Posted on 02/24/2003 11:56:39 AM PST by Pokey78
Drones or pieces of drones that have GPS mapping may have been sent to Iraqi agants in US to spray chem or bio weapons over US cities.
I'll go way out on a limb and hypothesize; say for purpose of discussion, he does.
The simple dispersal of two dozen individual terrorists spreading substances by hand is cheapest, as stated here.
Say there is a demonstrable advantage to using UAVs; problems and solutions.
Infiltration of 1) personnel; 2) aircraft; biochem agents.
The personnel are here. The aircraft are here. The biochem agents are easily brought.
John Doe gave a box of Cracker Jack to a woman with a baby at an airport; the lady boarded a plane with an ounce of coke.
Twenty-eight-point-four grams; retail.
For wholesale, Barry Seal's younger, smarter brother.
Surely any thought of "sealing borders" is moot in view of the tons of coke entering CONUS from labs in Colombia.
Thanks to NAFTA thousands of vehicles enter each day, most unsearched.
The sea of COSCO containers at San Diego is repeated at all major ports; very, very few are searched.
RC planes are larger and more reliable.
Guidance systems for private planes are fascinating.
My friend flew his wife from Santa Fe to North Carolina and showed me his software on his laptop.
He loaded it and ran some simulations.
It took him from point to point, observing the radii of restricted airspaces.
The use of small planes would enable larger payloads.
North's Project Donation provided a constant supply of aircraft for Contras.
Hopefully Islamist networks are being tracked and taken down, eliminating funding and operatives who would enact aircraft acquisition.
Monday next our Spirits should put lots of fire on the hive, and the drones far from the nest will either act or go down.
It's not comforting that Castro has been in contact with Iraqi biochem personnel, or that Chavez is close to Papa.
Also not comforting is possible Iraqi possession of Biopreparat's Newcomer nerve agent.
The FBI, emasculated by traitorrapist42 and Freeh, is tangled up in PC, holding sensitivity sessions and loathe to count mosques--count, let alone surveil with a vengeance and every humint, sigint and electronic method available.
Watch the Smoocher of Suha; when it goes to ground, a domestic attack is nigh.
Otherwise, the Bush Binary System will suppress the use of UAVs:
1) Use of such will bring a nuclear response;
2) A preemptive attack on the hive is on the horizon.
Message Creation Date was at 30-MAR-1998 11:14:00 THE WHITE HOUSE Office of the Vice President __________________________________________________________________ For Immediate Release Contact: Monday, March 30, 1998 (202) 456-7035 VICE PRESIDENT GORE ANNOUNCES ENHANCEMENTS TO THE GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM THAT WILL BENEFIT CIVILIAN USERS WORLDWIDE Washington DC--Vice President Gore today announced that a second civilian signal will be provided by the U.S. Global Positioning System. &This new civilian signal will mean significant improvements in navigation, positioning and timing services to millions of users worldwide--from backpackers and fishermen to farmers, airline pilots, and scientists,8 the Vice President said. The addition of a second civil signal represents a strong commitment by the United States to civil GPS users worldwide and is a major step in the evolution of GPS as a global information utility. Much like the Internet, GPS is becoming increasingly indispensable for navigation, positioning, and timing by users around the world. Also like the Internet, GPS has become an engine of economic growth and efficiency as businesses and consumers continue to develop new and creative applications of this technology. The addition of a second frequency will greatly enhance the accuracy, reliability and robustness of civilian GPS receivers by enabling them to make more effective corrections for the distorting effects of the Earth,s atmosphere on the signals from space. GPS has always provided signals on two frequencies for military users for this purpose. Today,s announcement marks a new era in which civilians will have access to the same type of capability. &The decision announced today demonstrates that we can successfully balance the needs of civilian users with the demands of national security,8 Vice President Gore said. &GPS civil signals are, and will continue to be, provided free of charge to consumers, businesses, and scientists around the world. We will continue to do everything we can to protect these GPS signals and to promote GPS applications for commercial, public safety, and national security purposes.8 The addition of a second civil signal has been recommended by a number of expert panels, the most recent of which was the White House Commission on Aviation Safety and Security, chaired by the Vice President. Today,s announcement fulfills a pledge made last March by the Departments of Defense and Transportation to reach a decision on a second civil frequency within a year. The Departments of Defense and Transportation co-chair an Interagency GPS Executive Board, created by President Clinton in 1996 to manage GPS and its U.S. government augmentations. ### &This new civilian signal will mean significant improvements in navigation, positioning and timing services to millions of users worldwide--from backpackers and fishermen to farmers, airline pilots, and scientists,8 Vice President Gore said. The NAVSTAR Global Positioning System (GPS) is a constellation of 24 satellites developed, launched, and maintained by the U.S. Air Force that provides positioning, timing, and navigation signals free-of-charge to both military and civilian users worldwide. A second civil frequency will allow receivers to measure the time of arrival for two signals that have passed through the Earth,s atmosphere and correct for the distortion introduced by passage from space to earth. An improved location calculation will allow safety-critical users requiring dynamic, reliable capability to be more reliant on the GPS signal, improve the overall accuracy of the system for the average user, and allow the high-accuracy users (surveying, geodesy, weather forecasters, etc.) to determine their data in a faster, more reliable manner. In addition, the second civil signal will allow the safety-critical users to have a backup signal in the event of inadvertent disruption of the current civil signal. The Interagency GPS Executive Board (IGEB) has selected the 1227.6 MHZ band (currently known as the L2 signal) for the addition of new civil capability. A third civil signal will also be added with a decision on the frequency to be made in August of this year. The decision on which of these two new signals the Government will pursue to become the safety-of-life service signal will also be made in August. One of the key factors in deciding which frequency to pursue as the safety-of-life signal is a commitment by all members of the IGEB to have a safety-of-life service signal available by 2005. The new signals are intended to be added to the GPS Block IIF satellites. The new signals will be available to all civil users worldwide. Internationally, interest has been expressed via the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in the use of a second GPS civil signal in conjunction with the Japanese MSAS and the European EGNOS augmentation programs. Currently the GPS system is used by a wide range of users: from cars and trucks on the nation,s highways to ships at sea and on inland waterways; from civil aviation to satellites in space, from earthquake monitoring equipment to surveyors to backpackers; new industries such as precision farming; and the electrical power companies and long-distance phone systems which derive timing and synchronization from the signals.
And even old farts will be able to play a key role in homeland defense, both overtly and covertly.
Me thinks not!
Yes, didn't we all hear that he was in Bagdhad serving as a model for brave white men (or was that stupid white men.. I forget).
Oh. ....ya mean he's not there with those noble human shields ?
And lot of the discussion had indicated that non-metropolitan areas are easily overlooked by radar at low elevations.
But I wonder just how much overhead motion detection or AWACS could actually solve these problems. Remember the German deployment of AWACS in the US?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.