Monday, October 1, 2012

The Growing Role And Evolution Of Drones

An MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aircraft vehicle (UAV) sits in a shelter at Joint Base Balad, Iraq, after a mission on November 10, 2008. According to the U.S. Department of Defense, the Reaper can carry up to 3,750 pounds of laser-guided bombs and missiles.

A Dangerous New World Of Drones -- Peter Bergen and Jennifer Rowland, Special to CNN

Washington (CNN) -- A decade ago, the United States had a virtual monopoly on drones.

Not anymore. According to data compiled by the New America Foundation, more than 70 countries now own some type of drone, though just a small number of those nations possess armed drone aircraft.

The explosion in drone technology promises to change the way nations conduct war and threatens to begin a new arms race as governments scramble to counterbalance their adversaries.

Late last month, China announced that it would use surveillance drones to monitor a group of uninhabited islands in the South China Sea that are controlled by Japan but claimed by China and Taiwan.

Read more ....

My Comment: Pandora's Box is now open when it comes to drones .... and there is nothing that we can do to put it back in. The only question that still remains to be answered is .... how deadly and how autonomous will these militarized drones be in the future.

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