CBP Launches New Maritime Unmanned Aircraft System Predator B Guardian UAS Unveiled
(Wednesday, December 09, 2009)
contacts for this news release Washington -
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection took delivery today of the first
maritime variant of the Predator B unmanned aircraft system. At a
ceremony in Palmdale, California, CBP, U.S. Coast Guard, and General
Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. unveiled the prototype maritime
variant Predator B, known as Guardian. To
support future mission requirements, CBP in partnership with the USCG
is exploring a maritime variant of its Predator B UAS to increase
reconnaissance, surveillance, and targeting acquisition capabilities in
maritime operating environments. For this purpose, GA-ASI, the
manufacturer of the Predator B UAS, modified a CBP Predator B aircraft
to become the Guardian. “The
Predator B Unmanned Aircraft System has proven its value to homeland
security over the nation’s land borders, the Great Lakes region, and in
support of DHS hurricane and flood response operations,” said Michael
Kostelnik, assistant commissioner for the U.S. Customs and Border
Protection Office of Air and Marine. “With the introduction of the
Guardian, maritime variant of the Predator B, DHS now has a powerful
tool and force multiplier to increase maritime domain awareness and
confront threats to our borders.” The
Guardian has been modified from a standard Predator B with structural,
avionics, and communications enhancements, as well as the addition of a
Raytheon SeaVue Marine Search Radar and an Electro-optical/Infrared
Sensor that is optimized for maritime operations. The
Guardian is expected to be ready for Operational Test and Evaluation in
early 2010. This OT&E will be conducted jointly by CBP and USCG
from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. After the Guardian
completes operational testing this spring, it will be deployed to the
drug source and transit zones to support joint counter-narcotics
operations. In 2008, CBP and the USCG
formed a UAS Joint Program Office to identify and address common
maritime UAS requirements, including sensors, command and control, data
exploitation, logistics and training, and basing. "I
am proud of our partnership with Customs and Border Protection to
develop the maritime version of the Predator B," said Adm. Thad Allen,
commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard. "An unmanned aircraft system is a
significant and needed force multiplier that will help us counter
threats like narcotics and migrant smuggling, terrorism, and piracy in
the vast expanses of the maritime domain. The collaborative work
between Coast Guard and CBP officers at the Joint Program Office has
been outstanding and we're seeing the results here today." In
the Southeast Coastal Border Region of the United States and drug
source and transit zones, CBP plans to use the Guardian to conduct
long-range surveillance in support of joint counter-narcotics
operations, where maritime radar is necessary to detect a variety of
threats. In the future, at the
Northern Border, the Guardian will allow CBP to conduct surveillance of
the Great Lakes, creating a more comprehensive picture of activity in
this expansive maritime environment, and give law enforcement a more
accurate tool to use in sorting illegal activity from legitimate
activity. CBP first employed the
Predator B in support of law enforcement operations on the Southwest
Border in 2005 and along the Northern Border in 2009. CBP operates
three Predator Bs from Libby Army Airfield in Sierra Vista, Ariz., and
two more from Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota. UAS
operations will continue to expand in 2010. By 2015, Air and Marine
expects to employ the Predator B throughout the border regions with
command and control from a network of UAS ground control stations
across the country. Built by General
Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., Air and Marine’s new MQ-9 Predator
B Unmanned Aircraft System will support air and marine crews and Border
Patrol agents charged with securing the border. U.S.
Customs and Border Protection is the unified border agency within the
Department of Homeland Security charged with the management, control
and protection of our nation's borders at and between the official
ports of entry. CBP is charged with keeping terrorists and terrorist
weapons out of the country while enforcing hundreds of U.S. laws. |