US Navy to attempt first drone landing on aircraft carrier

The US navy will attempt to land the experimental X-47B drone on an aircraft carrier for the first time since its May launch. A successful landing would mean the US can launch drones overseas without needing to use bases in other countries.

The unmanned X-47B aircraft, which is a prototype drone the
size of a fighter jet developed by the American defense
technology company Northrop Grumman, is due to take off from a
naval air station in Maryland on Wednesday. The drone will then
try to land on the USS George H.W. Bush off the coast of
Virginia.

The drone will attempt a maneuver known as “arrested landing,”
which involves catching a wire on board the ship with a deployed
tail hook, bringing the aircraft to a quick stop.

The task is considered to be one of the most challenging for a
human pilot, due to constant movement of the ship and the
turbulent air around it. The procedure will be performed
exclusively by the drone’s built-in computer program. 

This May 13, 2013 US Navy handout image shows an X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System (UCAS) demonstrator being towed into the hangar bay of the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) during operations in the Atlantic Ocean. (AFP Photo/US Navy)

If the drone fails to catch the wire, it is said to be able to
perform a touch-and-go stunt to try to land again. The X-47B made
nine such maneuvers in May, when it was successfully catapulted
from an aircraft carrier for the first time.

The US navy saluted the drone’s test, with Rear Admiral Mat
Winter calling it “historic event” worth mentioning in
“history books.” However, the drone’s capabilities have
raised concerns over possible expansion of Washington’s
controversial overseas drone program.

A successful launch of the drone prototype would prompt the Navy
to go ahead with its plans to order a fleet of carrier-based
drones. According to Winter — the US Navy’s program executive
officer for unmanned aviation and strike weapons — such drones
could begin operating by 2020.

It would also mean the US would soon be capable of launching
drone missions overseas without the need to obtain permission to
use other countries’ ground bases. Such missions could vary from
around-the-clock surveillance to targeted strikes, as the $1.4
billion X-47B is said to be able to carry missiles.

This May 14, 2013 US Navy handout image shows an X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System (UCAS) demonstrator flying over the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Bush (CVN 77) during operations in the Atlantic Ocean. (AFP Photo/US Navy)

According to the Navy, new generation drones would be at least
three times the range of the notorious Predators, while having
the capability to carry out programmed missions without human
intervention. They would rely on advanced flight control software
and precision GPS navigation, but retain the option of a remote
control by a human operator when needed.

The prototype X-47B can already boast reaching an altitude of
12km, and is said to be able to travel in a range of about
4000km. The US Navy plans to demonstrate that the drone can be
refueled in flight, which would increase its range even further.

The new drone and the research around it have already come under
criticism amid concerns that deadly attacks could get out of hand
without a pilot to control the aircraft.

Human Rights Watch has particularly protested the development of
drones that carry weapons and are fully autonomous.

“We’re saying you need to draw the line when you have a fully
autonomous system that is weaponized. We’re saying you must have
meaningful human control over key battlefield decisions of who
lives and who dies. That should not be left up to the weapons
system itself,”
Steve Goose, director of the arms division at
Human Rights Watch, said in a statement.

Maintenence personel check a Predator drone operated by U.S. Office of Air and Marine (OAM), before its surveillance flight near the Mexican border on March 7, 2013 from Fort Huachuca in Sierra Vista, Arizona. (John Moore/Getty Images/AFP)

The UN Human Rights Commission has published a report calling for
a worldwide moratorium on the “testing, production, assembly,
transfer, acquisition, deployment and use”
of autonomous
weapons systems until an international conference can develop
rules for their use. The systems, which are referred to as
“lethal autonomous robotics” (LARs) in the report,
“should not have the power of life and death over human
beings,”
said Christof Heyns, the UN’s Special Rapporteur on
Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions.

Washington’s use of Reaper and Predator drones in targeted
strikes in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Yemen has been a
subject of international criticism amid reports of widespread
civilian casualties. Both US and foreign critics have said that
the controversial drone program is conducted with inadequate
oversight.

In May, President Obama announced plans to scale back drone
strikes in foreign lands, only deploying the unmanned aircraft
when a threat was “continuing and imminent.”

But UN special rapporteur on counterterrorism and human rights,
Ben Emmerson, said that any justification cited in international
law by US officials for the use of lethal drone strikes is not
accepted outside the United States. Emmerson, who has been
investigating the US drone program since January, also said that
the American monopoly on unmanned aircraft technology is
“over,” and the US should engage in “a dialogue” on
the international legal framework surrounding the use of drones.

Republished with permission from: RT