Paul Joseph Watson
Infowars.com
November 25, 2013
Infowars has obtained a photograph of an unmarked gray helicopter
drone manufactured by Northrop Grumman which could be used to spy on Americans
domestically.
The image was sent to us by someone high up within Northrop
Grumman, who told us that the drone is small enough to transported on the back
of a large truck or towed in a trailer behind a pickup and can be fitted with
all manner of surveillance technology.
It appears to be a smaller version of the company’s MQ-8C
Fire Scout helicopter drone, which was tested for the first time earlier
this month by the U.S. Navy. Unlike the MQ-8C Fire Scout, the drone seen in the
image above has no markings.
The MQ-8C Fire Scout, described as a “next generation” drone, has
“three times the payload capacity of the current model in the military arsenal,”
and can remain airborne for twice as long.
Earlier this month, the Federal Aviation Administration released
a road map that set the stage for 7,500 surveillance drones to be flying in
U.S. skies within the next two years. The FAA’s chief concern is not the privacy
implications of such devices, but the threat of them colliding with other
aircraft.
The FAA has forecast that 30,000 surveillance drones will be in
U.S. skies by the end of the decade.
At least 80 law enforcement agencies already have agreements with
the FAA to fly drones for surveillance purposes. Some police departments want to
use such drones to watch
for “suspicious activity” in high crime areas.
Authorities are already using drones to conduct
surveillance of farms and the Department of Homeland Security is also
working on deploying drones for purposes
of “public safety.”
Earlier this year, the Pentagon began testing to deploy
two high-tech surveillance blimps over Washington DC that can remain at
10,000 feet for a month without the need for refueling. The blimps provide an
“elevated, persistent over-the-horizon sensor system” and carry “powerful radars
that can look deep into enemy territory.”
The U.S. Army also recently tested a football
field-sized blimp over the city of New Jersey. The blimp can fly for a
period of 21 hours and “is equipped with high-tech sensors that can monitor
insurgents from above.”
This past August, the DHS assumed
control of surveillance blimps used to monitor the US-Mexico border, a
perturbing development for privacy advocates given that the federal agency
considers all areas 100 miles inland of the border to be ‘constitution-free
zones’ within which the Fourth Amendment does not apply.
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