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US aviation agency to appeal drone ruling
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 07, 2014


For US forces in Africa, spy drones in short supply
Washington (AFP) March 07, 2014 - The US military faces a chronic shortage of surveillance aircraft in Africa needed to track extremists on the continent, particularly in the Sahel region, a top general said Thursday.

Only seven percent of the military's requirements for reconnaissance and surveillance planes -- including drones and other aircraft -- were met last year in Africa, said General David Rodriguez, head of US Africa Command.

"It's up to 11 percent now," the four-star general told the Senate Armed Services Committee.

US troops and hardware are not permanently assigned to AFRICOM, which must request aircraft and resources from other regional commands, such as US Central Command, which oversees forces in the Middle East, Central Asia and parts of North Africa and South Asia.

Two Reaper drones are currently deployed to Niger and several others at a US base in Djibouti.

But Rodriguez indicated his command badly needs more long-range surveillance drones and E-8 Joint STARS aircraft equipped with radar that can monitor adversaries at a distance.

As a result, commanders had to withdraw planes used to counter the Lord's Resistance Army in Central Africa when a crisis unfolded in South Sudan in December.

"So when South Sudan erupted, we had to take the effort away from the Lord's Resistance Army, as well as some counter-terrorist efforts in East Africa to support those efforts," Rodriguez said.

Citing vast distances and the small number of available aircraft, he said the "biggest intelligence gaps are out in northwest Africa, that really stretches from northern Mali to eastern Libya."

American forces have shared intelligence, including images gathered from drone aircraft, with French and African troops deployed in Mali.

Over the past decade, the US military has built up a logistical network across East Africa and beyond, securing access to key airfields and ports.

The Pentagon has tended to prefer a light footprint in Africa, gathering intelligence while relying on allies to take direct action against Al-Qaeda-linked groups in Somalia, Mali and elsewhere.

The US aviation agency said Friday it will appeal the dismissal of a $10,000 fine it imposed on a Swiss entrepreneur who flew a drone over a college campus to make a commercial.

Enthusiasts of the unmanned aircraft are closely following Raphael Pirker's case, which they say could shape the development of small drones for civilian use -- for instance in newsgathering or for wildlife protection.

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) had fined Pirker, known in drone circles as Trappy, in 2011 after he flew a small drone over the University of Virginia, shooting video to be used in an advertisement for its medical school.

It alleged that Pirker -- who now runs a drone business in Hong Kong -- had operated a drone without a pilot's license and in a "careless or reckless manner" in violation of a ban on using drones for money-making purposes.

But in a ruling Thursday, a National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) judge granted Pirker's request for the civil penalty to be dismissed, saying the FAA lacks the legal authority to regulate small drones.

In a statement confirming it would appeal to the full NTSB, the FAA said: "The agency is concerned that this decision could impact the safe operation of the national airspace system and the safety of people and property on the ground."

- 'Held back' -

Pirker's lawyer Brendan Schulman told AFP the case was having far-reaching consequences for the controversial but fast-growing drone industry.

"Various companies have been held back for seven years as a result of the FAA's purported ban on the commercial use of drone technology," Schulman said.

Timothy Reuter, founder of the Drone User Group Network, which brings together small-drone enthusiasts, said other nations have allowed drone entrepreneurship "for a number of years" already.

"We see commercial use as key to allowing this technology to reach its maximum potential to benefit our society," he told AFP.

In the run-up to Christmas last year, online retailer Amazon said it was looking into the use of drones to deliver packages.

Later, a brewer in Minnesota posted a YouTube video of a drone delivering a case of lager to a fishing hut on an icebound lake.

Campaigners for civil liberties have voiced concerns, however, that drones fitted with cameras or other surveillance gear could be used to infringe on individuals' right to privacy.

Pending the formulation of a clear set of regulations for drones, the FAA has advised that drones, like model aircraft, be flown no higher than 400 feet above the ground and away from populated areas.

The drone that Pirker used at the University of Virginia was a remote-controlled RiteWingRC Zephyr II "electric flying wing" with a 56-inch (1.42-meter) wingspan that weighed less than five pounds (2.3 kilograms).

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