By Lisa Ferdinando
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
POINT MUGU, Calif., Aug. 1, 2015 – Small, unmanned aircraft
systems, or drones, are easy to obtain and launch and they’re hard to detect on
radar, making them of particular concern to the Department of Defense,
according to officials taking part in the Black Dart 2015 counter-UAS
demonstration held here.
Black Dart 2015, which began July 26 and runs to Aug. 7, is
DoD's largest live-fly, live-fire joint counter-UAS technology demonstration,
Navy Cmdr. David Zook, chief of the Capabilities Assessment Division with the
Joint Integrated Air and Missile Defense Organization, or JIAMDO, told
reporters yesterday.
Zook briefed reporters at Naval Base Ventura County and Sea
Range here. He said the demonstration is bringing together some 1,000 people,
including industry personnel, observers from allied nations, and participants
from four military branches.
Small drones can be launched from virtually anywhere and fly
a significant radius, Zook said.
"Small manned and unmanned aircraft have always been
hard to find,” he said. “It's hard to tell the difference in the radar cross
section from that and other small airborne vehicles or even birds.”
Black Dart 2015 provides “a unique and very valuable window
for us to come together for two weeks here and practice in a littoral
environment, a land-based environment and a deep-sea environment in many
different scenarios," Zook said.
Zook said the demonstration features cooperation and
interoperability among military services in air and missile defense, while also
assessing the anti-UAS capabilities of DoD, its agency partners and industry.
Previous Black Dart demonstrations have resulted in new
systems or improvements in technology, tactics, and procedures that have helped
the warfighter, he said.
Staying One Step Ahead
One only needs to look at recent news reports to see
incidents involving members of the public using drones, including a quadcopter
that landed at the White House, said Air Force Maj. Scott Gregg, Black Dart’s
project officer.
Drones can easily be purchased over the Internet or at a
hobby shop, Gregg said. Defense officials are focused on staying ahead of the
threat, he said.
"If there is anything that the terrorists have shown,
it’s that they’ll be innovative and use anything that they can at their
disposal to do what they're trying to do," Gregg said.
"What we're trying to do at Black Dart is make sure
that we are staying ahead of the game and that we have a good understanding of
their capabilities before those capabilities outpace ours," he added.
The smaller class of drones is an "emphasis item"
this year at Black Dart, in response to concerns from combatant commanders and
interagency partners, including law enforcement agencies, Gregg said.
"It's a problem for everyone," he said.
More than 70 countries are using UASs, either in government
or military application, Gregg said.
Gregg points out that radio-controlled model aircraft have
similar performance and capabilities to some of the UASs that are considered to
be threats.
"It's a burgeoning market. The threat is expanding
rapidly, proliferation is expanding rapidly and it's not just a military
threat," he said. "Our allies are using them, our coalition partners
are using them, but our adversaries are using them too."
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