General Underscores Commitment to Fielding Unmanned Aerial Systems

  • (Source: U.S Department of Defence)
  • 12:00 AM, January 15, 2009
  • 604
WASHINGTON --- The Air Force is all in with regard to unmanned aerial systems, and the services leaders understand Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates direction to field the systems in the combat theater as fully and quickly as possible, the commander of 12th Air Force and Air Forces Southern said Jan. 12.>> Air Force Lt. Gen. Norman R. Seip participated in a teleconference with online journalists and bloggers.>> Next year, the Air Force will procure more unmanned aircraft than manned aircraft," the general said. So I think that makes a very pointed statement about our commitment to the future of UAS and what it brings to the fight in meeting the requirements of combatant commanders.>> Seip said the Air Force has 85 percent of its theater-level UAS capability deployed in support of operations in Southwest Asia. The other 15 percent are stateside to train UAS pilots and for operational test and development. The Air Force is doing all it can to speed up the UAS pilot training process, he added.>> Additionally, he said, teams at the Air Warfare Center at Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., are developing countermeasures for potential enemy use of unmanned aerial systems.>> When, in the future, we encounter a near-peer or asymmetric threat, or a terrorist organization that has the UAS capability, were going to certainly need to be working toward active techniques so that we can counter those capabilities, he said.>> These techniques will be essential for the Air Force to dominate airspace when needed and allow for freedom of maneuver for ground forces, the general explained.
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