Joint-service focus shapes UAV roadmap.

AuthorTiron, Roxana
PositionArmy Unmanned Air

The Pentagon is working on a new roadmap for unmanned aerial vehicles to accommodate the rapid growth in UAV programs seen in the past several years. The document will be updated by the middle of 2005, said Dyke Weatherington, deputy of the UAV planning task force at the office of the secretary of defense.

One aspect of the roadmap will be the working relationship between the Pentagon and the Department of Homeland Security, which is planning to spin off military UAV developments for domestic defense.

As it rewrites the roadmap, OSD must coordinate with all the services, said Weatherington.

"The department is encouraging, cajoling, forcing the services and agencies to work together more closely in that category called joint programs," said Weatherington at a conference of the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International.

These programs are the Joint Unmanned Combat Air System, a Navy-Air Force project overseen by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Unmanned Combat Armed Rotorcraft and the Micro Air Vehicle, both Army-DARPA ventures.

In the 2005 budget, the department was able to gain transitional funding for J-UCAS, formerly known as Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle, a program spearheaded by both the Air Force and the Navy.

J-UCAS will develop a combat unmanned aerial vehicle, to demonstrate its ability to perform suppression of enemy air defenses, surveillance and precision strike. An operational assessment is scheduled for 2007.

The vehicles developed by the two contractors for UCAV--Boeing and Northrop Grumman--already have had their first flights last year.

Meanwhile, the micro air vehicle is in the spotlight, "because there is a lot of enhanced capability in that class of vehicles," he said.

The department has seen an explosion in the need for small UAVs, said Weatherington, and recently submitted the procurement of another 1,700 UAVs, he said. Specifically, these are the Army's Raven and the Marine Corps' Dragon Eye.

"There are also other systems-they go directly to troops on the ground in contact with enemy forces and they provide an organic capability that the tactical commander does not...

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