Technology used to hunt enemy combatants in Afghanistan will be used for “non-emergency incidents” within the U.S.
by Paul Joseph Watson
The Department of Homeland Security plans to spend up to $50 million dollars on a spy system that has been used to hunt insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan for the purposes of “emergency and non-emergency incidents” within the United States.
The DHS is seeking four contractors to provide “aerial remote sensing” services, using LIDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) technology fitted to drones or manned aircraft that will provide surveillance capability for “homeland security missions,” as well as “management of emergency incidents by Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) regional offices, joint field offices and by state and local government.”
“DHS believes these airborne images are essential for homeland defense missions, such as planning for National Special Security Events (Super Bowls or a national political conventions come to mind); enhancing border, port and airport security; as well as performing critical infrastructure inventories and assessments,” reports Government Security News, adding that the technology will be used for “emergency and non-emergency incidents nationwide.”
The DHS expects successful contractors to “ensure imagery can be acquired, processed and delivered in 48 hours or less and the ability to support simultaneous missions in multiple geographic locations.”
LIDAR spy technology, which uses ultraviolet, visible, or near infrared light to track objects or people from the sky, has been used in Iraq and Afghanistan to track insurgents. The US military has praised the technology for its proficiency in providing “battlefield surveillance” and being able to easily locate enemy combatants due to it being “especially useful at seeing through foliage.” LIDAR can be deployed using both manned and unmanned aircraft.
The U.S. Air Force “has already deployed an unknown number of LIDAR aircraft to map all of Afghanistan,” reports MSNBC, with the 3-D laser mapping technology also being adapted to work aboard U.S. Special Forces helicopters such as the Blackhawk or Chinook to help hunt insurgents.
According to Raytheon, one of the companies that develops LIDAR, the technology is adept at tracking “people in crowded environments for safety and security,” because unlike traditional surveillance methods, LIDAR is honed to measure characteristics of individuals and keep them tracked within a “grid cell” so they cannot evade detection.
Under the terms of the recently passed National Defense Authorization Act, the whole of America has been defined as a battlefield, with the government reserving the power to have “belligerents,” including American citizens, arrested and detained indefinitely without trial.
US law enforcement bodies are already using drone technology to spy on Americans. In December, a Predator B drone was called in to conduct surveillance over a family farm in North Dakota as part of a SWAT raid on the Brossart family, who were suspects in the egregious crime of stealing six missing cows. Local police in this one area have already used the drone on two dozen occasions since June last year.
Last summer, the Department of Homeland Security gave the green light for police departments in the United States to deploy the ShadowHawk mini drone drone helicopter that has the ability to taze suspects from above as well as carrying 12-gauge shotguns and grenade launchers. The drone, also used against insurgents in Afghanistan and Iraq, is already being used by the Montgomery County Sheriff’s office in Texas.
The DHS has also provided drone surveillance for foreign countries, aiding Jamaican authorities in a botched drug raid that led to the massacre of 73 civilians last year.
A bill passed in by Congress this week paves the way for the use of surveillance drones in US skies on a widespread basis. The FAA predicts that by 2020 there could be up to 30,000 drones in operation nationwide.
source: DHS To Launch Insurgent-Tracking Drones Inside America
Related articles:
- Janet Napolitano Gives Top-Secret Security Clearance To Muslim Brotherhood
- Drones Becoming Pervasive INSIDE America
- Insurgents Hack U.S. Drones with $26 Software
- US admits flying drones out of Ethiopia
- U.S. Drones Patrolling Its Skies Provoke Outrage in Iraq
- Drones could patrol in U.S., FAA says
- Times Square Fizzle Non-bombing Provides Excuse to Launch Drones in Pakistan
- The Future Expansion of Unmanned Drones Over The U.S.
- U.S. Predator Drones to Surveil Mexican Border
- Drones over U.S. may pose security risks
- Surveillance Drones To Zap Protesters Into Submission
- US drones collecting ‘too much information’
- Dragonfly drones and cyborg moths: The future of spying and rescue missions


Pingback: 30,000 Domestic Drones by 2020? - Page 3 - INGunOwners
Pingback: FEMA Follows DHS In Monitoring News Coverage Of Its Activities 24/7 | Mountain Republic
Pingback: Video: Congress Launches ‘Attack of the Drones’ | Mountain Republic
Pingback: DHS To Launch Insurgent-Tracking Drones Inside America « News Worldwide
We need these things. How else would we finally prove Big Foot really exists?
“We need these things…..”
…..to complete the construction of the high tech control grid also known as the “Police State”.
MR
Reblogged this on Boudica BPI Weblog and commented:
When are the people going to wake up, stand up and stem this out of control government?
The American Revolution was won with only about 3% of the population taking part. Looks to be that way again.
MR