Apart of Australia interested in MQ-4C Triton
(version of Global Hawk) and (version of MQ-9 Reaper) to replace the aging P3
Orion, the United States flew highly classified Global Hawk spy drone missions
from the Royal Australian Air Force base at Edinburgh in South Australia from
late 2001 until at least 2006. The operations were detected by a group of
Adelaide aviation historians who had a member monitoring aircraft radio
frequencies 20 hours a day. (photo : ABC)
US Spy Drones Flown fromAustralia
US Spy Drones Flown from
The United States
operated secret spy missions out of South Australia
with its long-range Global Hawk surveillance drones, possibly over Afghanistan and
off the North Korean coast.
The missions began shortly after the September 11, 2001,
terror attacks and continued until at least 2006.
They were kept hidden after the US stamped on plans by former
Liberal Defence Minister Robert Hill to make the flights public.
The South Australian Premier at the time, Labor's Mike Rann,
was not told of the operations flown from Edinburgh Air Force Base near Adelaide , home of the
RAAF's fleet of APC3 Orion long-range patrol aircraft.
The Global Hawk missions were uncovered by local aviation
history enthusiasts and reported on ABC television's Foreign Correspondent
programme. The Defence Department confirmed to the ABC that "rare"
visits had occurred for "short replenishment purposes".
A Global Hawk made Australian headlines during the drone's
only public visit in April 2001, after flying more than 13,200km from Edwards
Air Force Base in California
to become the first unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to cross the Pacific.
Unlike the high flying unarmed Triton, the Mariner (version of MQ-9 Reaper) is also designed to carry missiles. (photo : ABC)
Australia Moves to Buy $3b Spy Drone Fleet
At the time of the Global Hawk's Adelaide
flights, Australia
was planning to buy up to seven sophisticated, long-range UAVs to operate with
new Boeing P-8A Poseidon aircraft intended to replace the Orions in 2018.
The two options under consideration were the Global Hawk,
made by Northrop Grumman, and the rival General Atomics Mariner, which
underwent evaluation at Edinburgh
in 2006.
The plans were deferred, although the RAAF operates leased
Israeli Heron UAVs in Afghanistan
and the army used smaller Shadow drones.
There are also long-term plans to fly UAVs such as the
Global Hawk from Australia 's
remote Cocos Islands in the Indian Ocean .
South Australian operations by the big, A$200 million drones
- whose wingspan is longer than a 747 jumbo jet's - were uncovered by members
of Adelaide's West Beach Aviation Group.
The group monitors aircraft radio frequencies 20 hours a day
to alert them to aircraft of interest, and they became aware of the Global
Hawk's presence after "unusual chatter" and a strange call sign
indicated the UAV was lining up to land 200 nautical miles away, when over Port
Augusta in the Spencer Gulf, west of Adelaide.
The group's spokesman, Paul Daw, told Foreign Correspondent
the Global Hawks began slipping into South
Australia two months after the September 11 attacks.
"The reason we knew a Global Hawk was coming is we'd
see a C141 Starlifter [transport aircraft] arrive up to a week earlier and
unload a shipping container or two," he said.
"These [had equipment] to control the approach of
Global Hawk."
Daw said the drones usually approached and left at night,
although there were a few exceptions thathad enabled the group to photograph
them.
The group recorded 10 missions to Adelaide , but Daw said there could have been
others.
He said the flights were believed to be surveillance
missions over Afghanistan .
The group monitored the flights until Australian military
security officials insisted they stop. Their reports had been posted on an
international website and published in the group's newsletter.
But Foreign Correspondent reported that in February 2006 an
American journalist from the magazine Aviation Week and Space Technology was
given access to a report on a single Global Hawk reconnaissance mission from
RAAF Edinburgh to southern Japan
and back again.
Officially, this was a demonstration flight for the
Japanese, who were keen to acquire Global Hawk, the programme said.
But the visit occurred a week after North Korea conducted a series of missile tests
and during a period when the US
was intent on assessing North
Korea 's offensive military capabilities.
Matthew Aid, an American analyst specialising in US
intelligence operations since 9/11, told Foreign Correspondent maintenance and
refuelling stops at Edinburgh made sense onthe
completion of missions or whenthe drones were in transit fromthe US to the Middle East
and other locations.
(NZHerald)
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar