Singer on Drone Defense

Singer (one of the smartest folks in DC) does a good job outlining the threat of cheap and plentiful drones:

Today, the lag time between the development of military technology and its widespread dissemination is measured in months, not years. Industrial farmers around the world already use aerial drones to dust their crops with pesticides. And a recent U.S. Air Force study concluded that similar systems are “an ideal platform” for dirty bombs containing radioactive, chemical, or biological weapons—the type of WMDs that terrorists are most likely to obtain. Such technologies have the potential to strengthen the hand not only of Al Qaeda 2.0, but also of homegrown terror cells and disaffected loners like Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. As one robotics expert told me, for less than $50,000 “a few amateurs could shut down Manhattan.”

However, his prescription for a defensive strategy is far from optimal:

To succeed in this revolution, we need something many competitor countries already have: a national robotics strategy. That means graduate scholarships, lab funding, and a Silicon Valley–style corridor for corporate development. Otherwise we are destined to depend on the expertise of others. Already a growing number of American defense and technology firms rely on hardware from China and software from India, a clear security concern.

The solution isn’t a new Manhattan project. It’s in widespread tinkering.



-Shlok
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27. February 2010 by Shlok Vaidya
Categories: Thinking | Tags: , | 2 comments

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