This is the second try at an armed UAV. The first was the Dark Star (crashed at Edwards during testing). The predators have proven this concept with
hellfire missiles and 500 lbs bombs (testing laser guided bombs now).
Originally posted by American Mad Man
My question is are we ready to trust remote control to carry out our missions? Isnt there a high probability that electronic warfare would prevent comunication with the plane, therefore rendering it useless?
Originally posted by huskers
This is the second try at an armed UAV. The first was the Dark Star (crashed at Edwards during testing). The predators have proven this concept with hellfire missiles and 500 lbs bombs (testing laser guided bombs now).
Originally posted by American Mad Man
...was the dark star A to G only or did it have A to A abilities as well?
Any chance these things could carry anti air weapons, or will it be strictly a ground attack platform?
Operational Mission and Mission Task Concepts
The study group assessed UAV contributions to Air Force missions and promulgated 22 missions/tasks to which UAVs can contribute. The following nine missions are representative of UAV mission needs and serve as a context in which to address technology opportunities. In no particular order, they are:
Counter Weapons of Mass Destruction
Theater Missile Defense-Ballistic Missiles/ Cruise Missiles
Fixed Target Attack
Moving Target Attack
Jamming
Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses
Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance
Communications/Navigation Support
Air-to-Air