Monday, January 17, 2011

Attack of the Drones

Unmanned aircraft are now a vital tool in war zones, but our skies could soon be buzzing with spy planes that feed information back to the police – and even the paparazzi



There is a second-and-a-half delay between the RAF operator pressing his button and the Hellfire rocket erupting from the aircraft he is controlling, circling in the sky above Afghanistan.
That's a long time in modern warfare, but the plane is an unmanned "drone" and its two-strong crew are 8,000 miles away at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada. Right now, the Reaper is being commanded from a console with twin video screens shaped to resemble a plane's cockpit.
The UK has five Reapers like this one operating in Afghanistan. With a wingspan of 66ft, they are 36ft long, reach a top speed of 250 knots and usually carry four Hellfire rockets and two laser-guided bombs. These Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) – which rely on fibre optic cables, European "upstations" and satellite links – are part of an international trend towards remote combat. RAF-controlled Reapers used their weapons in Afghanistan 123 times in the first 10 months of 2010.
British forces are also using smaller drones, such as Lockheed Martin's hand-launched Desert Hawk. The lightweight surveillance aircraft is flown by Royal Artillery controllers to provide army patrols with "over the hill" vision for improved reconaissance. Last summer the Ministry of Defence ordered £3m worth of an enhanced version that will give troops in Afghanistan "greater situational awareness" and upgraded "target acquisition" capabilities. On the US side, there were more than 100 CIA-led drone strikes in Pakistan last year and the Pentagon is about to deploy its intimidatingly named Gorgon Stare airborne surveillance system, a multi-image video device for tracking suspects across large areas.
But interest in UAVs is not limited to the military. Advances in remote control, digital imagery and miniaturised circuitry mean the skies might one day be full of commercial and security drones.
They're already being used by the UK police, with microdrones deployed to monitor the V festival in Staffordshire in 2007. Fire brigades send similar machines to hover above major blazes, feeding images back to their control rooms. And civilian spin-offs include cheaper aerial photography, airborne border patrols and safety inspections of high-rise buildings.
Despite this development, not everyone, even within the miltary, thinks that drones will eventually replace all other planes. Wing Commander Christopher Thirtle is responsible for the RAF's strategy on remotely piloted air systems (RPAS) — the term preferred in air force circles.
"Reapers will not replace Tornados. Human beings bring flexibility like no computers," he told an audience at the Royal Society in London.
It may be just as well: there has been international criticism because a significant number of those killed in drone attacks have been reported to be innocent tribesmen misidentified as al-Qaida leaders, or villagers caught up in targeted explosions.
But Thirtle insists the RAF is bound by international laws governing armed conflict – specifically the principle of attacks being discriminate and proportionate. "We have a targeting directive which sets down who are combatants and sets out rules on how we can engage [them]."
A ground pilot's extreme distance does not necessarily result in greater collateral damage, he argues. Aircrews in Kosovo conducted bombardments from 22,000ft. "If I was asked where I make the best decisions about people on the ground, then my clarity of thought is much more conducive at a ground control station [without] a 10lb flying helmet on my head."
Accustomed to the 20th-century gadgetry of cruise missiles, CCTV, satellite phones and radio-controlled model aeroplanes, technical experts and peace campaigners have only belatedly become alarmed by the combination of such capabilities.
The International Committee for Robot Arms Control (Icrac), founded in Britain in 2009, marked the beginning of a global – if small-scale – protest movement. The organisation held its first workshop in Berlin last summer and called for a ban on the "further development of armed autonomous robots", limits on numbers operated by any state and restrictions on the use of armed drones for "targeted killings in sovereign territories not at war".
Even the UN human rights special rapporteur, Philip Alston, has warned that US drone killings may violate international law. He has called on the US to explain the legal basis for its attacks. Others have taken direct action: peace protesters recently breached the gates of the Creech base – 14 of them were arrested for invading the site. Kathy Kelly, their spokeswoman, said: "We protested because . . . the US is, at an alarming rate, moving into robotic warfare, kind of a mission creep, that could lead us into perpetual war."
Opponents of drones fear they will lower the threshold for wars to start in places such as Yemen and Somalia, where the US is not involved in any formal conflict. Yemen was the site of one of the earliest CIA-co-ordinated Predator drone attacks on al-Qaida targets as early as 2002. There have been further drone strikes there since the failed Christmas Day attack on a transatlantic airliner. A fresh onslaught, it is suspected, is being planned in the wake of the recent Yemeni-based plot to destroy cargo planes.
Noel Sharkey, professor of robotics and artificial intelligence at Sheffield University, told the Royal Society meeting there are credible estimates that one in three casualties from drone attacks is a civilian. His chief anxiety is the development of "autonomous targeting", where unmanned planes are engineered to lock automatically onto what their onboard computers identify as the enemy. The military are keen on this because it would no longer have to worry about radio signals being jammed.
"There's a really big drive to get autonomy," he says. Manufacturers are even working on "swarms" of vehicles that can co-operate. "The big problem is there's no system capable of consistently distinguishing [between] targets. The Pentagon is funding research labs and saying these things can 'think': that's strong anthropomorphic language."
However, Thirtle is adamant we will never reach a Terminator-style situation where robots run out of control. "There will be an enduring need for a man in the [control] loop for the foreseeable future," he maintains.
The Oxford-based Fellowship of Reconciliation is "seriously concerned" the UK might be sanctioning a culture of "convenient killing . . . Our core concern is with 'PlayStation warfare', where the geographical and psychological distance between operator and target lowers the threshold for launching an attack."
Thirtle dismisses the accusation. "The people doing this are adults," he said. "They understand flying and the effects they are having on the ground. They are not remote. One pilot told me he had never felt more connected to the ground than in flying a Reaper."
But Steve Graham, professor of cities and society at Newcastle University, who studies urban battle grounds, warns that the US military's "technophilia" and "fantasies of omnipotence" blur the distinction between surveillance and killing. As he puts it in his book Cities Under Siege: "The possibility of deploying swarms of armed and unarmed robots to loiter persistently across regions of the world deemed trouble spots is clearly a good fit with the Pentagon's latest thinking surrounding the long war."
The growing popularity of UAVs can also be witnessed in the UK's congested skies. The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) has conducted two safety inquiries, the first of their kind involving UAVs, into the use of drones over Salisbury Plain following reports of near-collisions with helicopters. (It concluded that the ground operator avoided a risk of collision.)
Border patrols present a further opportunity for deployment. The US Customs and Border Protection Agency has announced that it is patrolling all 2,000 miles of the Mexican border with Predator drones equipped with night vision cameras. Frontex, the European border agency, has held a drone demonstration conference in Bulgaria, while the UK Border Agency says: "[We] do not rule out the use of drones in the future if they can be shown to provide a value for money increase in our border security."
At least four police forces – Essex, Merseyside, Staffordshire and the British Transport police – have bought or used microdrones. Last summer the Serious Organised Crime Agency published a tender notice requesting information on "a fully serviced, airborne, surveillance-ready platform for covert observation" provided by either drones or manned aircraft. And several fire brigades – including West Midlands and South Wales – regularly send up drones to check on the spread of blazes.
Commercial distributors and manufacturers are convinced drones will gradually displace expensive manned aircraft and expand into even more areas. Aviation experts already envisage a time when unmanned cargo planes, fitted with collision-avoidance detectors, circle the world.
Given this progress, it cannot be long before news organisations exploit microdrones to obtain picture exclusives: imagine aerial races between Hello! and OK! magazines. Last autumn a US academic claimed he was developing a "paparazzi drone". Ken Rinaldo of Ohio State University said it would have a lot of "flash and bling".
"UAVs will, to an extent, replace helicopters," believes Mark Lawrence, director of Air Robot UK. "Our 'air robots' cost £30,000 compared with £10m for a fully equipped modern helicopter. We have even been asked to put weapons on them, but I'm not interested in getting involved in that."
Alistair Fox, commerical director of Air Power Systems, which supplies microdrones to the fire service and the government's Health and Safety Laboratory, claims drones have "all sorts of commercial applications for safety inspections. With thermal imaging and air-sampling devices they could check for cannabis being grown under lamps in roof lofts." Another suggested use is perimeter patrols around prisons.
There are possible uses – drones have already been used for high-altitude research into hurricanes. And Israel lent the Chilean airforce several to inspect damage after the country's earthquake this spring. In Japan, drones are used to cropdust rice fields.
Many of the 70 permissions already granted by the CAA for drones to fly in UK airspace this year are thought to relate to civil engineering surveys or aerial photography companies. But the agency has warned: "In the wrong hands or used irresponsibly in built-up areas, or too close to other people or property, [drones] represent a very real safety risk."
The advent of effective "sense and avoid" systems would transform the technology, the CAA admits, opening up a future where unmanned UAVs could float safely above our heads. The first firm to design an acceptable system could make a fortune.
Part of the CAA's anxiety was due to postings on YouTube showing near–collisons in central London involving microdrones launched for amusement. Some of the latest models can be controlled by iPhones. Permission is now required to fly a drone "within 50 metres of a person, vehicle, vessel or structure" not under the control of the remote operator.
Even without these restrictions, it may be a while before our streets echo to the buzz of unmanned aircraft. John Moreland, general secretary of the Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Systems Association, the trade body that represents the industry in the UK, suspects that security surveillance at the 2012 Olympics will be conducted from an airship rather than highly mobile drones.
The CAA, he says, is unlikely to allow UAVs to operate so close to large crowds because of "reliability" issues. The east London site, he also points out, is too close to London City Airport.
One airshow enthusiast has nonetheless contacted the Guardian to say he is convinced he spotted a drone passing over the Olympic site. "Its length was about 8ft and its altitude between 300ft and 400ft," he said.
The authorities denied any knowledge of the flight. "The public perception of drones at the moment is that they are a little bit sinister," Moreland adds, "but the technology is becoming more widespread and there are lots of applications. Everyone is feeling their way forward."

Source: guardian.co.uk 

Saturday, January 15, 2011

TERRORISM

Abdel Nur Sentenced to 15 Years
*Nur Provided Material Support by Introducing Plotters to Violent Islamic Radical


The Eastern District of New York, U.S has sentenced Abdel Nur to 15 years in prison for providing material support to the conspiracy to attack John F. Kennedy International Airport in Queens, New York, by exploding fuel tanks and the fuel pipeline under the airport.
Nur believed that the attack would cause extensive damage to the airport and to the New York economy, as well as the loss of numerous lives.
The sentence was announced yesterday by Loretta E. Lynch, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in New York.
On June 29, 2010, Abdel Nur pled guilty to providing material support to the plot to attack JFK Airport. A federal jury subsequently convicted Abdul Kadir and Russell Defreitas in July 2010 of engaging in the terrorist conspiracy. On December 15, 2010, Kadir was sentenced to life in prison.
The court is scheduled to sentence Defreitas on February 17, 2011. A fourth alleged member of the plot, Kareem Ibrahim, faces trial on the same charges as Defreitas and Kadir.1
The evidence established that Nur, a citizen of Guyana, provided material support to the plot by attempting to locate al Qaeda explosives expert Adnan Gulshair el Shukrijumah, and by introducing the plotters and presenting the plot to Yasin Abu Bakr, the notorious leader of the Trinidadian militant group Jamaat Al Muslimeen, who had previously engaged in violent terrorist attacks aimed at overthrowing the government of Trinidad and Tobago.
The government's case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Marshall L.Miller, Jason A. Jones, Berit W. Berger, and Zainab Ahmad.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

NEW YEAR BONUS: AS FED.,STATES &LGs Share $1bILLION

* From Excess Crude Oil Account

In what could be considered as 'Manna from Heaven', the Economic Confidential magazine gathered how a total sum of $1 billion was shared from Excess Crude Oil Savings Account among the tiers of government on the eve of New Year 2011.
The commissioners of finance from states and their accountants general were suddenly invited to attend an Emergency Meeting of the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) on December 31, 2010 were the allocation was shared in a foreign currency, US Dollar. The meeting came about two week after the December Allocation of over N500billions were shared and just about two week to the next meeting in January 2011 for another monthly disbursement.
There are no convincing reasons for the dollarized allocation when the country’s legal tender is Naira. Apart from the constitutional implication of promoting a foreign currency against local legal tenders which could trigger off inflation and turn Naira notes to worthless tissues, the release of the amount few weeks to primaries of political parties in Nigeria called for concern.
At the meeting, it learnt that the governors mounted pressure on the President to release the money so they can "tackle the huge infrastructure deficit" in their states.
The Chairman of the FAAC who is also Finance Minister of State, Hajiya Yabawa Wabi, said the fund was disbursed for beneficiaries to execute capital projects.
From the table of figures obtained by the Economic Confidential, the highest recipients of the dollar rain in the eve of the new year are from the oil producing states with Bayelsa surprisingly leading the pack as it received $47.1mn, followed by Akwa Ibom $43.6mn, Rivers $40.6mn, and Delta $33.0mn. The highest recipients from non-oil –producing states are Kano $20mn, Lagos $15mn and Katsina $15mn
The lowest recipients as revealed in the table below are Ebonyi $8mn, Gombe $8.3mn, Nasarawa $8.3mn, and Ekiti $8.4mn. The Economic Confidential can also confirm other disbursements from this special dollar allocation in December 2010: Federal Government $458mn, and FCT Councils $1.5mn. 
1
S/NO
2
STATES
3
FED. & STATES
ALLOCATION
4
TOTAL DERIVATION OIL & GAS
5
TOTAL
(3+4)
6
STATE NET
7
LG NET ALLOCATION
8
TOTAL
(5+6)
S/NO
=$==$==$==$==$==$=
1ABIA5,603,018.131,302,652.266,905,670.396,905,670.393,737,246.2810,642,916.671
2ADAMAWA6,255,041.66-6,255,041.666,255,041.664,809,472.1311,064,513.792
3AKWA IBOM6,327,961.3330,937,340.2037,265,301.5337,265,301.536,342,726.2543,608,027.783
4ANAMBRA6,318,075.08-6,318,075.086,318,075.084,767,638.6411,085,713.724
5BAUCHI7,327,842.42-7,327,842.427,327,842.425,514,081.0812,841,923.505
6BAYELSA5,018,113.0540,102,560.8145,120,673.8645,120,673.862,028,712.7047,149,386.556
7BENUE6,754,525.03-6,754,525.036,754,525.035,606,701.1112,361,226.147
8BORNO7,452,689.83-7,452,689.837,452,689.836,443,638.9713,896,328.808
9CROSS RIVER5,871,901.641,095,803.806,967,705.446,967,705.444,004,274.3310,971,979.779
10DELTA6,324,209.1921,438,360.9727,762,570.1627,762,570.165,292,603.4433,055,173.6010
11EBONYI5,185,672.11-5,185,672.115,185,672.112,852,773.388,038,445.4811
12EDO5,902,555.801,277,260.277,179,816.077,179,816.074,007,836.6211,187,652.6912
13EKITI5,230,829.37-5,230,829.375,230,829.373,260,183.618,491,012.9813
14ENUGU5,901,631.39-5,901,631.395,901,631.393,862,697.939,764,329.3114
15GOMBE5,517,765.50-5,547,765.505,547,765.502,818,607.948,366,373.4415
16IMO6,300,662.471,261,327.087,561,989.557,561,989.555,592,903.5113,154,893.0616
17JIGAWA6,120,711.29-6,920,711.296,920,711.295,867,812.7512,788,524.0417
18KADUNA7,887,612.99-7,887,612.997,887,612.996,293,616.8414,181,229.8318
19KANO9,885,629.66-9,885,629.669,885,629.6610,328,704.1720,214,333.8319
20KATSINA7,517,991.79-7,517,991.797,517,991.797,551,386.7715.069,378.5720
21KEBBI6,288,360.38-6,288,360.386,288,360.384,690,724.4510,979,084.8321
22KOGI6,272,665.17-6,272,665.176,272,665.174,861,782.1911,134,447.3622
23KWARA5,716,082.56-5,716,082.565,716,082.563,733,725.359,449,807.9123
24LAGOS8,929,906.54-8,929,906.548,929,906.546,273,965.1815,203,871.7224
25NASSARAWA5,355,681.88-5,355,681.885,355,681.882,987,781.168,343,463.0425
26NIGER7,314,722.25-7,314,722.257,314,722.256,054,616.3213,369,338.5826
27OGUN6,113,363.41-6,113,363.416,113,363.414,480,296.7010,593,660.1127
28ONDO5,862,791.224,178,158.0110,040,949.2310,040,949.234,135,547.9614,176,497.1928
29OSUN5,798,203.50-5,798,203.505,798,203.505,636,008.3011,434,211.8029
30OYO7,305,036.20-7,305,036.207,305,036.207,206,970.4814,512,006.6830
31PLATEAU6,134,768.73-6,134,768.736,134,768.734,125,364.9110,260,133.6431
32RIVERS6,858,507.7628,406,536.6035,265,044.3635,265,044.365,401,971.0440,667,015.3932
33SOKOTO6,521,755.54-6,521,755.546,521,755.545,178,330.9411,700,086.4833
34TARABA6,177,377.31-6,177,377.316,177,377.314,122,044.1910,299,421.5034
35YOBE6,130,849.01-6,130,849.016,130,849.013,997,377.9910,128,227.0035
36ZAMFARA6,149,488.81-6,149,488.816,149,488.813,752,825.689,902,314.4836
37FCT-ABUJA--0.000.001,597,048.731,597,048.7337








SUB TOTAL
232,464,000.00130,000,000.00362,464,000.00362,464,000.00179,220,000.00541,684,000.00
40FGN458,316,000.000.00458,316,000.00458,316,000.00458,316,000.0040
GRAND TOTAL690,780,000.00130,000,000,000.00820,780,000.00820,780,000.00179,220,000.001,000,000,000.00
Source: Economic Confidential

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