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2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 07:55
Laser guided bombs and hellfire missiles loaded on a General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper drone prior to a mission

Laser guided bombs and hellfire missiles loaded on a General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper drone prior to a mission

May 31, 2013 by Tamir Eshel - defense-update.com

 

France has decided to buy two MQ-9 Reaper medium-altitude long endurance (MALE) drones from the USA, to extend the strategic reconnaissance capability of the French Air Force after the current Harfang drones end their planned mission in 2014. The two General Atomics (GA-ASI) MQ-9 Reapers that will be delivered by 2013 year-end. The two drones are not likely to be used in armed recce missions as they do  with the US Air Force. Defense-Update reports.

Given the short delivery schedule, it is likely the two Reapers will not be new but taken from the US Air Force inventory. According to the French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian the French Air Force desperately need the new drones to address the immediate situation in the Sahel region.

The Harfang was fielded with the French Air Force under the SDIM program in June 2008. France ordered three planes and two ground control stations which became operational with the Drone Experimentation Squadron 1/330 Adour, in Cognac, in June 2008. From the beginning the program was regarded as an interim capability, and proposals for the full capability plan were submitted by EADS Since 2007. Despite their ‘interim’ capability, the French Harfangs were supporting all contingencies the French forces were involved in, including Afghanistan, Libya and Mali.

Through the years the Ministry of Defense evaluated only two options – the Israeli Heron TP and US made MQ-9 Reaper. IAI, the developer and manufacturer of the Heron and Heron TP has teamed with Dassault Aviation and EADS to form industry teams to support the selection of its drones, but has not succeeded in winning the French Air Force support for its system.

The procurement of the two Reapers is also considered an interim phase, until France is capable of establishing its own drones, considered as the centerpiece of future intelligence and combat operations. Two parralel programs are currently underway in France – the collaborative development of a jet-powered Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle (UCAV) known as NeuroN, expected to replace some manned aircraft by 2030. Another collaborative development of a UAS, with the British industry. Dassault is also cooperating with Israel Aerospace Industries, on the development of a future MALE platform addressing the French requirements. However, it is not clear whether this alliance will hold after failing to win the interim MALE program. France is currently interested in MALE drones designed for strategic reconnaissance, attack missions are currently not a priority for these assets.

IAI is also coopreating with Rheinmetall’s Unmanned Aerial Systems, a joint entity set by EADS and Rheinmetall, pursuing a similar program in Germany. Defense Minister Thomas de Maiziere said Berlin is set to decide on the procurement of 16 drones, five to be operational by 2016.

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21 mai 2013 2 21 /05 /mai /2013 06:00
Le drone de surveillance Predator B MQ-9 Reaper fabriqué par l'américain General Atomics. L'Hexagone pourrait acquérir d'ici à la fin de l'année deux de ces appareils pour des missions de renseignement. - photo General Atomics Aeronautical Systems

Le drone de surveillance Predator B MQ-9 Reaper fabriqué par l'américain General Atomics. L'Hexagone pourrait acquérir d'ici à la fin de l'année deux de ces appareils pour des missions de renseignement. - photo General Atomics Aeronautical Systems

21/07 par Yann VERDO - lesechos.fr

 

La France va acheter deux drones américains de surveillance. Jean-Yves Le Drian estime que la France a raté le rendez-vous des avions sans pilote.

 

Le pays du Rafale a-t-il raté le rendez-vous des drones, ces avions sans pilote dont l'usage a changé l'art de la guerre ? C'est du moins ce que pense le ministre de la Défense, Jean-Yves Le Drian, qui l'a déclaré sans ambages ce week-end au « Grand Rendez-vous Europe 1-iTélé-"Le Parisien" ».

 

Le ministre, qui avait rencontré son homologue américain, Chuck Hagel, vendredi à Washington, a confirmé être entré en négociations avec le Pentagone pour l'achat de deux drones de surveillance « Reaper » fabriqués par l'entreprise américaine General Atomics. Ces deux appareils devraient être livrés non armés à la France d'ici à la fin de l'année et seraient aussitôt déployés au Mali pour des missions de renseignement exclusivement, mais les experts soulignent qu'ils pourraient être aisément transformés en drones tueurs par la suite.

 

Le ministre a également confirmé que des négociations parallèles étaient en cours avec Israël, le seul autre pays construisant des drones avec les Etats-Unis. Il n'a pas précisé le nombre d'avions sans pilote dont l'armée française souhaiterait rapidement se doter auprès des deux puissances étrangères. Dans un récent Livre blanc, il était recommandé que la France, qui dispose actuellement de 4 drones d'observation, porte rapidement le nombre de ces engins à douze.

 

L'opération « Harmattan » engagée il y a deux ans en Libye et celle actuellement en cours au Mali ont clairement montré que l'armée française était dépendante des renseignements récoltés par les drones américains. La faute d'un virage stratégique mal négocié dans les années 1990, notamment en raison d'un manque de coopération sur ce sujet entre les industriels français. Résultat : ni Dassault Aviation ni EADS ne fabrique aujourd'hui leurs propres drones. Ceux utilisés actuellement au Mali ont été simplement adaptés aux besoins de l'armée française par EADS à partir de drones acquis dans les années 1990 auprès de l'armée israélienne.

 

Une solution d'urgence

 

Dans ce contexte, la commande passée auprès du Pentagone et celle en discussion avec Tel-Aviv apparaissent donc comme une solution d'urgence. Une position d'ailleurs pleinement assumée par Jean-Yves Le Drian qui a déclaré que Paris ne pouvait se permettre d'attendre dix ans de plus que nos champions industriels se décident enfin à agir ensemble. Et qui a mis publiquement la pression sur les dirigeants des groupes concernés pour qu'ils oublient leurs rivalités et travaillent de concert sur ce dossier. « Il faut aujourd'hui que, sur notre demande, les industriels français et européens se mettent en relation pour élaborer ce que pourra être demain le drone de nouvelle génération », a déclaré Jean-Yves Le Drian, ajoutant que celui-ci ne devrait pas être uniquement français mais franco-germano-britannique.

 

Aux Etats-Unis, première puissance militaire au monde, les drones ont changé le visage de la guerre. Soit grâce aux renseignements qu'ils permettent de collecter en zone ennemie, soit du fait de leur usage pour les « assassinats ciblés » de dirigeants d'Al-Qaida ou d'autres mouvements terroristes. Chaque mardi, Barack Obama rencontre ses experts du contre-terrorisme pour réviser la « kill list ». Seul le Congrès est informé des frappes effectuées, mais les observateurs indépendants estiment que le nombre d'activistes ainsi éliminés au Pakistan et au Yemen s'est fortement accru depuis 2009, date de l'arrivée à la Maison-Blanche de Barack Obama.

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19 août 2011 5 19 /08 /août /2011 06:20
MDA Eyes UAS Missile-Tracking Potential

photo USAF

 

Aug 18, 2011 By Amy Butler aviation week and space technology

 

Washington- The General Atomics Reaper unmanned aerial system (UAS) may eventually go from hunting terrorists to hunting hostile ballistic missiles.

 

The U.S. Air Force’s Predator and Reaper UAS have been well-publicized workhorses providing intelligence and firepower on the front lines in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Arabian peninsula.

 

Now the Reaper may get a new mission as a frontline cueing system for the burgeoning U.S. missile defense architecture. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) officials say the Reaper and its Raytheon MTS-B sensor are showing promise. The system could plug a longtime gap by providing firing quality data to facilitate early intercept of ballistic missiles. MDA is exploring the technology and operational concepts for using electro-optical/infrared (EO/IR) -equipped UAS to eventually achieve “launch-on-remote” capabilities with Aegis ship- and land-based SM-3 interceptors. This means the fidelity of UAS data would need to be high enough for commanders to launch an interceptor before Aegis radars capture the target.

 

Ballistic missile patrol is one of many potential missions for the large and growing Predator/Reaper fleet. As the Pentagon plans to draw down combat forces in Afghanistan—combat operations ended a year ago in Iraq—officials insist that intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets (ISR) will continue to support ongoing activities in these areas. But Pentagon planners are considering how these ISR resources can be reallocated or, if need be, modified to fill capability gaps for other missions.

 

UAS orbits could be placed to provide a “picket fence” of sensors if an area is expected to have hostile ballistic missile activity, says Tim Carey, vice president of intelligence for Raytheon.

 

MDA officials say data from early experiments show that “just a few orbits can provide substantial sensor coverage” for various regions.

 

Gen. Robert Kehler, who oversees U.S. Strategic Command, provides advice to the Pentagon on how to allocate ISR resources across the globe. Regional commanders in the Pacific, Africa, Europe and Central and Southern America feel the focus on U.S. Central Command and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have curbed their ability to monitor activities in their areas of operation. “Their view is that many of their ISR needs are not being met because of all the things we have placed in Centcom,” Kehler says.

 

A potential near-term application of UAS for missile defense is to support monitoring of North Korea. MDA plans to field the Persistent Tracking Satellite System (PTSS) as soon as fiscal 2016 to provide early launch detection and high-fidelity targeting data from space to ship- and land-based interceptors.

 

That plan, however, has two problems. First, even if fielded as planned, the sensor gap would not be closed until later this decade. Perhaps a larger issue is that funding for PTSS is in question.

 

Industry sources say MDA is struggling with a $4 billion budget gap in fiscal 2013-17, and a project as expensive as building satellites could slip or be axed altogether as Leon Panetta, the new defense secretary, searches for projects to cut in light of diminished funding and deficit reduction pressure.

 

The interim solution for MDA is to test and possibly field the Airborne Infrared system (ABIR), a UAS carrying the proper EO/IR sensors to support early intercept operations (a kill before a hostile missile reaches apogee), improved target discrimination and enhanced handling of the threat of missile raids (tens or more missiles fired nearly simultaneously).

 

Last year, MDA selected the Reaper as the platform of choice for the ABIR experimentation phase, which is ongoing. “If fielded, we envision a podded ABIR capability that could ride on a variety of unmanned or even manned platforms,” says Rick Lehner, MDA’s spokesman. Ultimately, platform decisions would be made in consultation with the Air Force and Navy if the system is fielded, as these services will be the operators.

 

Since 2009, MDA has conducted 10 flight tests in which ABIR was used for data collection. Six of these trials were observed using MTS-B-equipped Reapers and the remainder featured risk-reduction tests using ground-based sensors (see chart, p. 43). For these trials, at least two Reapers are needed to provide “stereo tracking.” Each EO/IR sensor provides a “flat” view, but triangulating the target provides higher-fidelity data.

 

A main objective in the trials has been to expose the MTS-B—which includes visible, shortwave IR and mid-wave IR sensors—to various scenarios and targets, from short-range to intercontinental ballistic missiles.

 

“We have been able to improve the pointing accuracy of the sensor [and] we have demonstrated automatic acquisition and tracking of the sensor required to meet system needs,” Lehner says. “Modeling indicates the agility of the sensor will substantially improve the raid-handling capability we currently have.”

 

Today, X-band radars—the AN/TPY‑2 and Sea-Based X-Band—are used for early tracking. Carey notes that the ABIR experiments are the first time EO/IR data have contributed to generating firing-quality data early in flight. (IR sensors typically provide only a cue to ground- and sea-based X-band radars.)

 

“They just never thought to look up” with the sensors, Carey says. “Everybody was surprised [by] the range at which we were able to detect the targets after burning and the accuracy with which we were able track them.”

 

The MDA has purchased four MTS‑Bs for ABIR experimentation, two last year and two this year, Carey adds. MDA is contributing to a larger Pentagon effort to develop the two-color MTS‑C; this will add a long-wave IR detection capability. While the short- and mid-wave bands are optimal during launch and rocket burn, a long-wave detector is better for tracking cold bodies, such as missiles after burnout, or plumes and exhaust.

 

Packaging short-, mid- and long-wave IR detectors on the same sensor ball, however, presents complex challenges, including design of proper cooling and meeting power requirements. One defense official suggests the MTS-C could be a year or more from being ready for work in this area. Lehner says the MTS‑C will be delivered in the summer of 2012 and begin testing shortly thereafter.

 

This time frame will be a key deciding point for the future of the program. Also next summer, MDA plans to conduct a launch-on-remote exercise. “To demonstrate launch on remote, we will provide real-time tracking data to [ballistic missile defense (BMD) command-and-control] nodes,” Lehner says. “The BMD command-and-control nodes then send [the data] to Aegis in a simulated engagement in the summer of 2012.”

 

Carey notes that in trials thus far, ABIR has generated virtual targeting data that can be compared against data from other sensors used in the tests. But he says more command-and-control and system architecture work is needed to make the system operational.

 

Early tests were highly manpower intensive; targets were acquired by hand and tracked by people. Software has been developed to automate that process. But officials need to develop an operational concept of how many UAS must be orbiting in what locations for an optimum chance of achieving early launch data if there is an unpredicted hostile launch. “If you put the aircraft in the right place and we know the test is coming, we turn it on and it will perform,” he says.

 

Through fiscal 2012, MDA has requested $178.5 million for ABIR. Depending on results of the flight trials, the agency plans to make a development and fielding decision around 2014.

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