Monday, December 22, 2014

(#82-1) December 22 2014. “The whole art of war consists in getting at what is on the other side of the hill.” The Duke of Wellington.

YES

VICTOR - SHOT BY MICK - ENHANCED

I’M AN AIRSHIP FAN—AND DELIGHTED TO SEE AIRSHIPS FLYING IN ANY FORM. THIS ONE IS ONLY AN AERSTAT—IN THAT IT IS TETHERED TO THE GROUND—BUT, AT LEAST, IT IS FLYING (OR WILL BE VERY SOON)

This is what Stars & Stripes says.

When fully deployed next spring, the system will feature two, unmanned, helium-filled aerostats, tethered to concrete pads 4 miles apart. They'll float at an altitude of 10,000 feet, about one-third as high as a commercial airliner's cruising altitude.

One balloon will continuously scan in a circle from upstate New York to North Carolina's Outer Banks, and as far west as central Ohio. The other will carry precision radar to help the military on the ground to pinpoint targets.

The aerostats won't carry weapons, military officials said. Enemy missiles would be destroyed by air-, ground- or ship-based weapons.

The system is called JLENS, short for Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System.

"We can defeat cruise missiles but we have limited capability to detect. And so, with an elevated sensor, such as JLENS, and the ability to look out over the horizon, now we have the ability to detect and to enable our systems to defeat cruise missiles," said Maj. Gen. Glen Bramhall, commander of the 263rd Army Air and Missile Defense.

The project, built by Raytheon Co. of Waltham, Massachusetts, and TCOM L.P. of Columbia, Maryland, has cost the government about $2.8 billion so far. Congress approved another $43.3 million last week for the first year of the test.

Proponents say JLENS will save money in the long run by reducing the need for surveillance by conventional aircraft.

"The analysis we've done says it's about five to seven times less than operating a fleet of aircraft to cover the same area over the same time period," said Douglas Burgess, Raytheon's JLENS program director.

The white balloons, each 80 yards long, are part of a new wave of lighter-than-air surveillance equipment. The government also has deployed tethered airships near the Mexican border, in Iraq and Afghanistan and in the Caribbean Ocean to combat drug smuggling.

The airships at Aberdeen will be the first of their type near a major East Coast city, visible from Interstate 95.

The military said the balloons won't carry cameras but David Rocah of the American Civil Liberties Union in Maryland said privacy advocates were leery of the airships' ability to constantly monitor moving objects, including cars on the ground.

Bramhall said the radar can't identify individuals or record cellphone conversations.

"The mission is not to spy on U.S. citizens. It is not designed for that," he said.

Apart from the occasional sighting of an advertising blimp, the only time I can recall seeing one regularly used for surveillance was over Tokyo. It was there virtually every day and was used by the police.

I was intrigued by it and ended up setting a fight sequence in it in Rules Of The Hunt—my second thriller featuring Hugo Fitzduane..

I don’t object to that kind of surveillance. It’s very hard to have a good overview of a city unless you have an aerial overview—and airships are less expensive to run than fixed wing or helicopters.

VOR words c.90


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