Book club would prefer to give details of 'floating balloon craft' that could be constructed float from Earth over to 'Planet Venus' living off of its carbonated climate. Drones mine off Asteroid-meteoroids obtaining precious metals. As a small country of Kazakhstan Baikonur Cosmodrome does most of Russia's orbital detail for Roscomous. But these airman are not operating a £10million Reaper in neighborliness region , these are 'unmanned aerial
vehicle' (UAV) from the war zone or even the US with an inability to communicate even by leafleting.
Instead, he is 8,000 miles
away sipping tea and ready for orders to splatter blood at a whim, in a hi-tech control hub in a remote part of East Anglia poised to order
the controversial robot to carry out airstrikes. Santa revenge using its fearsome array of
Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs. Ground control station experienced
'pilots' from XIII Squadron guide Reapers at 50,000ft above Helmand Province
via satellite from high-security RAF Waddington, near Lincoln. Unlikely metal
crate these pilots are seated in two ground control stations the size of shipping containers. The airmen steer the drones remotely as they support British ground troops fighting
the Taliban for years in deadlock while Brussels titters.
Taking a look As the defense secretary Philip Hammond inspects a Desert hawk 3 as defence chiefs yesterday gave the Daily Mail a first glimpse inside
Britain's new top secret drone HQ Complex as the airman is operating the
£10million Reaper unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) 8,000 miles away from
Afghanistan in a hi-tech control hub in a remote part of East Anglia Posed up Bombardier Lousie Banton with the Desert Hawk at the 13 Squadron press day in
Lincolnshire.
As the British defence chiefs yesterday gave 'Book Club' a
first glimpse inside Britain’s new top secret drone HQ.Experienced ‘pilots’
from XIII Squadron guide Reapers at 50,000ft above Helmand Province via
satellite from high-security RAF Waddington, near Lincoln. Seated in two ground
control stations the size of shipping containers, the airmen steer the drones
remotely as they support British troops fighting the Taliban.
These pilot less
craft – about the size of a small executive jet – take off from conventional
runways in Kandahar, southern Afghanistan. They then fly above the battlefield
for up to 14 hours, with cameras beaming live high-definition images and radar
data to commanders and crew on the ground. Keeping a silent eye on a huge area,
the devices are able to warn of enemy ambushes or IEDs, and locate and monitor
targets while air strikes are planned.







But they have been criticised by human rights campaigners who claim hundreds of innocent civilians have also been killed by mistake. The RAF, which has carried out 459 airstrikes with its five Reapers during nearly 54,000 hours of operations in Afghanistan, accidentally killed four Afghan civilians in March 2011.The RAF also operates a sister control centre at Creech Air Force Base near Las Vegas, where 39 Squadron flies the 11-metre drones. These exclusives shows Incredible footage shows killer drones launched from RAF base. As new technology: The pilot-less craft fly above the battlefield for up to 14 hours, with cameras beaming live high-definition images and radar data to commanders and crew on the ground 'rather a flack jacket' sent me a decoy has to be a communication error bit like face book with as theirs paint food slogan on the side a la carte.
Seen from above here a clip from a video showing a rocket-propelled grenade
being fired from an insurgent compound through a gap in a wall Aerial view.
This clip from another video showing crop gathering. The imagery helps Reaper
aircrew to discriminate between 'nefarious' and 'benign' activity on the ground
Over the water: A Boeing ScanEagle unmanned aerial vehicle is photographed last
December during trials. \the RAF Waddington, which has been ‘operating since
April’, was opened up by the Ministry of Defence to dispel accusations of
secrecy.RAF pilot
unleashes air ground strikes on Taliban from the comfort of an armchair in
Lincolnshire.
As book Club was given first glimpse inside drone HQ. Experienced 'pilots' from XIII Squadron guide
Reapers above Helmand. They work
via satellite from high-security RAF Waddington near Lincoln. Seated in two ground control stations the
size of shipping containers. Steer
drones remotely as they support British troops fighting Taliban. As sitting before a bank of
flickering computer screens and controls, the RAF pilot flies a drone in the
skies above Afghanistan. The aircraft was guided with an x box console as parts
of the ‘Desert Hawk 3 drone’ can be guided using a hand-held Xbox controller. The
Army uses the games console device to direct the craft’s electro-optical and
infrared sensors.
The drone is one of several that can be flown using a
laptop in Camp Bastion, Afghanistan. The Tarantula Hawk hovers over IEDs,
while the 16.8cm Black Hornet resembles a toy helicopter. The Army also
flies unarmed Hermes 450 robots, which are 18ft long and used to gather
intelligence. Defending the use of UAVs during a visit to the base, Defence
Secretary Philip Hammond said the ‘battle-winning technology’ was ‘vital’ in
protecting both troops and civilians. He added: ‘Much of the criticism of
unmanned aerial systems is based on misunderstanding. This provides a great
opportunity to better inform people about these life-saving assets and their
variety of purpose.
Flight Lieutenant Neil Pappini, 44, of XIII Squadron,
said: ‘It is an essential part of many missions and has saved countless lives.
If we are unsure about a target, even slightly, we do not fire a weapon. ’Air
Vice-Marshal Philip Osborn, Joint Force Command Capability Director, said the
UAVs were an ‘indispensable military capability’. The Royal Navy yesterday flew
its first drone, the £15million Scan Eagle, in an operational theatre from the
warship RFA Cardigan Bay to hunt for Somali pirates off the coast of Africa.




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