What's new

‘Just a matter of time’ until Iran arms surveillance drones near US ships

ashok321

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 1, 2010
Messages
17,942
Reaction score
4
Country
Canada
Location
Malaysia
‘Just a matter of time’ until Iran arms surveillance drones near US ships


XPSJRFJXNJAL5KKG3GU3G5LJWA.jpg



ABOARD THE USS NIMITZ — High above the Arabian Gulf, an Iranian drone crosses the path of American fighter jets lining up to land on the U.S. Navy carrier Nimitz.

The drone buzzes across the sky at least a mile above the massive ship and is spotted by the fighters. It is unarmed.

But for the senior Navy commanders on the ship, the presence of the enemy drone so close is worrying. Their biggest fear is the surveillance aircraft will start carrying weapons, posing a more direct threat to U.S. vessels transiting one of the world’s most significant strategic and economic international waterways.


“It’s just a matter of time before we see that,” said Navy Rear Adm. Bill Byrne, commander of the carrier strike group that includes the Nimitz. He said the Iranian drone activity has “generated a lot of discussion” and was becoming an increasingly pressing matter of concern.

If, at some point, Byrne believes a drone is threatening his ship, he and his staff would have to carefully proceed through the required responses — efforts at communication, sounding the horn, firing flares and warning shots, and flying a helicopter close to the unmanned vehicle. If all those efforts fail and he still perceives a threat, Byrne said it would be his duty, his “responsibility,” to shoot down the Iranian drone.

So far, it hasn’t come to that. But the drones have become an even more dangerous security risk as U.S. carriers in the Arabian Gulf like the Nimitz play a key role in Iraq and Syria. Planes from these ships are regularly flying to each country to bomb Islamic State militants and other targets. From the Nimitz alone, U.S. fighter jets flew missions resulting in at least 350 bombs being dropped on ISIS militants just in the last month.

Iran has routinely challenged U.S. ships and aircraft across the Gulf, asserting at times that the entire waterway is its territory. Navy commanders say Iran’s unpredictable behavior is the biggest safety hazard.

“Iranians don’t always follow the rules,” Byrne said. “There is a well-established set of norms, standards and laws. They don’t tend to follow them.”


To counter the threat, Pentagon experts are searching for new ways to deter, defeat or disable the drones. According to Byrne and Cmdr. Dave Kurtz, the Nimitz’s executive officer, Iranian drones fly over the carrier strike group almost daily.

They said the danger is that as the F/A-18 fighters return from their missions in Iraq and Syria, they circle overhead, lining up for their turn to land on the carrier. Even if the Iranian drones are only meant to annoy, their buzzing across the American flight paths risks an accident.

Up in the carrier’s control room, a book on Iranian naval and maritime forces sits above the radar screen. Commanders on the ship announce when a drone appears. Then they go through a careful, planned response of attempted radio calls and warnings.

Gen. Joseph Votel, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, visited the Nimitz on Thursday, also stopping on the nearby guided-missile cruiser Vella Gulf. The drone, he said, also flew over that ship.

“The proliferation of drones is a real challenge,” said Votel, who was finishing his 10-day trip to the Middle East and Afghanistan. “It’s growing exponentially.”



Speaking with traveling reporters, Votel said the Pentagon has sought to devise more high-tech ways to handle the drones through the Joint Improvised-Threat Defeat Organization, originally set up in 2006 to counter improvised explosive devices used by insurgents in Iraq and Afghanistan to kill and maim American troops.

Much as it did with that decade-old roadside bomb battle, the organization now focuses on how to deal with Iran’s drones, Votel said. He didn’t provide details, but he acknowledged that U.S. cyber capabilities could be used to defeat a drone or the network controlling it.

The military is training troops on drone response, he said. But right now, said Byrne, they’re still following their normal procedures. And he still hasn’t been forced to shoot one down.

Byrne described how a helicopter from the Nimitz flew by the drone to ensure it wasn’t weaponized. In the month the Nimitz has been in the Gulf, efforts to speak with the drone operators have been hit or miss, he said.


US Navy releases video of encounter with Iranian patrol boat
The U.S. Navy released video Tuesday of a close encounter between an Iranian and U.S. Navy patrol boats, which prompted the patrol craft Thunderbolt to fire warning shots.

By: David B. Larter
“Sometimes they answer, sometimes they don’t,” he said, echoing experiences American forces have had with small Iranian fast boats that pose a similar threat of coming too close by sea.

When the Iranians do answer, Byrne said, they often “challenge our assertion that they are flying into danger.” The drones fly out of airfields up and down the Iranian coast, mainly watching U.S. ships and taking photos.

On Thursday, the Nimitz was about 40 miles from the Iranian coast, halfway between the Islamic Republic and Bahrain.
 
well I'm sure of one things no Iranian drone can fly to Gulf or even Arabian Gulf
Gulf is another name for Gulf of Mexico and this is Arabian Gulf
egypt_map.jpg

Just look under Alexandria and you'll see it, Its written with its Arabic name as "Khalij Al Arabia"

also if you are a history buff look at maps such as this one you see that in old times they called "Red Sea" as "Arabian Gulf"
2045AG.jpg


and I assure you no Iranian drone come near any USA ship in that body of water
 
well I'm sure of one things no Iranian drone can fly to Gulf or even Arabian Gulf
Gulf is another name for Gulf of Mexico and this is Arabian Gulf
egypt_map.jpg

Just look under Alexandria and you'll see it, Its written with its Arabic name as "Khalij Al Arabia"

also if you are a history buff look at maps such as this one you see that in old times they called "Red Sea" as "Arabian Gulf"
2045AG.jpg


and I assure you no Iranian drone come near any USA ship in that body of water

These comments are addressed to the author Lolita baldor

I understand your confusion. When The Persians and the Greeks were expanding philosophy and mathematics and mapping all of the known world at that time , it was called the PERSIAN GULF. Your tribal sub-human Beast-inbreds still had not learnt to read or right and were busy raping children and camels.
 
Last edited:
I understand your confusion. When The Persians and the Greeks were expanding philosophy and mathematics and mapping all of the known world at that time , it was called the PERSIAN GULF. Your tribal sub-human Beast-inbreds still had not learnt to read or right and were busy raping children and camels.
WTF dude
@JEskandari is in our side.
you make mistake
 
Did this guy fire a Simorgh missile at his own side?
:-)
all of Iranian regardless of their sect and origin are in same side specially in the case of Persian gulf.
he did not make mistake but I thought mistakenly that he addressed wrong person.

Trump will come after all of Islamic countries and now is turn of Pakistan. This is Wage of dancing for Americans and bending toward Americans. Unlike most of Islamic countries Iran never ever bend toward any super power.
American like it or not we are above them with our drones.

My comments were addressed to the author Lolita Baldor not to Eskandari
Hmmm
my bad dude
 

Back
Top Bottom