Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Central Intelligence Agency. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Central Intelligence Agency. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 11 de febrero de 2013

Secret American drone airbase in Saudi Arabia exposed


The American media has been in an uproar over the past week over reports on the existence of a secret American drone base built in Saudi Arabia for launching unmanned aerial reconnaissance and strike missions against Al-Qaida targets in Yemen and perhaps other countries such as Iran. Since the news came out, reporters and bloggers have been feverishly searching satellite footage documenting the base's existence, but it hasn't been easy. There are no aircraft to be seen in the pictures but the base contains three clamshell-shaped hangars, large enough to contain Predator or Reaper drones, the types most typically used by the United States Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency when conducting secret activity in the region, as well as, two relatively short runways. The base apparently supports missions over Yemen but the range of the drones would enable them to fly over other nations, including crossing the Persian Gulf to Iran. (Read more)

miércoles, 6 de febrero de 2013

Experts predict that unmanned vehicles will offer better job prospects than the airlines.


Today, the biggest use of drones is by the military and the Central Intelligence Agency, which operate hundreds of them around the world. At the moment, there are hardly any remote-controlled vehicles in American civil airspace. But the Federal Aviation Administration is under instructions from Congress to fully integrate them by 2015. The agency predicts that 10,000 remote-piloted planes will be operating in American airspace within five years. Equipped with cameras and other sensors, drones of the future will report back on traffic, survey land, inspect pipelines and transmission lines, conduct border surveillance and other law enforcement work, assess damage after storms and earthquakes, and even spot fish. Experts predict that unmanned vehicles will offer better job prospects than the airlines. (Read more)