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USCG Doesn't Plan To Deploy UAVs Until 2014 At Earliest

Current Models Don't Offer What Service Is Looking For

Even as other branches of the armed forces eagerly deploy a number of unmanned aerial vehicles -- both domestically, and in battle zones overseas -- the United States Coast Guard says it will be several years before it deploys UAVs to watch over the country's maritime borders.

That announcement came this week, as the Coast Guard prepares to deploy its first national security cutter, the Bertholf -- which is equipped to launch and recover an unmanned vehicle for long-distance surveillance missions, reports The Navy Times. But the ship likely won't see a UAV in its hangar before 2014.

Rear Adm. Gary Blore, head of the Coast Guard’s acquisitions directorate, said that decision isn't due to a lack of desire to have UAVs at the ready... but rather because there isn't a UAV currently available that meets the Coast Guard's needs.

The service had anticipated deployment of Bell's Eagle Eye tiltrotor UAV (shown below)... but that project, part of the USCG's "Deepwater" modernization plan, was axed in October 2007. As ANN reported, the prototype Eagle Eye crashed in March 2006.

That experience has left the Coast Guard somewhat gun-shy about future UAV efforts. "We got led astray with our previous project," Blore said. "We want to make sure that doesn’t happen again. We want something that will serve for many years."

Blore noted the Coast Guard requested $3 million in its fiscal year 2009 budget to study UAVs to replace the Eagle Eyes. Other models under consideration include the Northrop Grumman M-Q8A Fire Scout unmanned helicopter, and the increasingly commonplace General Atomics MQ-1 Predator -- a version of which is already in coastal patrol service in Australia.

Neither of those aircraft have exactly what the Coast Guard is looking for, however. Of the two, the Predator probably comes closest -- as it is able to cruise on station for hours, find a surface target, and identify it independently. What the Predator can't do, of course, is take off and land vertically.

The Fire Scout, due to be deployed on the US Navy's upcoming littoral combat ship, doesn't come with surface-search radar... and can't be deployed autonomously out-of-sight of the mother ship. Other rotary-wing UAV offerings have similar hinderances, Blore said.

FMI: www.uscg.mil

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