Wanted: one unarmed aerial vehicle; must be able to take off from ships.

AuthorMagnuson, Stew
PositionSECURITY BEAT: HOMELAND DEFENSE BRIEFS

The Coast Guard is in the market for a new vertical unmanned aerial vehicle to fly off the deck of its new national security cutters.

It will take a look at any UAV that meets its requirements, but it has to be fully tested and ready to go into production before the service will consider it, said Rear Adm. Gary Blore, the service's assistant commissioner for acquisition.

"We really need to see somebody else to develop the product and have it technologically ready, and production ready for manufacturing. And that's what we're kind of waiting for," he told reporters.

The Coast Guard ended its contract with Bell Helicopters, which was tasked with developing a UAV that could take off and land while the ships were at sea. Bell and the Coast Guard have said the halt in development was a matter of funding, not for any technical challenges.

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A UAV is needed in the Integrated Deepwater System to provide long-range over the horizon intelligence, reconnaissance and surveillance. Conventional helicopters, which will be used to provide these services until an aerial drone is deployed, cover about 9,000 square nautical miles. An unmanned aircraft can cover up to 56,000 square nautical miles and do so at a much lower operating cost.

The catch is that the Coast Guard will not pony up any developmental funds to help a potential manufacturer make the aircraft.

Deepwater is no longer into the technology development business, Blore said.

It wasn't always so. The program initially attempted to design its fast response cutters with composite hulls, which is a technology that didn't...

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