Terminator Planet: A Drone-Eat-Drone World
With Its Roadmap in Tatters, The Pentagon Detours to Terminator Planet
by Nick Turse
U.S. military documents tell the story vividly. In the Gulf of Guinea, off the coast of West Africa, an unmanned mini-submarine deployed from the USS Freedom detects an anomaly: another small remotely-operated sub with welding capabilities tampering with a major undersea oil pipeline. The American submarines smart software classifies the action as a possible threat and transmits the information to an unmanned drone flying overhead. The robot plane begins collecting intelligence data and is soon circling over a nearby vessel, a possible mother ship, suspected of being involved with the remote welder.
At a hush-hush joint maritime operations center onshore, analysts pour over digital images captured by the unmanned sub and, according to a Pentagon report, recognize the welding robot as one recently stolen and acquired by rebel antigovernment forces. An elite quick-reaction force is assembled at a nearby airfield and dispatched to the scene, while a second unmanned drone is deployed to provide persistent surveillance of the area of operations.
And with that, the drone war is on.
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n some ways, of course, the future is now. When the first Terminator movie was released in 1984, its HKs seemed as futuristic as its time-traveling cyborg title-character. Nearly three decades later, were living in an age in which armed robots do regularly surveil, track, and kill people. But instead of a self-aware computer network known as Skynet, its the American president or his intelligence officials and military officers who determine the human targets to be terminated by unmanned hunter-killer craft.
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/05/31-7