From Homeland Security NewsWire:
UAV update
U.S. to deploy see-all Gorgon Stare UAV
Published 5 January 2011
New U.S. UAV will be equipped with nine cameras which can transmit live video images of physical movements across an entire town; the new airborne surveillance system can send dozens of live images to a maximum of ten soldiers on the ground who would use hand-held devices similar in size to an iPad or Kindle
Gorgon Stare offers quicker response, greater coverage // Source: chats-en-images.com
The U.S. military plans to deploy a new intelligence drone in Afghanistan that will be equipped with nine cameras which can transmit live video images of physical movements across an entire town.
Called Gorgon Stare, after the ancient Greek creature whose gaze turned enemies to stone, the new airborne surveillance system can send dozens of live images to a maximum of ten soldiers on the ground who would use hand-held devices similar in size to an iPad or Kindle. It could also transmit to analysts tracking enemy movements. The Daily Telegraph reports that by contrast, current U.S. air force drones shoot video from a single camera over a narrow area the size of a building or two. The new images can also be stored for later examination, and can be marked or tagged to highlight noteworthy movements of individuals, groups or vehicles.
“Gorgon Stare will be looking at a whole city, so there will be no way for the adversary to know what we’re looking at, and we can see everything,” Maj Gen James Poss, an assistant deputy chief of staff, told the Washington Post.
The United States has already dramatically increased its use of unmanned surveillance aircraft, quadrupling the number of flights since January 2009.
Maj Gen Poss, however, conceded that sound human intelligence on the ground was vital “context” for the use of video imagery.
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