taken just up until this bright flash for others to see your reaction on CNN.

  46. The real questions... by sharkey · · Score: 3, Funny

    Will they be hooking these planes up to video games for kids, and will Robin Williams be able to save us in time?

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    1. Re:The real questions... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that was such a stupid movie... gotta love joan cusack though.

  47. hahaha.. by Frac · · Score: 1

    I'm glad it's a plane from Boeing. When I first saw the title "X-45", I thought it's x10.com's latest innovation since the pop under ad - the pop inbetween ad, or the pop inside your ass ad.

  48. Win with minimum casualties by L.+VeGas · · Score: 1

    I'm amazed at the people suggesting that there's something wrong with this because we're removing ourselves to far from actual hands-on killing.

    War is about winning. Glory and bravery are bizarre side-effects.

    1. Re:Win with minimum casualties by Malc · · Score: 1

      Well, it does make it easier politically to bring death and suffering to others and thus diminish the pressure to find diplomatic solutions.

  49. automatic formation flying? by Barbarian · · Score: 2

    Perhaps the pilot will control the lead plane and the others will automatically fall-in in formation?

  50. Scary Thought by roccothegreat · · Score: 1

    The military technology has greatly surpassed that of the rest of the world! A thought to ponder though. If servers on the web, including government agencies, can get hacked. Who's to say these smart RC aircrafts are not prone to the same vulnerability? Just a thought!

    1. Re:Scary Thought by NewWazoo · · Score: 1


      Spread spectrum technology is a beautiful thing. Let me explain...

      So let's say I'm Plane is communicating with Base using SS methods. You want to try a "man-in-the-middle" attack. Oops! You can't tell where (in the spectrum) Plane's transmissions are. Damn - if you can't hear him, you can't intercept anything.

      So what about a DoS attack? You want to jam Plane's communications. Easy enough, you just start broadcasting louder than Plane, whereever (in the spectrum) Plane's signals are.

      Oops! You don't know what frequency Plane is using. No problem, you'll just listen for Plane's transmissions. Oops, again! SS allows Plane to (using various methods) broadcast at an amplitude that's below the noise level.

      But you know Plane's transmitter's operating range, so you'll just "jam" across all of it! Oops! You're "in the field", and to do so requires a LOT of power. LOTS more than you've got. In fact, if Plane uses a frequency range wide enough, it becomes physically impossible to jam a "swath" wide enough.

      I wouldn't worry much about "hacking" the base station, either - I mean, really... who would put their plane control system on a machine that's also used for surfing the web...

      Brandon

  51. Your duty is not to die for your country.... by rhombic · · Score: 1

    It's to make the other guy die for his.

    It's not as if autonomous weapons are something new. And this is a heck of a lot better than the cruise missle's "Go to the following GPS coordinates and explode" technique. Or the ICBM's "burn your engines on this trajectory, and then when you get close to the ground again, blow up".

    --
    1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual.
  52. no too shabby really by Nf1nk · · Score: 1

    Yeah you named off some heavy hitters, but what about the apache still considered a heavy hitter with much less than a 3000 lb capacity (more like 2000 if i remember right). or we could go with the OH-58D with its massive 300lb ordinance load. or the current preditor with its 120lb load. 300 *is* a lot of fire power in a machine that weighs in at about 10000 lbs total.

    --
    I used to have a cool sig, back when I cared
  53. Re:I wonder if these could be launched from Carrie by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2

    Yes.

    UAVs are already operating from carriers. Predators were launched from the USS Carl Vinson during the whole Bosnia deal.

    They are so small, light and have short enough take-off/landing requirements that this is pretty easy to do.

    To my knowledge all branches of the military have UAV programs in full swing.

    .

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  54. Re:TROLLING IS DYING! L0L0L0L0L0L! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trolling is trolling, dying is dying ad being Gay is, well quite fashionable actually. So please explain the humour. You're either twelve, a windows user or heterosexual, any of which can't be pleasant, so please accept my sympathy.

    Sir Nigel Forbes
    Dartington Manor
    Lincolnshire.

  55. The last sentence... by antirename · · Score: 1

    Was a tongue-in-cheek parody of a typical slashdot comment. When in Rome... The first two questions I really was curious about. But seriously, any armed pilotless plane had better have all the bugs worked out before it goes up, no matter what it runs on (and yes, I know it will be custom and proprietary; most military stuff is. Have you ever seen one of the diskless, two hundred pound armored dumb terminals painted olive drab they used to use?)

  56. Considering the cost.. by prisonernumber7 · · Score: 1
    Under a $191 million cost-share agreement with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the U.S. Air Force (...)

    Geesh. It's been years since the last real innovation in aviation history and eventually something new comes along.

    And what is it all about? About killing people with less personal attachment and more anonymously than it already is.

    Methinks you americans should spend such vast amounts of money rather on different things than warfare. Such as education, social welfare and finally for real science with real use.

    -1, Flamebait. But had to be said.
    --
    && aemula C. ab stirpe interiit
    1. Re:Considering the cost.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Warfare has always driven innovation in aviation and several other industries. This is nothing new. IMHO, defense is the #1 priority for a nation, not giving someone a check to sit around and do nothing. The internet started out as a DARPA project for crying out loud.

    2. Re:Considering the cost.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We would gladly spend all our money on such things if:

      1. People stopped terrorizing us.

      2. People didn't suicide bomb everyone.

      3. Countries played nice with each other.

      4. All the whackos never existed.

    3. Re:Considering the cost.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not flaimbait at all...but odds are good that you are living in a glass house whilest tossing those stones.

      ALL countries have their quirks and ups and downs. If someone doesn't like living here....they are free to leave. Funny thing though....they don't seem to do that alot....

    4. Re:Considering the cost.. by Tigerfoot · · Score: 1

      It ain't easy being Rome.

    5. Re:Considering the cost.. by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      Methinks you americans should spend such vast amounts of money rather on different things than warfare. Such as education, social welfare and finally for real science with real use.

      Maybe when the EU and UN pull their thumbs from their arses and actually act for once. Look at Kosovo - took US involvement to get the European states in NATO to get involved in the process.

      Anyways, the research done in the military usually results in better stuff in the civilian sector. Look at history - most major new technologies started in the military, then were taken up by the civilian sector (ARPAnet anyone?).

  57. Big Deal. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, so it's a high tech ICBM disguised as a plane.

    Take a rc airplane add a gps nav computer mix in some stealth technology load it full of bombs and misssles and whola.

    I'm sorry this is news because...?

  58. Gundam Wing - Mobile Dolls by Thomas+M+Hughes · · Score: 1

    The Anime that ran on Cartoon Network a year or two ago called Gundam Wing delt with the implications for war when you use unmanned machines to do all the fighting for you. While you may or may not see taking lessons away from cartoons with giant city smashing robots, its still an interesting perspective on the matter. It basically makes the claim that any war that isn't fought between people is meaningless. While many political leaders feel war serves on the purpose of getting them what they want, soldiers often have a very different perspective of what they're doing and why.

  59. The technology to fuck you up by loosenut · · Score: 1

    I just love how we can use the "neat new technology" line to hype instruments of death. _Popular mechanics_ is notorious for this. Now Slashdot.

    Go ahead, mod me down. This makes me sick.

  60. not atacking, just clarifying by L.+VeGas · · Score: 1

    Are you saying it's better to put our (U.S.) soldiers at risk when it's not necessary in order to promote "diplomatic solutions"?

    1. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by Malc · · Score: 1

      No. I'm saying that the thought that US soldiers might die spurs the government in to finding other solutions, which often have the side-effects of reducing the cost in lives and suffering of "opponent". Removing this concern about US lives makes it easier for the government to go straight for the military solution.

    2. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by praksys · · Score: 1

      It would be interesting to know the nationalities of the people on each side of this argument.

      By and large, when there is fighting to be done on behalf of the free world, it is americans who have to do it. Maybe that would tend to make americans more enthusiastic for technologies that enable them to fight without taking casualties.

      By and large other parts of the free world know that they do not need to do anything, and will not be expected to fight. Maybe that makes them more willing to put the lives of soldiers on the line.

    3. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to forget that there are REAL people like you and me who are running the show in Washington DC. I'd have a hard time imagining Colin Powell saying "Hey, we can kill people more easily, lets have some fun!"

    4. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but I can see draft-dodging dipshits like Cheney saying it.

    5. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by Malc · · Score: 1

      Did you ever watch "Wag the Dog". Some of Clinton's actions drew parallels to that film.

    6. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      Read the book sometime - it has Lee Atwater as the man with the plan, George the Father as the man with the button, and the war wasn't staged, it was real (Gulf War).
      It also has people being killed to keep it quiet.
      Now, I'm sure it was pure fiction, but it was pure fiction that managed to make use of real situations in a believable manner.

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
    7. Re:not atacking, just clarifying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      By and large, when there is fighting to be done on behalf of the free world, it is americans who have to do it.

      Unfortunately, sometimes the people of the free world don't WANT America -- or anyone -- to fight. America just goes ahead and does it anyway. Don't get me wrong, America has justification in hunting down Al-Queda and all that. But a lot of US aggression in the past has been purely for US political/economic interests -- not 'the free world'. It is most certainly NOT the case that everyone wants the US to be the world's "policeman".

  61. PKD by legLess · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Ok, I'm going to ramble a bit, but I think this is a good point. In 1976 Philip K Dick wrote this about his story Service Call:
    When this story appeared many fans objected to it because of the negative attitude I expressed in it. But I was already beginning to suppose in my head the growing domination of machines over man, especially the machines we voluntarily surround ourselves with, which should, by logic, be the most harmless. I never assumed that some huge clanking monster would stride down Fifth Avenue, devouring New York; I always feared that my own TV set or iron or toaster would, in the privacy of my apartment, when no one else was around to help me, announce to me that they had taken over, and here was a list of rules I was to obey. I never like the idea of doing what a machine says. I hate having to salute something built in a factory.
    Much of PKD's work was about the way machines sneak into our lives, slowly become necessary, then resist our best efforts to get rid of them. One of his stories (name escapes me) centers on a group of people, sole survivors of the last world war. All the natural resources of the planet are being consumed by two warring "autofacs" ("automatic factory" I think is the derivation), neither of which is smart enough to realize that the war is over. The humans are struggling to destroy the factories so they can regain control. Being a PKD story, of course they fail.

    On the one hand, a pilotless bomber is a great idea - why risk a human life if a machine can do the job? On the other hand it's more than a little scary - when your wars are fought by machines, human beings are in the way.

    For nearly all of history, some people have thought they have a license or right to kill other people. Its one of the primary activities of humans - kill other humans. To become more efficient at this, we keep making human-killing technology better and better. Now we're talking about giving that license to machines.

    The biggest difference between the movie Blade Runner (which I love) and PKD's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep on which the movie was based (which I also love, for different reasons) is that in Dick's world androids have no compassion, no caritas. They have no inate regard for human life, or any life for that matter.

    The Nuremburg trials established that "I was following orders" is not a valid excuse for committing atrocities during wartime. That only works for humans, though, since machines have no moral compass. We're talking about giving a license to kill humans to a machine with no soul, no regard for life, and no accountability. All in the name of efficiency.
    --
    This isn't as much "normalization" as it is "don't take so many drugs when you're designing tables."
    1. Re:PKD by haggar · · Score: 1

      Very nicely put, artistically elevated post, I guess.. but there is one tiny-miny detail that brings it all down: the plane will be remotely controlled. This means, it's about as autonomous as your average TV set, which you can control with the remote.

      But I'm sure you have some literary talent, there.

      --
      Sigged!
    2. Re:PKD by Vuarnet · · Score: 1

      This means, it's about as autonomous as your average TV set, which you can control with the remote. For now.

      I think he's not talking about the current status of human-less warfare, but about the trend in reducing human interference with the objective of maximum damage with minimal effort.

      First, soldiers had to _carry_ the explosives to the enemy. Then they learned to throw them for afar. Then they threw them from planes. Then they didn't even had to send planes, just Tomahawks. Give them a decade or so, and they're just gonna throw them from space.

      --
      Tongue-tied and twisted, just an earth-bound misfit, I
      Learning to fly, Pink Floyd.
    3. Re:PKD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We're talking about giving a license to kill humans to a machine with no soul, no regard for life, and no accountability. All in the name of efficiency.


      Terrorists have no soul, no regard for life, and no accountability either. Islamic fundamentalists who kill themselves and others in the name of Allah are mindless automatons. They aren't fucking around, and we shouldn't either, the sooner we get killer cybernetic devices the better. Besides, it really pisses people off having to fight robots. There is nothing more undignified.
  62. Re:I wonder if these could be launched from Carrie by NewWazoo · · Score: 1


    While a nifty idea, it's probably not coming Anytime Soon Now.

    Launching from a carrier is a generally simply affair - engines up, hold on, up stick. Cake :-)

    Landings are where the problem lies - it'd take (IMO) a WHOLE LOT of work to make a plane that could not only land, but land on a platform that is pitching, rolling, and moving, at the same time. And when your mistakes cost millions, it's not exactly like you can just say "Oops, forgot to compensate for input from gyro 3 - recompile bring out another one!"

    Someday, though, I'm sure. Someday.

    Brandon

  63. Jamming. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

    I wonder how effective jamming would be if they took advantage of ultra wide-band/spread spectrum techniques, along with satellite linkages. Seems as though it would be hard to jam that stuff.. all the plane needs to do is look up and use a few gHz of frequencies, and you'd be hard pressed to block that.

    Depends on how much effort you're willing to put in the jamming.

    Jamming is just sending enough radio noise at the target to make the noise in the desired part of signal space louder than the signal.

    For a kid's walkie-talkie, that means dumping noise into a narrow region of spectrum. For frequency-hopping radio, that means dumping noise into many regions of spectrum at once (unless your spies have retrieved the hopping algorithm). For impulse-based UWB, you dump a lot of randomly-timed impulses out (easier if your spies or observations give you approximate timings). For scrambled spread-spectrum radio, you either dump an ungodly amount of noise into the band used to raise the noise floor enough that even coding and correlation don't save you (do-able), or you get your spies to find the family of scrambling codes used and pattern your noise into that band of signal space.

    In summary, jamming will always work, either through espionage or through brute force and ignorance.

    1. Re:Jamming. by crawling_chaos · · Score: 2

      As pointed our above, you are going to need one hell of a large emitter to make this work. Home-on-jam makes being a large emitter a dangerous (if not fatal) proposition. Your choice then becomes one of jam and die, or don't jam and somebody else dies. The real question is can you produce enough jammers to handle the second or third wave of these things and are the jammers cheaper than the remotes?

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    2. Re:Jamming. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

      As pointed our above, you are going to need one hell of a large emitter to make this work. Home-on-jam makes being a large emitter a dangerous (if not fatal) proposition. Your choice then becomes one of jam and die, or don't jam and somebody else dies. The real question is can you produce enough jammers to handle the second or third wave of these things and are the jammers cheaper than the remotes?

      Excellent points.

      If I were designing a jamming system, I'd do a few things to ameliorate (though not eliminate) this problem. The first is to use many medium-sized jamming sources instead of one large one. As long as I can approximately track the target and as long as the source dishes are large enough to allow some direction of the noise beam and as long as I have the infrastructure and logistics support to support the many small stations/deployed jamming units, this should make life much harder for the people launching radio-seeking missiles. It also makes the jammer cost to missile cost ratio a bit more level.

      Another option would be to send weather balloons with metal spheres (radio scattering reflectors) into the air around the jamming installation. When an incoming missile is detected, the jammer shuts down and a secondary jammer paints one of the reflectors as a sacrificial target. This would make the cost of the sacrificial target much less than the cost of the missile being fired at it. To make the location of your jammer station less obvious, sacrificial targets could be launched from scattered points some distance away from the jammer (but close enough to be convincing missile decoys).

      There are problems with both of these stragegies, and solutions to those problems :). That's what makes thought experiments like this so much fun.

      Of course, the best solution (hinted at in my previous post) is just to have agents steal the radio codes. This lets you snoop, scramble or usurp them at your discretion with much less effort required. Getting agents' hands on such sensitive information is left as an exercise...

    3. Re:Jamming. by thogard · · Score: 1

      Only your transmitters need to be cheap. If you can build a box and run it out to a few hundred antennas, the home-on-jam devices keep knocking out your antennas. At $500,000 each for an anti-jammer missile and $500 for an antenna and a bit of coax the numbers aren't good. Also keep in mind that some of the cheap spark gap transmitters work great for messing up some types of transmissions and Telsa had lots of cheap devices that will mess with a wide range of spectrum. The reason that the modern military jamers are so expensive is they only want to jam their enemys signals not their own. If your not using radio to such a high level you can just bust the whole spectrum.

    4. Re:Jamming. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2

      Only your transmitters need to be cheap. If you can build a box and run it out to a few hundred antennas, the home-on-jam devices keep knocking out your antennas. At $500,000 each for an anti-jammer missile and $500 for an antenna and a bit of coax the numbers aren't good.

      You'd need an amplifier at the antenna; aggressive jamming requires a bit more power than off the shelf coax will carry. But the idea is good (and in my own reply).

      Also keep in mind that some of the cheap spark gap transmitters work great for messing up some types of transmissions and Telsa had lots of cheap devices that will mess with a wide range of spectrum. The reason that the modern military jamers are so expensive is they only want to jam their enemys signals not their own. If your not using radio to such a high level you can just bust the whole spectrum.

      The problem is that spread-spectrum communication can tolerate a very high noise floor (hundreds of times higher than the magnitude of the signal in any given spectral range, or more). It manages this by taking advantage of the fact that true noise will cancel a lot of itself out if added across many spectrum areas (or areas of signal space if you're using coding to get spread-spectrum), while the signal just adds constructively to itself. In order to make noise that adds constructively, you have to know the scrambling codes used by the signal you're trying to jam. Otherwise, you have to be far, far louder than the signal you're trying to swamp (do-able, but not with anything small).

    5. Re:Jamming. by Slashamatic · · Score: 2

      As far as HARM-type missles are concerned (which home in on EM radiation), one only need look at the use example of the Serbs where they suffered a devestating series of attacks, but mostly on microwave ovens.

  64. Think of the civilian applications... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 2, Funny

    We're one step closer to the 'dog and pilot' flight crew:

    A pilot in case of an emergency and a dog to bite the pilot if he touches the controls.

    1. Re:Think of the civilian applications... by Inthewire · · Score: 1

      The way I heard it, the pilot isn't there for emergencies.
      He's there to feed the dog.

      --


      Writers imply. Readers infer.
  65. Re:TROLLING IS DYING! L0L0L0L0L0L! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

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  66. No more G-force limitations on pilots by VirexEye · · Score: 1

    The cool thing about these remote controlled planes is that they are not subject to the g-force limitations of a pilot in the cockpit. In a dogfight, it would be no contest as an automated aircraft could out maneuver any manned fighter.

    1. Re:No more G-force limitations on pilots by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      That is a huge advantage.

      I would think that another is that one way missions become much more viable. In fact as posted above - if the target is too far away to make a round trip- just add the aircraft to the payload at the end of the mission.

      You can also hot swap pilots on long missions. No more fatigue or other bilogically related limitations. This is the future of aviation as much as pilots in the military hate it.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    2. Re:No more G-force limitations on pilots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, they can take more G's but that is a moot point. The whole ideas of UAV's is to take pictures and deliver armaments cheaper and safer than manned aircraft. It would be an almost unrealizable feat to be able to program these to dog-fight. They are only programmed to go to certian points, they are never programmed to think on there own. The armed forces is very consevative, it will be many many many many years before they would ever allow some type of neural network software or something to decide an aircrafts manuevers (I should know, I design control systems for these things). Anyways, dog fights are a thing of the past. All aircraft-aircraft fights are done at long range nowadays. If you see two fighter planes engaging, you can be assured that neither of them have a weapon system half as advanced as an F-22.

    3. Re:No more G-force limitations on pilots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about latency? Sure you can bank at 15g, but if you can't enter and exit at the right time you won't have a shot. The comm system has to be radio (duh), with a super-low latency pipe but it also has to be as non-jammable as possible. Any RF guy can tell you a 'special' missile designed to blast out RF noise will take out a whole fleet of these planes unless they have substantial AI pilot procedures in place when the radio link is unavailable.

      Thats the part folks should be worried about. If a plane is going to dogfight at high speeds, you realistically must rely heavily on AI combat systems.

  67. Hmmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't anyone else think this sounds more & more like Terminator 2's storyline every day?

  68. Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by surfcow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Technology has come a long way; we have not. We build better weapons to kill people with more efficiency. We focus on winning the conflict, but not preventing it.

    No doubt, it is a very cool piece of technology. I can't imaging the engineering that went into it. I wish this energy went into exploring other planets, instead of "fighting for peace".

    Once upon a time, you had to look into someone's eyes to kill them. Then you could do the job from 20 yards away, 100 yards away, from 2 miles in the air, from another nation, another continent.

    Doesn't something change when you take human conscience out of the equation? The dot on the screen is a village with many homes, families, adults and children. We can unleash hell without ever seeing our victims. To them, we are a faceless empire, worse than Rome's wildest dreams.

    We use space-age technology to accomplish cave-man goals. We don't need better weapons, we somehow need better people.

    =brian

    1. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You're forgetting the fact that if the US creates these types of unmanned weapons, you can sure as hell bet that other countries will do the same. It's called an arms race (I think), and it's been going on for centuries. One country will come up with a great advantage, and the rest will desperately try to rise to meet them.

      So what, you say? Well, think of it this way: if I send some unmanned planes to blow up some country, and they launch some unmanned planes to counter mine, what do you have? An episode of battlebots. I recall hearing someone say that wars should be dealt with using video games or something. Well, this is the next best thing in my opinion.

    2. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Regardless of my hours spent on my study today, that has to be the wisest thing I've read all day:

      We don't need better weapons, we somehow need better people

      Well spoken (or written) :)

    3. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what about The Armageddon Factor? If we turn war into a video game, aren't we tempting Captain Kirk to blow up our computers?

    4. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the best way to get better people is... Kill all the bad people!! KILL!!! KILL!!! HAIL AND KILL!!!

    5. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by stoolpigeon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We don't need better weapons, we somehow need better people.

      As has already been affirmed this is correct. I agree anyway. The thing is what do you do between now and when these better people arrive? You can decide to be a non combatant as many others have done in the past. Personally I don't have a problem w/that. But many others, myself included, would rather be proactive.

      Peace and harmony I would like to see. In fact I think I will see it but not on this side of life. It is a fallen world full of bad people. Our government and many of us as individuals are a part of the process of finding ways of protecting what we hold dear.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    6. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by scum-e-bag · · Score: 1

      To them, we are a faceless empire, worse than Rome's wildest dreams.

      I recently heard an article on the american NPR radio. This described how Americans were shocked about how the world viewed them prior S11, and how CNN was hiding this info from them. Americans need to pull their heads in, or at least convince the nutters in washington to pull their heads in. Rome was sacked, and history does repeat itself... people still refuse to learn from the past.

      --
      Does it go on forever?
    7. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by JordanH · · Score: 3, Informative
      • We use space-age technology to accomplish cave-man goals. We don't need better weapons, we somehow need better people.

      Your suggestions on how we get these "better people" are welcome.

      In the meantime, we have to have the better weapons in order to survive. If we don't survive, then all of our other sentiments, no matter how lofty, are useless.

      You had better believe that those who currently enslave their own populations, those who do not share our values of freedom of thought and association are working toward having the best weapons possible. We need to get there first.

      Admittedly, we have to also make sure not to lose sight of the fact that our goal is to protect freedoms, not just defeat enemies.

    8. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by e_n_d_o · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd much rather see our money spent exploring Mars instead of building weapons too, were it not for the fact that there are more than a few nations out there whose number one priority is to exterminate us. If you think that we are safe simply because the USSR isn't such a threat anymore, I suggest you take a closer look at the history of the world. Were we being invaded right now, I'm sure you would be quite happy to not have to meet your enemy face to face.

    9. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your suggestions on how we get these "better people" are welcome.

      Kill all the bad people, of course. Unnatural selection and evolution.

    10. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
      Other countries lack the resources to engage in projects of such monumental nature. Europe, the USA's nearest competitor, is woefully out of date. Russia tries but it'll be a generation until they get their act together. That's why the Crusader artillery was recently cancelled, to spend resources on next-generation weapons like UCAVs that no competitor to the USA can match.

      This isn't an arms race on the level of increasing the range or power of your soldiers' field guns. It's about information technology. Of course, the USA will have its secrets stolen by the vast array of spy networks inside its government.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    11. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by thogard · · Score: 1

      That assumes they can. It took years to get cruise missles to work correctly and nearly a decade to retrofit GPS into them.

      The way most countries will look at these is you have to take out the command and control system and to do that you nuke it or the communication sats. Waht this has done is just moved up the bar on the space weapons race.

    12. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by thogard · · Score: 1

      Every time Rome was sacked it was by armys with lower tech weapons than what its defenders had.

      America is tring to be the modern version of the old Roman Empire. After all thats what many of the founders had hoped for. Remember Rome didn't fall because it was defeated, it feel because it became a power hungry political back stabing cesspool.

    13. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by delcielo · · Score: 2

      I wish I had mod points. What a very down to earth and realistic sentiment. Thank you for a small piece of reason on slashdot. It is truly refreshing.

      --
      Hot Damn! It's the Soggy Bottom Boys!
    14. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      No, that's "A Taste of Armageddon". "The Armageddon Factor" is where Dr. Who and Romana get the sixth segment of the Key To Time. (Oops, I hope I didn't spoil it -- you're not in a timezone where 1979 hasn't happened yet, are you?)

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    15. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by franimal · · Score: 1

      That's a very good point. Personally I think exploring Mars and the rest of space is a great idea. That's why I studied to become an aerospace engineer. But there are not enough people and will to do so, throughout the world.

      Until standards of living and education are raised and hate is decreased I fear that humanity will never reach out to the stars. In the short term the best parts of humanity face a horrible enemy in this ignorant hate. A hate that is become ever more able to adversely affecting all of humanity. In the short term this hate must be guarded against. And that is why I work in the defense industry.

      I hope that someday humanity will overcome this short term threat from ignorant hate. I spend a good part of my time considering how to turn children into well educated engineers that, with the benefit of their education, can defend against hate and build ships to the stars.

      I apologize for using hate like a buzzword. I hope you all catch my meaning anyway.

    16. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Altruism is a two-way street.

      When the shaheeds stop trying to topple American office towers or explode themselves among non-combatants, then I'll stop being as supportive of the US military dropping GPS-guided bombs on those people actively trying to establish a global islamic caliphate.

    17. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by ozborn · · Score: 1

      There are "more than a few nations out there whose number one priority is to exterminate us"? Give me a break. Like who for instance? Iraq? North Korea? China?
      Iraq just wants the sactions lifted, and maybe Saddamm would like a piece of Kuwait but he is hardly bent on exterminating the US. If memory serves me correctly, the US attacked Iraq not the other way around.
      North Korea? I'd guess the number one priority there was food, not "exterminating" the US.
      China? Potentially a long term strategic threat to the US, but it is a joke to say that their number one priority is exterminating the US. Maybe you could save the #3 priority was taking/retaking Taiwain, but a nation with the capacity to build ICBM's (but has only built maybe a hundred or so) is hardly bent on exterminating the US. Choose your words more carefully, especially considering it is the US who has been doing most of the attacking and spends more on its military than the rest of the major powers combined. And no, Osama bin Laden and friends aren't a nation.

    18. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by smash · · Score: 1
      Other countries lack the resources to engage in projects of such monumental nature. Europe, the USA's nearest competitor, is woefully out of date. Russia tries but it'll be a generation until they get their act together. That's why the Crusader artillery was recently cancelled, to spend resources on next-generation weapons like UCAVs that no competitor to the USA can match.

      Not necessarily. This is an assumption, and we all know what happens when people make assumptions about their safety and become complacent.

      smash

      --
      I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
    19. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would hardly call our afghanastan war a "cave man goal."

      I'd call it "avenging the attack on the united states." Sure, killing civialians is bad, but I would hardly call what the united states does "cave man."

    20. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a goddamned karma whore. I can't believe you dumb sons of bitches modded this up to 5. It has *no* original thought whatsoever, just the standard Slashdot mindless platitudes.

    21. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by ave19 · · Score: 1

      It's the job of the diplomat to avoid the fight. It's the job of the fighter to be prepared to unleash hell if the need ever arises. The sharper your swords, the more effective your diplomat can be. Our military prowess is a big reason we haven't had a global scale conflict in 60 some years.

      --
      ...or maybe not.
    22. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      If memory serves me correctly, the US attacked Iraq not the other way around.

      If you ignore the fact that they'd invaded Kuwait, held US Embassy staffers and their families hostage there, and were itching to attack Saudi Arabia (including US troops and bases there), yes, Iraq attacked first.

      North Korea? I'd guess the number one priority there was food, not "exterminating" the US. Your guess would be wrong. North Korea's military consumes more than 1/4 of their entire budget - people go starving because N. Korea spends so much on their armed forces.

    23. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by e_n_d_o · · Score: 3, Informative

      There are "more than a few nations out there whose number one priority is to exterminate us"? Give me a break. Like who for instance? Iraq? North Korea? China?

      Why is China having a problem getting Taiwan back?
      Why is North Korea's economy not so hot?
      Why does Sadaam Hussein have to resort to terrorism to get what he wants now? (He used to have the 4th largest army in the world.)
      What do the answers to these questions all have in common?

      If memory serves me correctly, the US attacked Iraq not the other way around.

      Aren't you forgetting something?

      And no, Osama bin Laden and friends aren't a nation.

      It wasn't too long ago that Osama bin Laden and friends were a nation.

    24. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your second paragraph basically summarizes what I was about to say in my response. One way or another, this technology will find its way to other countries. The only question is how long will it take.

    25. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by kinnunen · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Funny you should mention space-age. After all space-age came upon as direct result of the the cold war. Nothing drives technology forward like war does. Even without there being an actual wat going on, the military can spend staggering amounts of money on R&D, with results eventully propagating to civilian sector. Jet engined figher -> jet engined commercial planes. Unmanned bomber -> unmanned commercial planes.

      Not needing a pilot would greatly benefit civilian aviation too, lower cost (no cockpit, no pilots, no pilot training) and increased safety (most crashes are caused by human error, sept 11 would have been impossible if there were no controls in the plane).

      And what's wrong with better and more accurate weapons? Isn't it better to use smart bombs than indisicriminate carpet bombing are shelling? Less civilian casualties. Yeah sure, "I would like there to be no wars" - wouldn we all. But looking at the world it's pretty clear that global peace isn't going to happen anytime soon.

    26. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by t14m4t · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point.

      Think of it like this. Remember high school? Ever get picked on by the bully? Ever been the bully? Those are the two scenarios usually thought of for a military: either as a tool of aggression, or a tool of defense.

      The only thing wrong with that view is that it is incorrect of the current US military.

      The US military right now is like the high school quarterback: the number one guy out there, can bench 345, is an Eagle Scout, and a straight-A student (with NO "teacher-assistance"). We have the most capable equipment and the best training; the only ones that are close to us are the Brits, and they are on our side. There is NO navy that can realistically challenge ours in the open water (and little challenge near-shore), there is NO standing army that can stand up to a Marine Corps/Army assault supported by our Air Force and initial-assaulted by a power-projection-ashore provided by the navy.

      So what do we actually do with that?

      It used to be that this country believed in isolationism (to an extent). Before WWII, we never had a large standing military. There have been times in our history where our navy consisted of a token force that did not actually have any ships, and an army that was more for force-protection at home than power-projection abroad. What we have realised sionce then is that this DOES NOT WORK. you HAVE to maintain a decent military, or you get Pearl-Harbor attacks all the time.

      But there is another benefit to being the best. We can maintain peace. there is no other country in the history of the world that has ever used their military to provide the humanitarian relief that we do. admitedly, going in guns blazing does not make people happy about things (ok, it pisses them off), but what we do is better than standing idly by. We are like that quarterback, when he finds that there's some nerd getting beat up by some bullies, who then goes in and defends the nerd.

      We do not go around with a big military and bully people to do what we want (well, ok, so we DO bully people around, but with our economy, not our military). We go around and make sure that there are no gross violations of humanitarian laws (I think that's what Yugoslavia was about; there are other examples which currently elude my memory). We do this because it's the right thing to do, and it is polliticaly feasible (eh. we're not completely altruistic).

      the only way to maintain our ability to do what we do is to continuously advance our weaponry and our defenses, to continuously train our troops, and to continually plan for unforseen circumstances which we just thought up.

      if we let ourselves slip, we will not be able to maintain peace, and will soon find ourselves at war.

      weylin

      --
      67.5% Slashdot Pure I guess I need to work on that.... :)
    27. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by bryan1945 · · Score: 2

      As an American, I would be quite happy to leave the rest of the world alone, except they seem to keep trying to blow us up. Howabout we all just keep to ourselves and stop bombing each other?

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    28. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Where the hell are my mod points when I need them!

      It seems people only say smart things when I have no points! Aaarrggg!

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    29. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by pviceic · · Score: 1

      Your perception of *smart* is maybe the cause of your lack of points...

    30. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I would be quite happy to leave the rest of the world alone, except they seem to keep trying to blow
      > us up

      If you had left the rest of the world alone in the first place "they" wouldn't try "to blow you up".

    31. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • Our government and many of us as individuals are a part of the process of finding ways of protecting what we hold dear.

      Seems to me that what we hold dearest is the process of protecting what we hold dearest. That's a reactive and recursive strategy, and it's producing a self fulfilling prophecy of anti-US aggresion.

      I can't help but think that when Germany tells you that you have an over-invasive foreign policy, you'd better wake up and smell the coffee. Self defence is always justified, but just because you're being attacked doesn't mean that you're the good guys, or that you did nothing to provoke it.

      As regarding the "cheap" cost of these things... $10-$13 million projected (and double or triple this in reality) is a lot of schools, hospitals... or foreign aid. Tell me, is a $20 million dollar plane so expensive that you can't afford to use it, or so expensive that you can't afford not to use it?

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    32. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The countries you are talking about also feel the US is unfairly suppressing them. How real is the threat, really? All you have is Pro-US newscasts.

      There was one big incident, so everyone's scared. But as security increases, as it has over the years, the frequency of incidents decrease, as it also has done.

      But sooner or later, something will occur, and it will be bigger than everything else we had seen before. It has to be bigger, otherwise it wouldn't have passed the security measures.

      So what's the choice? Frequent small incidents, or rare major disasters.

      So you can bomb anyone in the world with an unmanned plane - no risk to your own people.

      Will this make those you supress less determined to break free? I don't think so.

    33. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      As I said, I want to leave the rest of the world alone. But how far do you go back? The Gulf war, Vietnam, Korea, WWII, WWI, Spanish war, the Revolutionary War? At some point nearly every country has screwed with some other country. When can we just call it all even and just stop?

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    34. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by bryan1945 · · Score: 1

      Ha ha. I only get to meta-mod nowadays. Just because you disagree with my opinions is not a reason to call my intelligence into question.

      Have a good day!

      --
      Vote monkeys into Congress. They are cheaper and more trustworthy.
    35. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by markmoss · · Score: 3, Informative

      Doesn't something change when you take human conscience out of the equation? The dot on the screen is a village with many homes, families, adults and children. We can unleash hell without ever seeing our victims. To them, we are a faceless empire, worse than Rome's wildest dreams.

      It's a little late to worry about that now. 18th Century artillerymen (with a 3-mile range) could drop shells over a hill and kill people they couldn't see. By 1914, most artillery shells were fired at unseen targets, and more casualties were inflicted by artillery than with any other weapon. By 1942, bomber fleets could destroy an entire city from 25,000 feet, never seeing anything as small as a human being below. By the early 60's, two men in a Minuteman silo in North Dakota could turn their keys and vaporize a million people on another continent... A remote control airplane flying low enough for the camera to actually see people and firing off one precision weapon at a time is a welcome step back from the remote-killing capabilities we already have.

      But finally, even when killing someone meant getting up close with sword or axe and getting splashed with their blood, armies could still slaughter entire civilian populations. It just took more work and some training to kill.

    36. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fall of Rome was more about increasing reliance on mercenaries, as good Roman's were not willing to die on the Empire's borders defending the good life at home, than politics. The political attribution to the fall of Rome is Hollywood history. Once a nation is no longer willing to sacrifice it's own to defend its existance, it cannot survive. It can linger on, but the essential spirit of self sacrifice for the greater good, the reason for nation states is missing. It appears we're entering this state.
      Other nations still retain the notion of self sacrifice and are willing to do so in numbers that could conceivably overwhelm even the automated might of the last superpower.
      Would we run out of super smart/automated munitions before a human tidal wave overwhelmed the last bunker in Washington?
      Do we morally have the right to exterminate everyone on the planet to eliminate all threats to us if it comes down to the wire in an us vs them scenario?
      Hopefully we never have to seriously ponder this, however the current policy tends to view the rest of the world as either for us or against us. Allies of convenience become enemies very easily to politicians and weapons used on our enemies can be just as easily turned against us.
      Only the arms merchants are benefiting from the current state of affairs.

    37. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by witts · · Score: 1

      For everyone who claims that we should not use technology to fight our wars, I have one simple question: ARE YOU VOLUNTEERING TO FIGHT OUR NEXT WAR?? I read the posts about "courage from a distance" and so on... Are you volunteering to man a foxhole?? I've been in the military and have a pretty good idea what war would be like. Massive war against Russia would be a nightmare. Now imagine war against China, out-numbered ten to one. Are you still against robot military vehicles? I'd give my foxhole to a decent robot anyday. I'll watch the Chinese human wave attack on tv and press a few buttons any time.

      --
      pot.kettle(black);
    38. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by srvivn21 · · Score: 2

      We don't need better weapons, we somehow need better people.


      I find this concept interesting. Are humans inherently flawed? Where does this flaw originate. At some point in our ~ 3 million year existance, we just (out of the blue) grew flaws?

      Think about it. Doesn't that strike you as just a little bit odd? Me neither. Until I read a short essay on the origins of our agricultural society.

      Take three minutes, read the essay. It might change your perception of where the flaws lie.
    39. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      I read the article. But let me respond to a couple of your questions.

      "Are humans inherently flawed?" Yes- and ironically or not I would say that they inherit that flaw. So again, yes -exactly.

      "..~3 million year existence" Nope. I don't think so. "..(out of the blue) grew flaws?" - no we inherit them from the first sinner - Adam.

      If you have not figured it out - the autor of the essay refers to my ilk in his essay:

      "Facts that were indisputable to all but BIBLICAL LITERALISTS had radically repositioned us not only in the physical universe but in the history of our own species. " (emphasis mine)

      I thought I gave that away in my original response referring to this as a fallen world. Interesting essay but completely wrong. Thanks for the link though.

      .

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    40. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cut the military spending. Unfortunately, the current administration would rather fight imaginary star wars than protect us from real threats as evidenced by 9/11. Even worse, they would rather bully the rest of the world, and create the threats in the first place.

    41. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a "tree hugging liberal", but I'm no fool. You can't love thy neighbor when they are strapped full of explosives. I happen to think our technological military lead is one of the few things that keeps the world from going into utter chaos. Europe helps in this regard also, sure, and they will probably do more as they unify more but for right now, it's us...

      Don't be snowed - there is enough money, even in a recession, to do great things like go to Mars, do all kinds of funky research AND make these robot planes. B2's?? That cost is a drop in the bucket, really. It's politics and the fact that most people have the "if God had wanted us to fly...", and "why care to know how a grasshopper jumps?" attitude that money gets spent in a way that is un-geek-like.

      As a true liberal, you should not ask, "should we invade Iraq", but, "what do we do after we invade?" Nation builing is cool; let's make more democracies! Let's lock our enemies into constitutions that make it really tought for them to turn around and bomb us, lets turn them into stable, productive, rich, world-contributing countries...

      Yeah, we gotta kick the shit out of 'em first, but this ain't a perfect place...and, after all, it did work for Germany and Japan...we had a good oppurtunity with Afhgnaistan I thought, and we blew it! we BLEW it. We handed the country over to a bunch of squabbling warlords! Why, WHY?? Nobody hates us for turning Germany into the 3rd richest country in the world...they do hate us for supporting bull-shit governments, like the Sha and that ass they had in China that was opposite the Communists (name escapes me now). Each of them was bad, as in, dictator...who would have thought - America, supporting dictators! THAT's why they hate us...back to nation building and we should be a-ok.

      In the meantime, make as many of these x45's as we need, times 5.

    42. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by markx16 · · Score: 1

      "we somehow need better people"
      We have plenty of good people. These weapons are for some of the worse ones - really, what would you have us do with the worse people?

    43. Re:Space-age tech, cave-man goals. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      blug blug blug
      the resident englishman trolls your post
      BOOM

  69. EMP Weaponry? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    In the past, non-nuclear EMP weaponry has been a fantasy, but there are some valid ideas on how to implement such a weapon.

    Who thinks that developments such as these unmanned drones are going to lead to an increase in efforts to develop a non-nuclear EMP weapon?

    In the end, could it result in warfare going backwards? (EMP renders electronic warfare and computer-controlled weaponry much more difficult to use, resulting in a return to more old-fashioned technologies?)

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:EMP Weaponry? by haggar · · Score: 1
      --
      Sigged!
    2. Re:EMP Weaponry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Develop? I'd bet my bottom dollar that we already have a non-nuke EMP weapon. There were rumours that that ridiculous "virus sent in on a printer" story from the Gulf War was a coverup for a EMP bomb.

    3. Re:EMP Weaponry? by texchanchan · · Score: 2

      Interviewer: What do you think World War Three will be fought with?
      Einstein: I don't know. But I can tell you what World War Four will be fought with.
      Interviewer: What?
      Einstein: Rocks.

  70. Jamming - unmanned F-4 mission. by (H)elix1 · · Score: 2

    Jamming a signal is simple, compared to intercepting it. And as the US military becomes increasingly reliant on its advanced communication network to wage war, it will become a simple way of levelling the playing field for the bad guys.

    I was thinking about jamming too, but the real furball usually starts with knocking out the SAM sites -- the guys still flying F-4's with HARM missles. Turn on your radar/jammer, eat a missle. Things quite down after a bit of hunting with those. Unmanned patrol craft set to paste anyone who tries to target it with a SAM... or even tries to see what is flying about with the radar...

  71. Re:TROLLING IS DYING! L0L0L0L0L0L! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Important Stuff:"
    Could that be classed as having a high opinion of yourself?

    "Please try to keep posts on topic."

    Please read that to which you're replying. Did you get an education?

    "Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments"

    None of those, so mod yourself down as troll big guy.

  72. Re:Crackers? (BSOD) by BakaMark · · Score: 1

    Hmm, brings a new concept to the Blue Screen of Death when the computer crashes, and so does the plane (loaded with bombs). In this case I certainly would not want to be some poor shmoe in the field, even if the planes were on *my* side.

  73. Too late... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    15 Nov 1988 - unmanned space flight of Buran space shuttle in fully automatic mode.

    But don't worry, we are totally destroyed now by "demonocratic" government. You can even buy one of Burans :-)

  74. Re:I wonder if these could be launched from Carrie by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2, Informative

    You've got to think about the scale involved here. W/the high stall speeds and size of a manned fighter- recovery is incredibly difficult. I bet these little guys have no trouble. Their target - relatively speaking is huge. There are acres of flight deck. If they can slow down real well - and this X-45 is subsonic - it would be no problem. Carriers have had automated landing systems for some time. They would work w/this fine. You don't need to worry about actually trapping on one of the arresting gear engines. The angle should be long enough for the aircraft to stop on its own.

    I promise you I am not just talking out the side of my head. Launch and Recovery was my life for some time.

    Ron Peck
    ABE, V-2 Div.
    USS Carl Vinson CVN-70

    .

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  75. Time to prove how "leet" you are... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 2

    OK, first one to hack into these babies and have them looping-the-loop on demand officially has the best kung-fu.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  76. and the point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    and how is it a massive improvement over missiles except that it comes back? actually today's missiles travel faster than planes so what's the point? bomb someone with these and wait for missiles to rain back, only they'll come much faster! (i think they are much cheaper too)

    1. Re:and the point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      for a stationary ground target I'd agree.. however the unmanned plane has more application -- for instance, consider having it chill at a lower cruising speed..monitoring incursions into a no-fly area.. and then check out any violators.. report to the human operator in such an event, and wait for confirmation before grounding the hostile aircraft.

  77. Sure, I trust the Americans... by horza · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We already have plenty of technology in the battle field, such as electronic beacons etc. The only Allied casualties in the Gulf War were when the Americans blew up and killed British troops. So called "friendly fire". The only Allied casualties so far in the Afghan war was when the Americans bombed and killed Canadian troops. More so called "friendly fire". And now you want to put American firepower under the finger of someone even *further* removed from the responsibility of his actions? Sorry but the American military has a lot of trust to regain before we let the US military bring new toys to the party.

    Phillip.

    1. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure blame the friendly fire on the Americans. Maybe the reason we were the ones to make the majority of mistakes has something to do with that fact that in both the gulf war and the war in afganistan 90% of the troops from western countries were US troops. Other countries threw in what essentialy amounted to moral support and maybe a couple spare units.

      I'd be willing to guess that the US military would have had an easier time without the "help" of other nations. That way our guys wouldn't have had to keep track of a dozen or so small groups of allied friendlies getting in the way.

    2. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by colganc · · Score: 1

      Friendly fire, seems to be an inevitablity of war (its part of that death and destruction thing)...it has happened historically in virtually every major war, however it is less of a problem now then it used to be.

    3. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by elefantstn · · Score: 1

      How did this get modded up? The only casualties suffered in the Gulf War and Afghanistan were from friendly fire? Mods, this should be -1, Wrong.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    4. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by Alsee · · Score: 2

      "friendly fire"
      American military has a lot of trust to regain before we let the US military bring new toys to the party.


      Insightful my ass.
      The friendly fire incidents got a lot of press because they were damn-near the only losses on our side. If it weren't for all the "new toys the American military brought to the party" there would have been a hell of a lot more losses due to unfriendly fire.

      The US isn't perfect, but that post was nothing but blind bias.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    5. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by typeabstraction · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's not true. Americans also killed other Americans. Sometimes due in part to lack of sleep.

    6. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by franimal · · Score: 1

      You are in error. The only reason you believe that the only casualties for these two conflicts were friendly fire is because:

      1. You're a moron.
      2. The media gives greater coverage to friendly fire incidents.

      Actually, friendly fire accounted for a large percentage (but by no means all) of the battle casualties during the Gulf War. The Allies lost many more than those 9 British soldiers that were mistakenly bombed. However, there were actually more non-battle deaths in the Gulf War than battle deaths. Furthermore, the U.S. military suffered more casualties outside the Persian Gulf than in it during the Gulf War (training accidents, etc) [DIOR Casualty Statistics]. Bet you never would have thought that more people died as a result of normal activities than battle. That's because non-battle casualties don't get the coverage and attention of battle casualties.

      In Afghanistan friendly fire again seems to be to blame (finally figures are not yet available) for a large percentage of casualties.

      Friendly fire accidents are horrible and they do need to be addressed (they are). I think we're seeing a general increase in the number of friendly fire deaths (percentage-wise) because we've gotten so much better at killing than our enemies. We've drastically reduced the casualty figures in recent conflicts. I've no doubts that our government is working to reduce casualties even further. And you can bet that they are giving friendly-fire and the bad coverage it gives them more than it's fair share of attention.

      Will the X-45 have an impact on casualties? Who knows ... it has yet to be tested.

    7. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by franimal · · Score: 1

      Just curious, but how do you define "less of a problem"? 'Cause, percentage-wise, friendly fire is on the rise. Do you mean: less of our guys are being killed by us? Is that a good measure? Then again: is the percentage of friendly fire incidents being raise because we're so good are keeping the bad guys from killing us?

    8. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      The only Allied casualties in the Gulf War were when the Americans blew up and killed British troops.

      False. False false false. False. Can I say it some more? Less than one-fourth of casualties in the Gulf War were due to friendly fire, and they weren't all British - many of them were Americans.

      The only Allied casualties so far in the Afghan war was when the Americans bombed and killed Canadian troops.

      Again, completely false. A number of US and Afghan troops have also been killed by friendly fire, and two American soldiers have been killed by hostile fire.

      Please, someone mod this guy down. :-|

    9. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by GuyFromAccounting · · Score: 1

      "Sorry but the American military has a lot of trust to regain before we let the US military bring new toys to the party."

      I don't believe the US military is going to ask for your permission.

    10. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by colganc · · Score: 1

      Percentage wise friendly fire is not on the rise. It's ridiculous to count the number of casualties from friendly fire as a percentage of overall casualties.

      With an army near 100,000 that fought in a war consider the following: 500 friendly fire casualties / 1000 casualties overall = 50% of casualties from friendly fire.

      With an army near 100,000 that fought in a war consider the following: 10,000 friendly fire casualties / 30,000 casualties overall = 30% of casualties from friendly fire.

      Now a different way of determining if friendly fire is on the rise.

      With an army near 100,000 that fought in a war consider the following: 500 friendly fire casualties / 100,000 casualties overall = .5% troops lost from friendly fire.

      With an army near 100,000 that fought in a war consider the following: 10,000 friendly fire casualties / 100,000 casualties overall = 10% troops lost from friendly fire.

      As percentage of our overall troops the percentage lost from friendly fire most likely is down.

      To respond to "Then again: is the percentage of friendly fire incidents being raise because we're so good are keeping the bad guys from killing us?" we are not necesarily good at keeping the "bad guys" from killing us as we are good at winning quickly.

      All IMHO.

    11. Re:Sure, I trust the Americans... by franimal · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's ridiculous to consider friendly-fire as a proportion of total casualties. If you wanted to work to reduce troop casualties you'd focus on the largest percentage and the ones that are easiest to solve.

      As friendly fire becomes a larger part of battle casualties it bears more attention. But is it easy to solve?

      There was a great article in American Aerospace a while back that highlighted the military action in ex-Yugoslavia. Anyway, one of the major problems was the technology gap between the U.S. and allies, especially in communications and smart weapons. Both of which can reduce friendly-fire casualties. It really helps to be able to talk to all of your allies and then drop the bombs in the right spot. There were instances (far too many in fact) where effective communication was not possible. Some pilots didn't speak English (the NATO language) and allies didn't have radios compatible with newer U.S. technology.

      In the U.S. we've done a better job at employing smart weapons and with great results. New communications equipment is also coming into use. Special forces are now being equipped with radios that can utilize 5 different standards. This was a major problem as specially forces were not able to talk to the people they needed to without carrying 5 radios.

      The point of all this is that communication (as it has always been) is a problem on today's battle field. It's being worked on and if it's done right friendly fire incidents will decrease. You don't bomb someone if you know they're your allies and better information distribution and communication lets you know that they're your allies.

      On information distribution: information sharing, between branches and nationalities, and levels of command has been an issue. But last I heard serious progress had been made in this area.

      Also, improved communication will reduce enemy fire casualties. But, in my opinion, not as much as friendly fire casualties.

      So, it makes sense to focus on improving battlefield communications and information distribution. It will certainly never eliminate friendly fire but it has great potential to reduce a large percentage of casualties cause by friendly fire incidents. Is it easy? No. There is a lot of expensive communication equipment in service and many procedures that need work. But the 'easy' fixes have been done already.

      However, your perspective of the larger picture, that fewer and fewer U.S. troops are being lost in battle, is laudable.

  78. Ideal for causes worth killing for ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but not dying for.

    No reason to celebrate. This world does not need this 'innovation', and could actively do without it. I hope these engineers will still feel proud when they see the fruits of their labours - dead, maimed and disfigured people, and the perpetuation of hate. Way to go.

  79. Flying X-10s? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 4, Funny

    Great, so those X-10 webcams featured in those annoying pop-up ads can fly now? Is there no end to the invasion of our privacy?

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  80. Re:Jamming - unmanned F-4 mission. by BakaMark · · Score: 1
    I was thinking about jamming too, but the real furball usually starts with knocking out the SAM sites -- the guys still flying F-4's with HARM missles.

    Looks as if it is going to be a while before any Military can totally remove people from the air battlefield, or for that matter rely solely one one form of weapon in order to carry out appropriate duties.

    It really does not make sence to go into a battle with every armed with these planes, because there are certain things that these unmanned bombers cannot do.

    The whole emphasis on developing these devices is that they can be easly sacrificed when there is a problem and there is a need to carry out a complex bombing mission with a high risk. It is not as if every single operation that is going to take part in a war/battle is going to be based around these things. They are going to be used with a conjunction of other methods as well. Any military command would have to be totally insance to fight a war based purely on machinery such as this. It might happen in the future, but we are still talking a number of years off.

    However from the perspective of loosing one of these things in enemy territory, then you would have to make sure that it is throughly destroyed. Remember during "Desert Storm" when the US was using a lot of cruise missiles, and occasionaly the things would be shot down. The US Military then bombed the location of the crashed cruise missile as quickly as possible to ensure that "other states" would not get their hands on the technology.

  81. G-forces by peacefinder · · Score: 1

    I don't think bandwidth is going to be more important in air-to-air operations than in ground ops. I suspect it's backwards, even... in ground ops distinguishing the target from the environment is going to be a lot harder than in air ops, and that's a tough task for computers to do autonomously.

    I think they'll really be nasty in air-to-air operations. Without a human pilot, these suckers are not going to be limited to a mere 6 or 8 gees. Once the engineers figure out how to maintain control at higher accelerations, I expect they'll be designing UCAVs to pull 12 gees or more. Add to that enough brains to fly some autonomous evasion rules, and these things are going to be very survivable.

    A scenario: Fly your unmanned swarm into the opposing manned formation, and let them all (autonomously) fly for position. They won't all get good position on the enemy; they won't even all survive necessarily. But your battle manager can see when one does get good position, and assign a pilot to take telepresence control of it. He jumps in and flies it until he gets a shot or loses position. When it's no longer in good position, the pilot flits to another UCAV in a better spot, while the machine reverts to autonomous operation to work for position again. Done right, you can probably have three or four drones per pilot.

    Of course, there's nothing preventing the other guys from doing this, too...

    --
    With reasonable men I will reason; with humane men I will plead; but to tyrants I will give no quarter. -- William Lloyd
    1. Re:G-forces by thogard · · Score: 1

      They already have gear that works at nearly 1000G like the GPS systems the use for shelling research.

      A typical air to air missile will do 50G for short times.

      The F22 and F15 can cope with 12G in some conditions but the pilots most likly can't.

  82. No National Guard Nintendo Junkies please! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let's just hope that there are no National Guard cowboys manning the joysticks for these things.

    They can't tell the difference between friendly troops training and enemy fire when they are actually *there*; nevermind when all they see is a video representation of the aircraft surroundings.

  83. Re:Jamming - unmanned F-4 mission. by Schaffner · · Score: 1

    The US no longer uses F-4's, except as target drones. The F-16 now carries HARMs for the Wild Weasel mission.

  84. Terrorists and others can play too by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The really worrying thing about the way that technology has advanced at an ever-increasing pace is the fact that it now places some similar powerful offensive capabilities well within the grasp of terrorists and smaller countries.

    UAVs, RPVs and cruise missiles are a perfect example of a technology that is well within the reach of such foes of the USA.

    The ready availability of low-cost GPS units with computer interfaces, small and efficient low cost high powered computers, advanced composites such as kevlar and carbon-fiber, solid-state gyros, high-power servos and cheap but powerful jet engines (such as this or maybe this) has lowered the barrier to entry significantly.

    Up until now the might and technical superiority of the US defense arsenal has proved a mighty deterrent and (when used) a mighty effective tool in battle.

    The only response that terrorists and small factions have had to the US's superiority has been to offer suicide bombings and attacks such as those of September 11.

    However, now that just about anyone (or group) with access to some readily available knowledge and equipment can produce their own cruise missile , RPV or AUV, things could begin to change -- for the worse.

    Imagine the effect that such a craft would have if it were programmed to fly over NYC and dispense a payload of anthrax or other bio-agent over a wide area as it went?

    Such a remotely piloted or autonomous vehicle could be built for as little as US$10,000 and could be launched from the roof of a van or SUV at a location which might be several hundred miles from the intended target.

    The use of a fairly small airframe built from composites would mean a low radar profile and the onboard computer operating in concert with an onboard GPS receiver and small radar distancing system would allow a low-altitude pre-programmed flight path to be followed with relative ease.

    That good numbers of these machines could be built using "off the shelf" materials and components that would not ring any bells in the way that the training of Al Qaeda pilots did, is worrying.

    Imagine the effect of 20 or 30 of these missiles being launched simultaneously at NYC or LA on a warm summer's day when plenty of people are outdoors enjoying the sun.

    Just as the X-45, Tomahawk and other remotely piloted or automomous weapons can impersonalize a war for the USA, we should be aware that the same may now be true for the USA's foes. Suicide bombing may become redundant real soon now.

    1. Re:Terrorists and others can play too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If anyone can build something like this using "off the shelf materials" for "$10,000", then why did it take $200 million in research for the US to figure out how to make them for $10 million a pop? I don't get it.

    2. Re:Terrorists and others can play too by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 2

      If anyone can build something like this using "off the shelf materials" for "$10,000", then why did it take $200 million in research for the US to figure out how to make them for $10 million a pop? I don't get it.

      Clearly you don't understand how the defense idnustry and its contractors work.

      Just ask the price of a single nut, bolt or screw when purchased from a defense contractor and you'll realize that "military spec" carries an incredible premium.

      You must also realize that the type of "bomebuilt RPV" being refered to is not as large or sophisticated as the ones the US military are planning to use -- but they don't have to be.

      It doesn't matter how expensive YOUR gun is, it only takes a $0.05 bullet fired from your enemy's $50 AK47 to kill you.

      In the case of cruise missiles, a Tomahawk can carry a very large payload over distances in excess of 1,000 miles and deliver it with pinpoint accuracy -- within just a yard or two of the intended target.

      From a terrorist perspective you don't need (and certainly don't want to pay for) that level of performance.

      It's much cheaper to drive your SUV or pickup to within 200-300 miles of your target and, if you're dropping a biological agent or "dirty" nuclear material then you only have to be within a Km or so of your intended target to score an effective hit.

      The USA plays ethical by trying to avoid civilian and collateral casualties -- it's the goal of the terrorist to take out as many innocent civilians as they can. See how the differing objectives can be met by differing levels of sophistication and cost?

    3. Re:Terrorists and others can play too by Sinical · · Score: 1

      No.

      You can't just go grocery shopping for parts, then go home and pile them all on the floor and say, 'yup, that there's a cruise missile'.

      As someone who has worked on these things, it isn't easy. Primitive rockets are reasonably easy (see Hamas, fer instance), but any kind of guidance is relatively hard. Also, cruise missiles must either be:

      a) airdropped (Tomahawk)
      b) launched with a rocket booster (Tomahawk)
      c) be able to fly itself up from the ground on a runway (unlikely).

      The development cost of even a rude cruise missile is pretty significant, as is the requisite experience. Far cheaper to just buy or steal missiles from bit players like North Korea or whomever. Even the smallest nations could presumably build a missile. Getting one with a reasonable degree of accuracy, however...

  85. start recruitin' by Jafa · · Score: 2

    How soon until they start monitoring and weeding out young children, and put them in front of this new 'video game'?

    :)

    1. Re:start recruitin' by T-Punkt · · Score: 1

      Haven't you read the slashdot story "E3: Epic, US Army Develop Games as Recruitment Tool"?

  86. Sweet! by Ridge · · Score: 1

    Now it's only a matter of time before our enemies hear the dreaded words of our ace 10 year old pilots. "U sux u friggin n00b!" or perhaps upon a stinging defeat "ARG!! My ping suckz0rs@%&)@%"

  87. Slows down reaction times by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If it comes to actual dogfighting, false cues like that take a split second off the enemy's reaction time. Recent fighter designs have vectoring egine nozzles, and there were concepts with canard (in the front) wings in addition to the regular wings. One interesting side affect of the combination was that the control surfaces (ailerons, elevators, rudders) were no longer as good an indication of what the plane was going to do next -- roll, turn, climb, dive. One of the tricks in dogfighting is to watch those controls to know what the enemy will do next. The plane could actually fly level but with a slightly nose down attitude. Not only was it good for strafing ground targets, it was very upsetting to another pilot trying to follow it aorund the sky. The false cues were confusing enough to give a solid edge in dogfighting.

    Whether dogfighting itself is still of much use is a good question, since there aren't many airforces willing to battle the USA in the air. But the experts have been predicting the end of dogfighting since the 1950s.

    1. Re:Slows down reaction times by Aceticon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yep - all them missiles got really confused!!!

    2. Re:Slows down reaction times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually one of the biggest limiting factors in dogfighting is the pilot's ability to withstand sudden onset of high-G loading without becoming unconscious. Removing the pilot actually can improve an aircraft's dogfighting ability along this dimension at least. Not sure if the X-45 is the best ACM platform, but I'd bet that an unmanned plane designed from the ground up as a fighter (with a complete and robust multi-spectral sensor array and a well-trained and experienced teleoperator) could beat most of today's manned fighters in a dogfight.

    3. Re:Slows down reaction times by delong · · Score: 1

      Dogfighting? Not much dogfighting going on when you fire a Sidewinder at your opponent 10 miles away. And the Sidewinder is classed as a short range weapon.

      Derek

    4. Re:Slows down reaction times by Zathrus · · Score: 1

      Dogfighting is dead... I don't know of any recent air-to-air combats that have ended in dogfighting - AVRAM's take out your opponent from 50+ miles away, and I suspect there are missiles that do it even further now.

      About the only (fixed wing) aircraft which significantly used its guns was the A-10, and it's in the process of being decomissioned as helicoptors and laser-guided bombs take over its missions. Even then, that wasn't air-to-air combat - not unless the A-10 driver wanted to go down in a fireball.

    5. Re:Slows down reaction times by Sabalon · · Score: 2

      I was in a class with a Vietnam Vet. He was in the airforce and was telling me about a dogfight he was in. He was the copilot or whoever is in the second seat. During a real high-g turn he blacked out. After they landed the pilot said "I'm sure glad that you didn't black out during that turn as well."

    6. Re:Slows down reaction times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Whether dogfighting itself is still of much use is a good question"

      Not really. Establishing and maintaining air superiority is fundamental to any control campaign. Other points: The substantial majority of air kills happen out of sight range of the pilot; 10 to 20km strikes are not uncommon. This is what radar and thermal guided Air/Air weapons have brought us. Contrary to what Hollywood would lead us to believe, the use of a jet aircraft's cannons ("guns") is very rare unless attacking ground targets.
      If a hostile aircraft is close enough to see your aircraft at all, nevermind the control surfaces, you're beyond dead unless as good as dead.

    7. Re:Slows down reaction times by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Actually, A-10s are getting to be like B-52s. They're just too usefull to get rid of. They're more survivable than helicopters, can carry more further and require less maintenance. And yes, they have shot down other aircraft with their guns. They tagged a few helicopters. A good trick as the gun is actually tilted down a few degrees to better tag ground targets. Can you imagine what happened to the helicopters when they were hit by rounds designed to kill tanks?

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  88. Forerunner of the monster battle robots in Matrix? by ncstockguy · · Score: 1

    These robot planes give an old soldier like me cold chills. Soon we will be able to wreak havoc on other nations and peoples with nary a scratch on our own people. That will be wonderful until our enemies start using them on us. Then we'll be right back where we started. Throwing rocks then running back into the cave...
    These automated planes are nothing but the forerunnners of the fearsome tentacled war robots in the Matrix. Loathesome...!

  89. Playstation 4 -- the Peace-Maker?? by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 2

    We use space-age technology to accomplish cave-man goals. We don't need better weapons, we somehow need better people

    No, we need a global gaming treaty.

    Let's face it, although some argue that computer war games are becoming increasingly realistic the real truth is that real war is becoming increasingly computer game-like.

    Let's hope that eventually everyone will wake up and realize that instead of wasting billions of dollars on *real* weapons, nations can resolve their problems far more cheaply by simply firing up their PS4 and shooting at each other that way.

    After all -- is there really any difference?

    In both cases (UAVs/RPVs and computer games) nobody gets hurt.

    In both cases the outcome is based on pressing buttons and strategic actions/reactions.

    In both cases the outcome is a winner and a loser.

    If we simply moved all these conflicts onto the Playstation then war could actually become fashionable -- a recreation that the whole family could enjoy.

    Who would have guessed that computer games might become the planet's last hope for global peace?

    1. Re:Playstation 4 -- the Peace-Maker?? by g1zmo · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of an old ST:TNG (I think, it could have been TOS) episode. The losers must report to a recycling machine after the game is over.

      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    2. Re:Playstation 4 -- the Peace-Maker?? by Hack+Shoeboy · · Score: 0
      You are a fucking moron. So what happens when a loser objects? He attempts to force his will regardless of the "game over" staring at him in the screen. Jeez, as it is, people cheat in any way possible when playing games. What's to stop the "players" you describe from killing each other before playtime to gain a competetive advantage? Gee, it might even escalate into the old-fashioned kind of warfare.

      When we are confronted with people who don't even recognize the value of free speech and idea exchange, the value of allowing citizens to direct the course of their own lives, or the value of maintaining their reputation when confronted with obvious propagandistic lies, WTF makes you think they will sign, much less abide by, your proposed treaty? Keep in mind the one thing they say that you can bank on is that they want us dead.

      These people NEED to be stopped, not negotiated with.

      --

      IN TEH FUCHAR, LITERSY WLIL EB OPSHANAL!!!!!111
    3. Re:Playstation 4 -- the Peace-Maker?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > After all -- is there really any difference?

      > In both cases (UAVs/RPVs and computer games) nobody gets hurt.

      You are missing the point that UAVs are made for getting people hurt, the more - the better. Those people might look just like dots on the screen, but they DO get hurt.

  90. Eve the Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're walking down a very slippery slope my friend.

    It boils down to the first guy to use a weapon instead of his bare fist. He was a coward. Since then it has been one long arms race. Of course stopping at the fist->tool border is arbitrary as well. It is far more reasonable to say that the first person to attack another person was the gutless coward that started this murderous ball rolling.

    Of course that assumes a rather forked up view of evolutionary processes. A more reasonable position would be to lay the blame at the first organism to use physical force to improve it's state at the cost of another organism.

    Of course that assumes a peculiar importance to physical conflict when we're all well aware of the limited actual effect of conflict when compared to disfavorable environmental activity. In other words, it's a lot worse to take all the food by stealth and leave a village to slowly starve than it is to rob a single villager of his/her food.

    Not that it's relevant that the initating party gain from their actions, as long as the receiving party is negativly effected. Dump a hundred gallons of mercury twenty miles upstream and never look back, your lack of benefit doesn't change the situation.

    What are we left with on this slope? The first organism to act in detriment to another organism. I've got a funny feeling I know which organism that would be. The second organism that existed, whereever and whenever that was. There's the real coward. That bitch Eve.

  91. Re:I wonder if these could be launched from Carrie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The navy has flown UAVs off vessels in the past, although retrieving them has been messy. It is funny to watch videos, put up a big net and flew the UAV right into it to catch it. There has been a vertical take-off and landing UAV tested on a frigate by a Canadian company many years ago, but it never went into production. It was quite a humorous looking UAV, it looked something like a peanut with opposite rotating propellers in the middle of it. The Navy currently has a vertical take-off and landing UAV being produced by Northrop Grumman in test right now (first flight was last weekend). It is essentially an unmanned helicopter. Within a year, the Navy will put out a request for proposal for a carrier version of an unmanned combat aircraft.

  92. Other delivery technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I wanted to send somebody a bomb I'd use FedEx.

    Maybe UPS if the bomb was too heavy.

    Who needs all this gigabuck technology anyway?

  93. Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's informative, accurate and relevant to the human impact of UCAVs.

  94. more info in the usual places by Jafa · · Score: 2

    Googling "ucav x-45" brought up the usual tons of hits. One of the more interesting was from the Federation of American Scientists' Miliraty Analysis Network.

    An interesting feature, besides all of the usual high-tech stuff people talk about here, is the storage aspect. This is mentioned in several articles, but what this means is that the planes do not have to be designed with the same mission life that manned aircraft do. This is because about 80% of a military aircraft's life is training missions. The UCAV doesn't have this- the training is done in simulators, that aren't really any different from real life.

    This is a big step toward reducing the costs.

    Jason

  95. Irrelevant - They will be largely autonomous by Goldenhawk · · Score: 2
    These planes will be largely automatic and will not require a remote pilot. There may be a requirement for a last-minute "fire or not" decision but a lot of the work over the last few years has been in the autonomy arena. We've been building and flying drones for years - nothing new there. The QF-4 could easily be loaded with bombs - the F-4 was quite capable of that. The NEW part of all this is the ability to tell the plane "Go here and destroy this" and expect it to happen by itself.

    In case you didn't read the article, here's the essential quote:
    In a typical mission scenario, multiple UCAVs will be equipped with preprogrammed objectives and preliminary targeting information from ground-based mission planners. Operations can then be carried out autonomously, but can also be managed interactively or revised en route by UCAV controllers should new objectives or targeting information dictate.

    --
    --Brandon / Split Infinity Music

  96. Missing the point of AUTONOMY by Goldenhawk · · Score: 2

    Note the word AUTONOMOUS.

    This thing won't require a pilot for every little detail of its flight. If you change your mind about something, you tell the computer, LAND AT HOME BASE. Push the "Commit" button. Wait half an hour, and the thing lands and parks itself at the ramp.

    If you think this is a pipe dream, they've already done it - repeatably, and reliably, with the Global Hawk - which has seen combat in Afghanistan. The plane is preprogrammed (by an engineer, NOT a pilot), and taxis out, takes off, flies its mission, returns to base, and taxis back to the ramp - without a single additional real-time command. (GPS is a wonderful thing...)

    The only difference here is that this thing will be also able to drop bombs.

    So, YES, it will save pilot training costs. Hugely. One person would be able to command many of these things - even at the same time. If the computer cannot handle the problem by itself, it probably cannot be handled by a real-time pilot either.

    --
    --Brandon / Split Infinity Music

  97. That's just great by barcarolle · · Score: 1

    Now soldiers can sit back in a Laz-e-boy and wipe out civilians anywhere in the world. I hope the evil bastards building these rotten things are proud of themselves.

  98. You should - this will REDUCE friendly fire by Goldenhawk · · Score: 2

    Since this plane is autonomous, and flies a preprogrammed mission based on intelligence and satellite data, the chances are actually much lower of a real-time mistake. Most of the friendly fire deaths in recent combat have been caused by a pilot error in the heat of combat - "Gee, that looks like an Iraqi tank." Forget it - this won't happen in a preprogrammed mission.

    Sure, you will always have bad targeting, but you're largely reducing the ability of ONE person's incorrect decision to make someone's day really, really bad. Instead, you've got quite a few eyes looking at the targeting data, along with plenty of direct access to information about where your troops actually are.

    So in my opinion, this thing will end up killing FEWER friendly troops than ever before.

    --
    --Brandon / Split Infinity Music

  99. The etymology of SNAFU and FUBAR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All these people replying with 'the US military is doing it, so it's got to be good' have never served, don't know anyone who has served, and have never opened a newspaper either.

    I'm sure most members of the military make every effort to do an excellent job. Their job is to succeed under the most difficult conditions, and expectations need to be tailored accordingly.

    But please, you've never heard of the US military screwing up? Do you know where the words SNAFU and FUBAR come from? No one will crack the code? Is encryption bit length the weak link? Do these words -- h-bomb, w-88, or Vincennes -- ring bells?

  100. You wont be there when these exist. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There wont be such a thing as "friendly fire" when these are around. There will be little to no need for anyone to be tromping around in firefights on the ground when we can just swarm hundreds of unmanned fighters. The USA will most likely not call on anymore help from countries, also. You can be safely assured, the USA will keep this planet safe themselves with almost 0 loss of "aliied" lives when this is perfected.

  101. The professionals by dbrower · · Score: 3, Insightful

    call things 'prudent' and 'effective' that amateurs and romantics call 'cowardly' If you come at a professional with a knife, he wants to shoot you with a gun, at a distance; if you have a gun, he wants a morter. If you have a morter, he wants artillery; if you have artillery, he wants air support. It's about making some other dumb son of a bitch die for his country. A misaimed UAV isn't much worse than a short round from a 155mm gun. Stop hand wringing-- once you decide to be in a shooting war, it's ugly. The stick and rudder guys in the pointy planes may not like UAVs, but they understand the motivations. They probably don't want to be flying a lot of the missions that they are (or will be) assigned to perform. When I was in school, a teacher once said to the class, "if we're at war, I want killers on my side." That's the job, if it comes to that. The military people I know don't want to fight, but they'll do it for us when required. It's nearly memorial day. Go hug a serviceman, servicewoman, or vetern you know. -dB

    --
    "It if was easy to do, we'd find someone cheaper than you to do it."
  102. When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by marm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...through conventional means, then the rest of the world must play dirty.

    Increasing automation of weaponry, and now, total remote control has led and will lead to fewer and fewer deaths of American servicemen and women. This, in turn, removes the single biggest reason for the American political establishment to hold back from launching into war; if there are no body bags flying home, who is going to bother voting these politicians out of office? If a victory can be gained quickly and the opposing side forced to follow the American Way, generating a tidy profit in the process for those American companies that will help them see the light, it is entirely good political karma. Where once a diplomatic solution would have been applied, politicans will be all too keen to apply military solutions instead. No risk, all gain.

    America cannot expect those in the world who do not share her views to sit idly by whilst this happens. When people are fighting for what they believe to be their country or their way of life, they will continue to fight back no matter what the military imbalance may be against them. This can be seen, for instance, in the current Israel/Palestine conflict, where despite being massively outgunned and confined to very limited areas, the Palestinians continue to get back up off the floor and keep fighting.

    Notice how the Palestinians fight back. They do not have a conventional army, so they must choose other means. Currently, their method of choice seems to be the suicide bomb, and they are called terrorists by the Israelis. The Palestinians, of course, who believe that they are fighting to regain their homeland, call them martyrs.

    This is what lies in store for America should she choose to go down this path. Without fear of being voted out of office thanks to the technology, American politicians will throw the country into many wars, and no doubt she will win them in spectacular fashion. However, the opposition will fight back, not through conventional means but through 'terrorism'. It is easy to infiltrate a country as proud of its freedoms as America. What lies in store then? Suicide bombs? Information warfare? Or worse?

    We have already seen this scenario once, with September 11th. I am firmly of the belief that the key driving force behind Bin Laden is that he feels his homeland, Saudi Arabia, is being 'occupied' by American forces stationed there since the Gulf War. Of course there is much more to it than that, but it is all too convenient that his anti-American rage became prominent only in the years following the Gulf War.

    When this starts to happen, how do you stop it? The obvious way is to restrict those very freedoms that allow the enemy to infiltrate and perpetrate this 'terrorism'. Then what happened to the 'American Way', the very thing that the war was meant to be protecting in the first place?

    It's time we started thinking about some of the consequences of the great superiority in American military technology, before those consequences come back to haunt us.

    1. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by SectoidRandom · · Score: 1

      A very good comment, I must say. Unfortunatly I believe with your closing remark it is not just a case of "thinking about the consequences", as we cannot stop progress, to do so would only allow someone else to catch up. That is definatly a huge problem in itself. (Cold War, etc)

      I do like your thinking though, although my views are quite different, I see advances such as these largly making conventional war obsolete. In general it is a positive move, as long as the country at the top is not an irratic dictatorship of some kind. History has shown the United States is not such a country, hopefully nothing brings a change to this state. (That's a whole new topic!)

      The specific problem of Islamic fundamentalism has been developing long before Bin Laden, I believe it is accepted to have started in the late 70's in Egypt, sorry cant remember the names.. But of course there are so many deep seated reasons for so much of what we now have to deal with, such as this.

      Of course it's an impossibly complex problem to solve, certainly there is no quick fix. "Fortress America" certainly wouldnt help a bit, neither would bombing to oblivion certain undesirable people/nations. A lot more thought and effort should be put into looking for real solutions, i would think.

    2. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The (art/obsenity) of war is not a static thing, When one group seemingly dominates a style of war the opposing side if they have any inteligence at all would develop a new tactic that can't properly be countered by the seemingly dominant force. This has happened many times in the past. The tactic of dueling knights made obsolete by the archer. The battleship made a sitting duck by the aircraft carrier. The open field engagement of two large armies made a joke by the use of gorilla tactics. The suicide bomber employed against civilians to distory any sence of security is only the latest directions of warefare. Initially all new tactics and weapons are called unfair or dirty but eventually counter-tactics are developed and the cycle begins again. This is so that one group can push its will upon another group. That is the reason and the nature of warefare.

      When your enemy fights dirty, there is no tactical or strategic reason to fight clean. Morals are liability in outright war.

    3. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by Raven1 · · Score: 1

      Well you're a stupid shit. Bin Laden has no such feeling of his homeland being occupied. He is power hungry in the extreme. While you're bitching about how we're not killing American soldiers, realize that we've spent BILLIONS more on preventing civilian casualties then military casualties. Oh, everything you know you learned on CNN. You stupid shit.

    4. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by tooler · · Score: 1

      How do you stop [terrorism in retaliation to our new military]?

      Annhilate the terrorists, their parent organizations, and any countries that support terrorists. It will take a stronger response than we are giving right now.

    5. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      The only reason the Israelis are not completely effective in stopping suicide bombings is because they have limited their application of force due to foreign pressure. If the US shared a border with a nation that constantly infiltrated terrorists with the goal of asymmetric attacks, this situation would not last long. The US would apply diplomatic pressure on the nation to crack down, followed by technical measures to isolate the border. If this did not work, the government in the hostile nation would be replaced however would be most convenient.

      The difference is that the US is not nearly as dependant on foreign opinion as the Israelis are.

      The US is fortunate to have good relationships with the nations sharing land borders, and it is even more fortunate that those nations are democratic. Most Americans aren't really all that eager to go off taking over the world. However, we have also learned that it is wiser to deal with a problem when it is small, rather than waiting until it represents a genuine threat to your own security. Look at WWII - if everyone had pounced when the Axis powers were just getting started I don't think nearly as many would have had to die - on either side. When the US got involved, there was actually a serious chance that there could have been an invasion of the continental US - certainly if we had taken a half-hearted response this could have been the case.

      I favor diplomacy over war any time I am given the chance. However, paying the bully rarely does anything other than encourage him to ask for more. A strong military is a deterrant to attack from the outside. While the US must be prepared to deal with unconventional attacks, a conventional response will always be a wise option to give to those who make policy.

    6. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by attackiko · · Score: 1

      And you wonder how he got moded at 5 and you got 1?

    7. Re:When the rest of the world cannot fight back... by cduffy · · Score: 1

      Hmm. So if I don't like someone, I can stage a terrorist attack on the US, and carefully make it look like the country I dislike did it? A convincing fake of an attack on a third party, after all, must be far cheaper than a direct strike on my enemy; all the better if I'm a citizen under the government I'd like to see the US destroy.

      And what about attacks that aren't sponsored by any government organization at all, directly or indirectly? That happens, you know.

      And finally, the real issue -- you can't get them all. Like illegal drug trafficking, the real, effective, long-term solution isn't fighting the problem head-on, but rather eliminating the problem altogether (ie. legalization of drugs or withdrawing foreign troops). Taking an interventionist position may result in the destruction of some terrorists (like the current War On Drugs puts many of those involved in distribution channels behind bars), but as long as the motivation is still there (the profit in selling illegal drugs, or the desire to stop Americans from replacing your country's government whenever they feel like it) the problem won't go away.

  103. They could try an EMP bomb by MtViewGuy · · Score: 2

    I'll say this though: one way some terrorist could potentially render a UCAV useless is to detonate what's known as an electro-magnetic pulse bomb (a bomb that spreads a big cloud of energized carbon filaments). Such a bomb could render all electronics virtually useless since electromagnetic field caused by such an explosion will render all electronics useless in a very localized version of a EMP effects from a nuclear detonation.

    Mind you, I'm sure the designers of UCAV's have built the plane so they are not affected by EMP blasts caused by such a device.

    1. Re:They could try an EMP bomb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and they could do this with anything else electronic, including planes WITH pilots. But considering the ceiling of this aircraft I doubt an "EMP bomb" could reach it. Did you just get done watching Oceans eleven? Or maybe the matrix?

    2. Re:They could try an EMP bomb by Zathrus · · Score: 1

      And precisely what are you going to fight with then? Rocks?

      Go ahead and drop an EMP on top of yourself. We'll have howitzers pounding you from 18-21 miles away, and they really don't give a crap about carbon fibers. (The current Paladin SPG fires 8 rounds/min at up to 18 miles away. The proposed Crusader fires 10/min at 21 miles).

  104. Well, if you haven't heard about it... by Gorimek · · Score: 3, Funny

    ..it is sure to not have happened. Only tin foil crackpots could suspect that NSA would be secretive about such a thing!

    1. Re:Well, if you haven't heard about it... by Grave · · Score: 1

      While it's true that if it did happen, the NSA sure as heck wouldn't admit it, you have to realize that it's fairly easy to build a communications system that is unhackable in real-time. Besides, the enemies that we would be going after using this technology are unlikely to be sophisticated enough to crack a multi-gigabit encrypted signal that is hopping from one frequency to the next at a rate of thousands of frequencies per second. Sure, with an few hundred thousand computers operating together, you could probably begin to crack it over time. But even the US and Japan don't have computers powerful enough to do it in real time (I don't care if you say the NSA has ones that could do it, because that's not provable and is therefore not relevant to inteligent discussion).

      Trust me, the US Army is developing encryption systems for the FCS2012 program that won't likely be broken any time soon.

  105. Oops! by digitaltraveller · · Score: 1

    People have too much faith in cryptography. History has shown us that every major encryption algorithm has been broken. The simple Vernham cipher (aka One-time-pad) is the _only_ cryptosystem that can be proven mathematically to be secure beyond all doubt.
    Considering the radio link can be jammed, or DDOS'ed, the best case scenario is that these planes will be turned into stupid, expensive missles. The worst case scenario is probably unthinkable.
    The Germans lost WWII because of their belief in the infallibility of Enigma.

    1. Re:Oops! by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      Simple solution - if plane goes out of contact with base station, have automatically it return to base. Considering that the cool thing about the X-45 is that it's pretty much autonomous, that'd be a trivial exercise. I imagine it's already built in. As for the jamming risk - fire a HARM missile. Bye bye jammers.

  106. Winning is preventing. by SectoidRandom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In my opinion winning a conflict _is_ preventing conflict, In the longer term sense at least. War is an unfortunate part of life, why not because as some would say it is our instinct to fight, but progress is a battle. Back to my original point, the United States has developed a good position to prevent war, its quite simple, if you wage war then you die. This in no way prevents all wars, of course not, if the US wants to wage war against someone then, nobodys going to stop them.

    The real issue you made, is not the battles we fight now, its the battles we _are_ slowly winning. Your comment "we somehow need better people." is correct but, I would state that we are working on it. Of course despite the fact that we are all so impaitent and short lived, these changes take time. Lots of time. Over the past 100 years we have evolved as people to a very very different world, with a much more significant proportion of maybe lets call them; "Good willed, free loving" people. In my opinion we need at minimum another hundred years, maybe more, but it is not a question of how can we, or when will we, but a question of simply how much more pain we will have to endure in the mean time.

    Conflict or war is a part of evolution, my reference being evolution of society. Largly gone are the days when wars were simply fought over land, not that it still doesnt happen, but i dont see Australia invading New Zealand, or simiar. That maybe an extremem over-simplification, yes India is seriously thinking about invading Pakistan right now, Isreal still occupies Palistine, etc, etc. But it comes back to my previous point, politically western nations (in general) have put in the past such disputes, the few remaining ones are purley idological.

    Slowly these idological battles will be resolved, and with time eventually all peoples and nations, will realise there is a better way. One day..

  107. The article should be renamed... by fungus · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...the beginning of the end.

    Human nature's make them destroy themselves.

    I can imagine "intelligent aliens" or "god", if they exist, looking at us and saying to themselves:

    "foolish humans, they think they are so great but dont realise that the world would be far better if they never saw the light".

    1. Re:The article should be renamed... by fungus · · Score: 0

      I cannot beleive this was modded down as a troll. Don't you have first posts and goatsomething.cx to mod down?

      I truly beleive what I wrote. We are like bacterias, in a close vase with limited resource, burning more and more and fighting to have more. Until there is no more resources, and the population slowly dies.

      Alright, its not really the "beginning" of the end, it is just another leap towards self-destruction.

      HUMANITY, do you care for the future? Not the future of americans, not the future of afganistans, not the future of frenches, but the future of fucking HUMANITY.

      I am not really talking here about this specific weapon and americans, but rather about how humans, the human nature, will lead to the end of our "world".

  108. Bandwidth Requirements by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

    This article (Google cache of MSNBC) was posted a ways back, about the "bandwidth crunch" that the military has experienced in Afganistan. As I understood the technology, though, most of the signal is directed up, to the sattelites, so jamming in and of itself might not be that big of an issue.

  109. In related news by Glytch · · Score: 2

    In related news, the Romafeller Foundation announced their interest in the X-45, saying it would make "a useful companion technology" to an undisclosed project of their own. This comes amidst rumors of divided upper management.

  110. The hidden life-saving benefits of robots by karb · · Score: 2, Insightful
    They don't have to fire in self-defense. Which would have saved quite a few lives in afghanistan alone (friendly-fire).

    Frankly, if we were willing to lose some ground-hugging robots with stun guns, we could probably win a war without actually killing any of the enemy, just imprisoning them for a little while ;)

    --

    Jack Valenti and the MPAA are to technology as the Boston strangler is to the woman home alone

  111. An important transition... by percey · · Score: 1

    Something like this will completely change the dynamics of war. The future of warfare is robotic infantry and special forces enfused with nanomachine armor. I think its a mostly great thing. It seems to me, that the closest thing to peace is a war without casualties. War is an inevitability and if modern technology can provide a way for soldiers to sit in a safe location and control their mechanical counterparts and defend our country I think that's great. But we do run the risk of turning warfare into nothing more than a giant video game. Politicians may be too quick to act without that barrier of the enormous casualties that modern warfare brings with it. What worries me even more is that I think it can be empirically proven that the younger the people the better they are at video games. Faster hand/eye coordination, etc. Is it such a large mental jump to think that special drafts might be instituted to get the best of these new soldiers from the ranks of under-18 year olds? Perhaps this thought doesn't hold up, but it seems like a logical progression to me.

  112. Re:Incorrect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most of the colateral damage is due to misidentification of the target. ie: incorrect intel, or incorrect target illumination. The majority of weapons being used are so called smart bombs, or otherwise a slightly modified gravity bomb with relatively cheap control fins and a laser seeker.

    Pilots really have fairly little to do with targeting, unless either the bomb "smarts" fail and they have to resort to gravity bombing, or they come under fire and release the bomb before it is inside its flight characteristics.

    ie: There is a lot more target mis-identification , technical failures, then pilot error. Remember that most bombing runs are at night in hilly terrain. The pilot doesn't see the actual target for long.

  113. Re:I wonder if these could be launched from Carrie by rcw-home · · Score: 2
    Landings are where the problem lies

    Go watch some R/C glider pilots sometime. It is absolutely amazing to watch a pilot single-handedly bring his bird in from fifty feet away five feet off the ground, fly it directly towards himself, and get the timing on the flare so perfect that it stalls in his other hand.

    If a bunch of hobbyists can do that even with wind gusts (gusts + hills seem to attract R/C glider pilots), there's no reason someone couldn't cleanly land something remotely on a carrier that usually carries aircraft seven times as heavy.

  114. Not quite yet... by E-Rock · · Score: 2

    This machine doesn't make decisions, it's still told what to do, when to release and what targets to destroy. Think RC war plane, not autonomous fighter.

  115. Not to mention the scene analysis by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2

    An unmanned jet could use 360 degree viewing, updated thousands of times a second, with the aid of satellite data beemed in every second, to gain a complete view of the sky that would give it a huge advantage over any crew, even two man crews.

  116. Don't be naive. You have mortal enemies. by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This is cute, but in case you hadn't noticed, there are individuals in the US and elsewhere right now who would like nothing better than to roast you and your family alive.

    No, unmanned fighters won't stop terrorists. Thats obvious. But unmanned surveillance drones that will collect massive amounts of data and never need to come back for a pee break, just might.

    Peace is won through strength. Somehow that simple fact escaped you in history class, but your bashful pleas for peace love and happiness are completely out of line with what we know about human nature and human history. If you value your culture, you defend it.

  117. Unmanned wingmen? by MystikPhish · · Score: 1

    Obviously UCAV's won't be replacing real pilots for anything but specific missions anytime soon.

    I can see some interesting possibilities with this though. You could give a whole new meaning to the EWO (Electronics Warfare Officer / Copilot) on planes like the F-14 and such. One fighter/bomber with a real pilot and EWO, and three or four UCAVS under his control... Each with specific capabilities loaded on.

    You'd have to get the controls away from the "truck sized" stage and probably into a virtual display but this would be a big force multiplier.

    --
    "I'm about to drop the hammer and dispense some indiscriminate justice!"
  118. Here it comes... by Crazydiamond21 · · Score: 1

    Does anyone remember that Star Trek The Next Generation episode where Captin Picard and Dr. Crusher become stranded on the planet whose population was destroyed by those flying robotic solders?

  119. Way Too Expensive by istartedi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Get the guys from Junkyard Wars (aka Scrapheap Challenge for those in the UK) to "bodge" together a motorcycle engine, a propellor, 100kg of C4, a GPS receiver and some control circuitry. Brand new and in quantity these could probably go for about $10,000.

    Let's see... for the price of one of these drones (assume $20 million for the drone), we could launch 2000 of our expendable smart bombs.

    Now, now, I know theirs will probably be supersonic, but let's face it: most of the enemies can't hit the broad side of a barn, and if we send 5 or 6 of these things on target at least one will get through.

    That's the big problem with the US military: too much money spent on big showpiece weapons. They've forgotten what won WWII. It was massive industrial output. We no longer have the ability to flood the battlefield with thousands of cheap weapons. God forbid somebody gets lucky and shoots down a B-2. That's what... a billion dollars? Yikes!

    Yeah, I know, we're doing great now, but when it comes to military stuff "now" is yesterday. The future won't look all that bright if we keep buying our weapons from Gucci.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:Way Too Expensive by DietFluffy · · Score: 1

      some "fuzzy math" is going on here...

      As stated in the article, the target cost of each UCAV plane is between $10 million and $15 million, not $20 million. This is very cheap. (about one-third the cost of the next-generation fighter planes.) Cruise missiles cost more than $1 million apiece. Laser-guided bombs cost around $100,000; the highly advanced AGM-130s, fired from F15E aircraft, cost $800,000.

      These are highly sophisticated weapons that were designed to prevent unintended damage and deaths. I have no doubt that your "100kg of c4 strapped to a propellor" would be able to kill a lot of enemy soldiers, but many of your bombs would probably stray and hit and kill civilian targets. And the United States is not in the business of killing civilians. If we wanted to do that, we wouldn't even bother with the conventional bombs you are takking about, we could just as easily nuke the country and kill every last person.

      Our soldiers deserve the best weapons and protection we can offer them. Though the weapons deployed by our armed forces aren't as "cheap" as they used to be, american soldiers suffer far fewer casualities today than they did in past conflicts.

      Sophisticated weapons save lives on both sides. They protect our soldiers and they minimize civilian casualities.

  120. I'm very sorry for what I'm about to do... by lostchicken · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    How'd you like a Beowulf cluster of these?

    Oh, wait, wrong obligatory post.
    *groan*

    --
    -twb
  121. Disgusting by solarrhino · · Score: 1

    So many posts have lamented the dehumanizing effects of remote-control warfare. Well, guess what - unless you're currently out on the front lines, you're already engaged in the ultimate form of remote-control warfare. Has there ever been another place or time when a government launches a massive military campaign, and all it asks of its civilian population is more consumer spending and travel? Has that dehumanized the opponents in your eyes? Are you willing to give up our push-button military and put yourself into the battle?

    --
    "Lord, grant that I may always be right, for Thou knowest that I am hard to turn" -- A Scots-Irish prayer
  122. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...but at least they look really cool. I mean REALLY cool.

  123. Donald Rumsfeld a Jedi master? by Ilan+Volow · · Score: 3, Funny

    >The military is always claiming that Force Protection is one of the most important things they do.

    I never knew the U.S. military was using The Force. But that would explain their fascination with hokey religions and ancient weapons.

    --
    Ergonomica Auctorita Illico!
  124. low ring? by jwp · · Score: 1

    "while low ring the overall cost of combat operations"

    I've been working under a high ring freeze for the last year, is that similar?

  125. Dogfighting is irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    How many dogfights have there been since WWII?
    How about since Viet Nam? It's over.

  126. Unpiloted Planes are a BAD IDEA by DG · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Time for a rant:

    One of the defining strategies of the American armed forces since the Gulf War is a near pathelogical reluctance to accept friendly casulties.

    Now there's nothing wrong with wanting to keep your own guys alive, but this obsession with not accepting casulties is subordinating other aspects of the military mission. There is a deliberate movement to reduce the effectiveness of weapon systems if it means less risk for American troops.

    Don't confuse "effectiveness" with "lethality" - weapons systems are only getting MORE lethal with time. What I am talking about is identifying and killing military targets AND ONLY military targets.

    The most effective means of knowing for sure if what you are shooting at is a legitimate target is to be in actual contact with it - that normally means troops on the ground. If you think there's baddies in that building, you go send some soldiers to have a look.

    But that exposes those soldiers to risk, and risk isn't allowed in the American battle manual any more. Instead, the new modus operendi is to drop a bomb - preferably many bombs - on anything you figure may have a target in it. Then you take satellite pictures of the crater to see what you hit.

    The side effect is to inflict a much higher percentage of civillian and friendly casulties than would be otherwise done. Yes, you hit the bad guys, but you also hit hospitals, orphanages, and other non-legitimate targets LIKE YOUR OWN PEOPLE.

    But as bad as this is, at least in a modern fighter/bomber you have a set of eyeballs attached to a decision-making process that can choose not to attack if they actually clue in that the target is non-legitimate. The record of those eyeballs is not great - witness the British Warriors taken out in the Gulf by American A10s, and the latest moron National Guardsman who saw fit to bomb a Canadian training exercise - but at least they were there. They were given the opportunity to not screw up.

    With a remotely-piloted plane, no matter how good the sensors are on the user interface, they will not be as good as the current eyeballs in the plane are. If eyeballs in a plane have a crappy record, then the record of the RPVs is going to be even worse.

    Less risk to the guys behind the weapon systems, but MORE risk for the guys on the ground - enemy, friendly, and neutral!

    Somebody needs to get a grip on the guys in charge of the American Air Force. They need to be reminded that they cannot win battles on their own, that their ultimate mission is support of the troops on the ground, and that the risk of loss of life to those troops is part of the tradeoff for doing the job right. Indiscriminate bombing is NOT acceptable.

    And for the kiddies who may think that you can videogame your way through everything, I have 10 years experience in the Army as a Armoured Recce soldier, so I actually DO know what I am talking about. Nothing in the Real World is as hated and feared as the American Air Force, because they are just as likely to bomb you or a crowd of civillians as they are the bad guys.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
    1. Re:Unpiloted Planes are a BAD IDEA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know what SEAD is? It's playing fscking chicken with the other guy's radar guided missiles. SEAD is not indiscriminate bombing -- big giant BUFFs (and to some extent Bones and Spirits) are made for that.

    2. Re:Unpiloted Planes are a BAD IDEA by Rogerborg · · Score: 2
      • One of the defining strategies of the American armed forces since the Gulf War is a near pathelogical reluctance to accept friendly casulties.

      Absolutely. Do a google search for UXO (unexploded ordnance) and you'll find that the primary military/government argument against use of cluster munitions and mines is that they cause a few casualties to US soldiers>. The dreadful humanitarian effect (e.g. in Iraq and Kuwait) is mentioned only as an aside.

      • witness the British Warriors taken out in the Gulf by American A10s [...] but at least [humans] were there [making the decision]

      Witness the opening US shots of the ground conflict, which were from an AH-64 taking out an M-113. The footage from this incident is harrowing: the pilot (suffering from faulty navigation data) radios for confirmation again and again that he is engaging hostile targets, and he is repeatedly told that he is seeing BMP's and should engage. You can hear clearly in his voice that he knows it feels wrong. Ever though his instruments tell him he should fire, and the chain of command confirms it, and he is ordered to fire, he hesitates and questions, in a most human way.

      And then he fires anyway. And the hesitation is gone. He whoops in triumph and crows "Nobody's getting out of that one!"

      And then the order to "Cease fire! Cease fire!" comes in, and the pilot sounds like he's going to be sick when he realises that he was right, and that these were friendlies.

      But the part that struck me the most was simply this: even though every human instinct was telling him not to fire, he fired anyway, because he had to fulfill his part in the military machine.

      In other news, the US military is now sponsoring games to breed a new generation of soldiers. That's right kids, war is just a game, with you as the hero. It's not about mud and dust and dysentry and months and years of boredom and mindless toiling, it's a quick romp where you slay godless foreigners, complete with "pause" and "retry". Great PR, lousy message.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  127. And in Other News... by bigattichouse · · Score: 1

    Chinese hackers have already learned to reverse engineer the spread spectrum control and flight patterns to re-deploy those 3k of bombs right back on the air field.

    --
    meh
  128. Leave it to man... by toupsie · · Score: 2

    We, as human beings, are pretty good at making stuff that will really, really hurt some jerk we don't like. In the past, our technology required us to get up close and personal with the jerk we don't like. Now that we have all become fat, lazy, high advanced, couch potatoes, we have modified our form of killing other humans so we can do it from the luxury of a climate controlled bunker, thousands of miles away from the jerk we don't like. Ain't progress grand?!?!?!

    --
    Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
  129. Three paragraphs, the DMCA, and lawyers, ... by jerryasher · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is a U.S. Department of Defense Computer System.

    This computer system, including all related equipment, networks and network devices (specifically including Internet access), are provided only for authorized U.S. Government use. DoD computer systems may be monitored for all lawful purposes, including to ensure that their use is authorized, for management of the system, to facilitate protection against unauthorized access, and to verify security procedures, survivability and operational security. Monitoring includes active attacks by authorized DoD entities to test or verify the security of this system. During monitoring, information may be examined, recorded, copied and used for authorized purposes. All information, including personal information, placed on or sent over this system may be monitored. Use of this DoD computer system, authorized or unauthorized, constitutes consent to monitoring of this system. Unauthorized use may subject you to criminal prosecution. Evidence of unauthorized use collected during monitoring may be used for administrative, criminal or adverse action. Use of this system constitutes consent to monitoring for these purposes.

    Unauthorized attempts to upload or change information, prevent or limit access, or otherwise violate the intended purpose of this web site are strictly prohibited and may be punishable under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act of 1986.

    This notice is embedded into X-45 and all UCAV ROMs. All X-45s are distributed with three platoons of lawyers. This and the DMCA should do.
  130. Blast radius by jbf · · Score: 2

    Send a daisy-cutter towards your jammer, and all the sacrificial targets, plus the real one, will go down in one shot :)

    But let's play a thought experiment for a moment. Suppose the controller were 1000 miles away and the jammer were 100 miles away; we'll assume free-space propogation, because everything goes up. That gives a 20dB advantage to the jammer. We'll get it back for the good guys by going to a 20dB directional antenna, plus we'll put out 100 chips per bit (not even UWB, == 20dB processing gain). Combine that with a 100W transmitter, and the jammer has to do 1kW to do a reasonable job jamming (-10dB SNR).

    Agents stealing the radio codes isn't that easy. Suppose each UAV has a tamperproof module that speaks some key exchange protocol. Controller and UAV exchange nonces, run keyexchange, hash nonces and key exchange results for a session key, and communicate using that as an encryption key, chipping code, etc. Basically then the only person who can steal the codes is the operator him/herself, or someone who can compromise both the UAV and the controller, which makes a physical attack better than a jamming attack (eg disable the rudder or whatever).

  131. In other news... by ar1550 · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...Three different women named Sarah Connor have been found brutally murdered in their homes. Police have yet to name any suspects.

    --
    I once shot a man in Reno 'cause they cancelled Firefly.
  132. honestly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    will be able to carry 3,000 pounds of guided bombs.


    Lets be perfectly frank in the future, and put this in terms of live humans beings killed. Thats what these things are for. Why can't slashdot put all these articles under a "military hardware masturbation" topic so I can block it out and not have to read about whatever the government is doing with the money that they aren't spending to improve public services which *improve* people's lives?
  133. Swarms... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    from cnn.com

    "Leahy said the X-45 would "hunt in packs," carrying up to 3,000 pounds of guided bombs to drop on enemy radar and surface-to-air missile batteries. Officials hope to fly a swarm of the planes by late 2003."

    Just too cool!

  134. Actually by Sergeant+Beavis · · Score: 1

    The AirForce test their aircraft for vulnerabilities to EMP. I never worked on an aircraft that was extremely dependent on avionics (I was a UH-1H mech at one time) but I've heard stories from members of the airforce about hardening aircraft against EMP. I know the Army has experimented with it on Tanks. Funny thing, the Russians use radios and electrics in their tanks that still run on vacumme tubes. However vacumme tubes are no vulnerable to EMP.

    --
    There is nothing inherently safe about liberty. That's why so many people died protecting it.
  135. And now... by Mika_Lindman · · Score: 1

    ... the Taleban can make aeroplane strikes without sacrificing their own men. They just hack up few X45's. This is gonna save so many lives!

  136. nickname by bbc22405 · · Score: 1

    Once this thing goes into production or gets fielded, it will need a nickname. And just like the A-10 is named "Thunderbolt", but more appropriately nicknamed "Warthog" to match its appearance, the X-45 should be nicknamed the "Mola mola", or just "Mola".

    Of course _you_ probably don't get it, because although you are a nerd, _you_ are not _me_. But Google will let you in on the fun. Click links until you find pictures. I especially like the pix I found at http://www.earthwindow.com/mola2.html. To quote a line from a Marx Brothers' movie (_Horsefeathers_?): "I give you a hint. It's the name of a fish!"

  137. the pentagon says they will only cost 10-15 mil by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 2

    wow as a tax payer i am glad those planes are kind of cheap.

    Imean with such a low initial estimate by the time the contract is signed and Boeing does its usual trick on the US government those planes will probably cost us no more than $50 mil each!!!

    1. Re:the pentagon says they will only cost 10-15 mil by oldstrat · · Score: 1

      The equivalent manned platform (F-117) carries a price tag of $45 million (pilot extra).
      AGM-158 Cruise missiles are between $1.5 and 2 million each.
      The X-45 concept would allow payload costs to be reduced to tremendously low levels and a variety of charges that just wouldn't make sense in a cruise missile platform.
      X-45 concept also allows for one of the greatest problems for pilots in the current world situation, pilot fatigue.
      It's a real waste of taxpayer money to spend MILLONS to fly a craft halfway around the world, just to have the pilot be his most fatigued when he needs to be his sharpest.
      Cracking up a $45 million flyer isn't just dangerous for the pilot, it's beyond expensive for the hurry up, hurry up to get a replacement in place.

  138. Pilotless = Bandwidth Hog by Venotar · · Score: 1

    Hmmm.... I wonder what sort of impact this is going to have on the military's bandwidth shortage?

  139. Yeh its so tyically American by DABANSHEE · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Americans like to wage war without the natural justice of having casualties.

    look at their reliance on air superiority, It's gotten to the stage that their mountain troops don't even do mountains

    & look at their reliance on gadgets, no wonder they couldn't cope with peasents in pyjamas in the jungle with nothing but Kalashnikovs & RPGs, & had to resort to defolients.

    Hence its no wonder how pissed they are at UBL et alle - they were able to take out more than 3000 Americans & many billions in American real estate simply through the use of Stanley knives & by putting their own lives on the line.

    Something that US Special forces wouldn't pull off without millions in high tech gadgets etc & would probably fuck up.

    1. Re:Yeh its so tyically American by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

      Yeah you're right. We should just get rid of all our technology so we don't piss off Warfare purists like you.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    2. Re:Yeh its so tyically American by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      & look at their reliance on gadgets, no wonder they couldn't cope with peasents in pyjamas in the jungle with nothing but Kalashnikovs & RPGs, & had to resort to defolients.

      Oh please! Everybody with a brain knows we had to use defoliants because the french had let vietnam get so overgrown. We were just cleaning the place up.

  140. The X45 mission by Animats · · Score: 2
    The American way of air warfare in recent decades has been something like this:
    1. Smash enemy air defenses.
    2. Bomb enemy into rubble with repeated missions by bombers that can't defend themselves against a serious air defense.
    Part 1 is the risky part, the one in which most pilots and aircraft are lost. The X45 is built for that. It's a stealthy aircraft, which is a big help in phase 1, but isn't needed in phase 2.

    After all, America's biggest conventional bomb is delivered by shoving it out the back of a trash-hauler.

  141. Movies we can learn from? by wildumut · · Score: 1

    Terminator, Robocop, Matrix? They all have one thing in common, human independent firepower.

  142. Actually - some major babes at Norwestcon! by JimmytheGeek · · Score: 1

    Gender ratio close enough to 50-50 that I'd have to take a census to find out what it actually was. And there was an agreeable fashion consensus to present breasts with various push-up contraptions, much like a platter of hors d'oevres.

    There are female geeks. They may not be playing Magic, but they are out there!

  143. Its quite cheap? by LadyLucky · · Score: 2

    Attention Slashdot editors:
    Enough with the advertorials or whatever you call them. I aint buying one!

    --
    dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
  144. Re: eject button for HARDRIVE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They might need to make an eject button for the HD so the enemy dont reverse engineer a downed plane.

  145. Re: .MIL spends more on toilet paper than mars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet the military spends more on toilet paper annually, than nasa spends on mars missions.

    When will a nation have the balls to spend 10% of GDP on space, not military/welfare/farmsubsidies/red tape.

  146. cheap cost by KrisWales · · Score: 1

    Cost is never cheap, things are. Cost is low.

  147. With all due resepect, you're wrong about UCAV by citanon · · Score: 2, Informative

    With all due respect to your military service, I think you're wrong about UCAVs increasing undesired casualties.

    1. Having soldiers on the ground do not mitigate the problem of dealing with an enemy that blends into the civilian population. Such enemies tend to dress and act like civilians, so that they are hard to identify even for a soldier within visual range. This has been a common complaint in Vietnam and other places where an army has tried to deal with guerrilla war. The advantage of having a soldier on the ground is that a soldier can walk a 3 miles and hour, go into places cameras can't see, and be shot at. In the future, small squad level UAVs will be able to do the same thing.

    2. UCAVs in their current incarnation are designed for dangerous 1st day of war duties. Their targets, SAM sites, radar installations, command bunkers, government offices, power plants, are likely to be well known, high value fixed targets that are unlikely to be confused with civilian buildings.

    3. Human operators will make the shoot/don't shoot decision for UCAV's. Being physically away from the combat environment, the human operator will have a lower stress level and be more careful in verifying the target than a pilot in a dangerous combat environment.

    4. Modern pilots fly most bombing missions from high altitude out of concern for ground fire. As a result, the closest to a visual inspection that he'll do is watch the target through a camera attached to his aircraft from 10000 feet. This is no different than what a UCAV operator will do excpet for the fact that UCAV's will be able to fly lower and closer to their targets, bringing the camera closer and giving the UCAV operator a better view than the pilot.

  148. EMP and back to WWI by theolein · · Score: 2

    I increasingly wonder with all this reliance on high tech weaponry when someone or country will develop an easy to use EMP (Electro Magnetic Pulse) device. It is a factor with nuclear weapons that the explosion releases an EMP and that this is extremely destructive to circuitry and most things digital, unless they are very well shielded in some type of Faraday cage.

    If an EMP device, without the nuclear explosion bit, were to be developed and were easy to deploy, it would make most modern high tech weapons helpless and costly white elephants. It would, I think, take most nations back to a world war I or II level and make for some interesting adjustments in international balance of power.

    Am I seeing this wrong? Are most modern planes etc shielded against the effects of EMP?

  149. There are two separate issues by citanon · · Score: 1

    1. Creating a more effective military.

    2. Wise foreign policy.

    Both are important issues. However, having a better military does not necessarily lead to imprudent foreign policy decisions.

    What is needed to ensure the first goes hand in hand with the second are people who device and advocate balanced approachs to achieving the strategic interests of the US. Currently, there are think tanks that try to fulfill this role. What is missing are grass roots groups that advocate pragmatic non-military solutions that can be alternatives to or work in concert with military action. Today, no grass roots peace movement offers pragmatic solutions. Instead, their birdbrained dependence on useless idealisms has made them utterly ineffective.

    There needs to be, IMHO, grass roots movements and political action committees that employ, contribute to and cooperate with policy think tanks such as the Rand Corporation and Stratfor.

    From the point of view of peace movements, these ties will serve two functions:

    1. Through the exchange of views, personnel, and money, peace momvements will be able to influence Pentagon thinking by influencing think tanks that help shape defense policy.

    2. Through dealing with people who grapple with practical political, military, and economic issues, peace movements will be able to find pragmatic and effective policy positions which they can then publicize, popularize, and politicize through grass-roots campaigns and lobbying of politicians.

    Without doing the above, blind opposition to military development unaccompanied by real alternatives born of concern for and careful and rational consideration of America's strategic interests will continue to be rightfully ignored.

  150. Robotic planes? by bolivarlurks · · Score: 1

    Cool. The yanks can now bomb the allies with no danger to their own pilots!

    --
    -- The future's bright. The future's lemon.
  151. Americans sent the enemies running by citanon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you can stop ranting on and on about Americans causing friendly casualties long enough to pull your head out of your ass, then you'll realize that without American planes in the air, there would have been 10 time (very conservatively speaking) as many casualties, 90% of which would be from enemy fire.

  152. X-45 Innevitable by oldstrat · · Score: 1

    The Innev. word has been bandied about a lot of late, but the X-45 really did/does have to come into use.
    Not because I want it, given a choice I'd ban everything more powerful than spitwads. The X-45 is the equivalent of Richard the first's circumvention of Pope Innocent's ban on the crossbow.
    X-45 is a way around the UAV known as the cruise missile. The cruise is one way throw away and gives a commander an out by saying that 'errors' cannot be avoided.
    The X-45 get a little closer to having a way to pull the bullet back after it has left the barrel of the gun.
    With the cruise being a 1-way device and the X-45 being a return platform with more of the 'smarts' held in the transport rather than being destroyed with the payload it should help bring cost down and decrease the oops factor.
    I'd like to see the delivery date moved to first quarter 2004.

  153. Friendly Fire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bet the US still hits more friendlies than targets...

  154. Just wait.. by aziraphale · · Score: 1

    what will people's reaction be when these things start coming back in bodybags?

  155. Isn't this what Gundam was warning us about? by randomErr · · Score: 1

    If I'm not mistaken this is exactly what Gundam Wing was preaching against. Robots doing the fighting for men. Men no long saw war for the bloody engagements war is. War became no more then pushing a few button to get their way.

    Art imitating life or life imitating art? I love anime.

    --
    You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
  156. Sea Slug by stinkydog · · Score: 2

    I can't help thinking of the movie TOYS. The autonimus weapons are easily distracted by 'the enemy' and eventually turn on their creator.

    I guess it is never to soon to start stockpiling ammo.

    SD

    --
    âoeWho knew something as harmless as willful ignorance could end up having real consequences?â
  157. If Terrorists could, then China would have tons by citanon · · Score: 1

    But they don't. Creating a viable weapon means integrating off the shelf technologies into a viable weapons platform that can navigate by itself accross hundreds of miles of complex terrain while performing complex obstacle avoidance manuveurs. In reality, just making the software to keep the missle stable in flight would be very challenging. Terrorists certainly do not have the capability to do this. Not without a lot of money, a lot of time, and large testing facilities that will be difficult to conceal.

  158. Freaky... by MarvinMouse · · Score: 1

    The US Army begins developing computer games to encourage (ahem, train) young children (ahem, cadets) to consider the army as a career.

    Now, they begin to build fighters that can be controlled by a computer interface.

    Wow, if all things work out. The world of the general in "Toys"{c} will begin. Young children playing computer games to train to fight with robotic fighting planes and machines. We now just need Robin Williams...

    (As always, this is IMHO)

    --
    ~ kjrose
  159. Do we actually need this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I am beginning to be sick and tired of the military spending millions and millions on crap like this while, at the same time, they seem to be unable to do anything much about the al-Quaeda morons.

  160. Cruise Missile? by btrain · · Score: 1

    What's the point use a cruise missile.

    --
    "The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." --Unknown
  161. The other side of this is better training by DG · · Score: 2

    As I mentioned before, I was in Armoured Recce.

    A large part of my job was constant training on Armoured Vehicle Recognition (AFV) - being able to see a small portion of a vehicle, determine what it is, and then make judgements about if it was friendly or enemy.

    I would typically spend an hour or so A DAY studying Jane's. We'd have unit contests where small portions of models were briefly exposed and the observer would have to determine what the vehicle was.

    At my level, we also had to study Soviet tactics, as a good portion of our mission involved determining where the main axis of advance of an opposing MRR was so that the Divisional commander could come up with the appropriate response. I can still draw out the order of march of a Soviet Motor Rifle Regiment, listing the equipment carried down to the last pistol, right off the top of my head.

    This was typical of a Recce troop leader, and most of my subordinates were capable of the same thing. In fact, I had a corporal in Charlie patrol who was an AFV God, much better at it than I was. I'm pretty sure he could write out Jane's from memory.

    I am reasonably confident that I or any one of my comrades could tell the difference between an M113, a Warrior, and a BMP. I am equally confident that they would not open fire on a M113 or Warrior, even if some yahoo was screaming over the radio to open fire.

    The Americans don't approach anything near this level of training for their soldiers. They choose instead to go for the technological solutions, dumbing down their soldiers in favour of machines. Tears inevitiably result.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
  162. That was a movie, President Reagan by Isochrome · · Score: 1

    It didn't really happen.

  163. 3000lbs ? Okay..New government math... by SacredNaCl · · Score: 1

    They list the carrying capacity of the X-45 as 1500lbs. This is fairly typical in military hardware bids though - take whatever it can actually do - and times that by 2 for the press release.

    The 1500 lb figure is by the way -- their own.

    --
    Freedom is merely privilege extended unless enjoyed by one and all.
  164. after a perfect operational record... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    how long before the brains behind these things become self-aware, having learned at a geometric rate?

  165. x-45 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This has been covered long ago in a movie
    "Deal of the Century" with Bill Murray.

  166. Uncle Sam Buys an Airplane... by iJoel · · Score: 1

    ...is an interesting article in The Atlantic Monthly magazine by James Fallows, who knows his politics and his airplanes (I think he's a pilot).

    http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2002/06/fallow s. htm

    In case you don't want to read the whole article: The JSF is the Pentagon's attempt to control the cost of developing reducing that spending is a good goal. We can (and should) try to do that by making peace via diplomacy and global co-operation (e.g. the U.N. & world criminal court), but we're still going to need armed forces to enforce the peace, no matter how good our diplomats are.

    2. I think drones will first be used to knock out anti-aircraft guns and similar targets to make everything safe for the piloted planes.

    3. I'd like to see how well an unmanned fighter can do in a "John Henry-style" contest against a plane with a pilot. I'd guess the piloted plane will still be better in most real-world scenarios, so it must come down to cost. In no particular order, there are two costs when a plane is shot down: building a new plane, and training a new pilot. (Yes, of course, there's also the "priceless" human life involved, but in a war some soldiers are going to die, no matter how careful we are.)

    4. All of the discussion about whether drones are more or less moral than piloted planes strikes me as pointless. Just like computers, weapons are tools. They can be used to do bad things or good things, depending on the people operating them. I'm not a believer in artificial intelligence, but I definitely believe in human stupidity.

    --
    --- iJoel
  167. Largest Casualties by colganc · · Score: 1

    From the perspective that friendly fire casualties should be more important in this time, I agree. As enemy fire casualties become fewer and fewer, friendly fire obviously becomes more important (as you said). However I (still) believe to say that friendly fire casualties are on the rise is inaccurate. I (still) think a better way to tell if friendly fire is on the rise is by percentage of overall troops.