Revealed: details of British drone attacks & plans to purchase more Reapers

Answering Questions: Dr Liam Fox

Catching up on Hansard, have just noticed that last week Secretary of State for Defence Liam Fox revealed new details  about British Drone attacks in Afghanistan in response to written question from SNP MP Angus Robertson:

26 Oct 2010 : Column 173W

Angus Robertson: To ask the Secretary of State for Defence how many missions the MQ-9 Reaper has flown in Afghanistan since May 2008; and how many of those missions involved the release of each type of weapon. [18015]

Dr Fox: The primary role of the UK Reaper Remotely Piloted Air System is Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance. Since October 2007, it has flown 1,344 sorties and since May 2008 employed 36 laser guided bombs and 84 Hellfire missiles in support of UK and coalition forces in Afghanistan.

A couple of days later, in response to a question from former Labour Defence Secretary, Bob Ainsworth,  MoD Procurement Minister Peter Luff revealed that the UK plans to purchase five more Reaper drones from the US  (28 Oct 2010 : Column 421W)

Mr Ainsworth: To ask the Secretary of State for Defence (1) how many unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) he expects to order in the Spending Review period; and by what date he expects such vehicles to be in service; [20259]

(2) how many new unmanned aerial vehicles he expects to order; and what timescale he has set for their entry into service. [20418]

Peter Luff: The Ministry of Defence has in recent weeks placed an order for a further 100 Mini Unmanned Air Systems (UAS) Desert Hawk III Air Vehicles to sustain the capability which has been supporting our troops in theatre since 2007. These are expected to be delivered in 2011-12. Additionally, we plan to order and receive up to five additional Reaper remotely piloted aircraft during the Spending Review period. Consideration of our requirement for future persistent armed surface surveillance is in its early stages. A remotely piloted system is one of the potential options to deliver this capability.

Maybe we are entering a new period of government openness on the use of drones – or perhaps its just a co-incidence that the release of information came in the same week… but it is curious…..

UK Has Five Reapers in Service: RAF staff officer speaks about Reaper operations

British Reaper in Afghanistan

Wing Commander Chris Thirtle, from the Remotely Piloted Air Systems Strategy unit at the Ministry of Defence (MoD), confirmed last night that the UK currently has five Reaper drones in active service. Speaking at Science Policy Centre event at the Royal Society in central London, Chris Thirtle said he could not confirm  for security reasons whether the Reapers were all in Afghanistan.  This may simply be the UK military secrecy culture in operation or could perhaps suggest that Reapers are also operating in other locations such as Iraq. 

Wing Commander Chris Thirtle spoke about the use of Reaper drones in Afghanistan although he refused to use the term ‘drone’ arguing that as Reapers were remotely piloted’ they should not be called drones. 

The focus of the event was on whether increasing autonomy in military systems should be allowed or controlled.  Chris Thirtle repeated current UK policy that there is a ‘man-in the-loop’ with regard to decisions about whether to launch weapons but argued that “there are limited circumstances where autonomous systems could be used.” 

Chris Thirtle also refuted the suggestion that drone operators are susceptible to a ‘playstation mentality’ arguing that there was little or no difference from launching weapons from an aircraft  a few thousand feet from a target instead of 8,000 miles away. Indeed, he suggested that the ‘persistence’ of observation allowed to Reaper operators gave greater time for consideration about whether to launch weapons or not. Pressed about the recent US military inquiry which found that a drone operator had ‘played down’ the prescence of civilians in a convoy leading to 23 civilians death, Wing Commander said that was a US operation and he couldn’t really comment.

As is well know the British Reapers  are currently operated by 39 Squadron currently based at Creech AFB in Nevada.  I asked Wing Commander Thirtle  after the event whether about rumours that 39 Squadron were coming home to Lincolnshire.  He said that although the RAF had made the ‘business case’ to have ten Reapers, and at that level it might make sense for the Reaper Squadron to be based in the UK, the  question of the number of Reapers to be procured was now part of the Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) and a decision had yet to be made.  In addition, Chris Thirtle stated that there was ‘synergy’ to be gained from having the US and UK Reaper being operated from the same location.   On a side note, in response to a question from one of the other presentations at the event, Professor Juergen Altmann, from Technische Universität in Germany about whether the Reapers had been registered under the Conventional Forces Europe (CFE) Treaty, Chris Thirtle stated that as the Reapers were not operating in the area covered by the Treaty they had not been registered.

While many questions about UK Reaper drone operations remain unanswered the presentation by Wing Commander Thirtle was helpful and a hopeful sign that the UK MoD may be willing to be more accountable to the public about UK drone operations

Death from the skies: 100 and still droning on

This weekend saw four CIA drone strikes in Pakistan with a death toll estimated to be around 35.   This has brought the number of drone strikes in Pakistan since Nobel Peace Prize winning President Barack Obama came to power to 100.  The Guardian reports that British Reapers have been used 97 times to launch attacks in Afghanistan since 2008.

The Guardian information comes in their reporting of the 90,000 secret US military files, released via  Wikileaks,  that detail military operations between 2004 and 2009 in Afghanistan.   The files can be downloaded from Wikileaks here.

This report details an armed strike by a Reaper drone which resulted in two Afghan children being wounded.

This report details how a Reaper continues to attack people fleeing from its inital attack.  

This report details how a Reaper was assigned to bomb 3 people believed to be planting an IED.

No doubt as people trawl through the thousands of files, more details of how drones are operating in Afghanistan will emerge.

Skynet 5: Connecting the Drones

Whilst it is relatively easy to build, launch and fly a drone, controlling them over great distances and then launching missiles and bombs requires a key element that is available to relatively few forces – military satellites.  

The UK has three military hardened Skynet 5 satellites in geostationary orbit 40,000km above the earth’s surface which relay communications between  headquarters in the UK and British forces deployed on operations overseas.  A fourth Skynet 5 satellite will be launched in 2013.  

The satellites enable  RAF pilots sitting in their base in the Nevada desert to fly Reaper drones and launch their missiles over Afghanistan.  Via Skynet 5’s high-bandwidth connection, information and video from the Reapers over Afghanistan is beamed to Creech USAF base in Nevada and to the UK. 

Skynet 5 however is not owned by the Ministry of Defence, but by a private company called Paradigm Secure Communication.  In 2003 the Ministry of Defence signed a £3.6bn deal with Paradigm Secure Communication for provision of all worldwide satellite communications services to UK Armed Forces up to 2018 (later amended to 2020 and then this year extended to 2022).  This Private Finance Initiative (PFI), one of the most expensive ever signed by the MoD, is paid for in part by selling spare bandwidth to other military forces.

1. Skynet 5 enables satellite communications for UK forces
2. The largely autonomous satellites talk to two UK ground stations
3. Skynet 5 supports high-bandwidth applications, such as UAV video
4. Antennas and terminals are being upgraded to make best use of Skynet
5. New battlefield networks, such as Cormorant, feed into the system
6. System gives commanders access to more information, faster

 

Paradigm Secure Communications is a wholly owned subsidiary of EADS (the European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company), one of the world largest military companies.  Within the company structure, Paradigm is part of Astrium Services, which delivers space-based services to military and government users. Astrium Services owns 75% of Milsat Services which also provides military satellite communication services to both the German armed forces and the French Navy.

While British Reaper drones are flying over Afghanistan and controlled by pilots in the Nevada desert, the Skynet system is operated out of several locations in the UK.   The system has two satellite ground stations, one in Hampshire (Oakhanger) and one in Wiltshire (Colerne).  However Paradigm operates the Skynet 5 satellites from a dedicated centre in Hawthorn, Wiltshire, very close to the MoD’s Defence Communications and Services Agency (DCSA) Global Operations and Security Control Centre at Corsham.

Channel Four News video on armed drones

Following up Philip Alston’s report to the UN Human Rights Council, Channel Four have screened a long piece on US armed drones tonight. Sarah Smith, Channel Four’s US Correspondent visits Creech airbase and interviews drone pilots. The report is very focused on US drones – barely even mentions the fact thatthe UK also operate armed drones in Afghanistan.  However it does have TV footage of the result of drone attacks in Pakistan and says that the secrecy and unaccountabilty of the drone attacks make them “illegal”.