One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby redsock » Sun Aug 23, 2015 3:33 pm

http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/0 ... ne-program

US Military Prepares Drastic Escalation of Global Drone Program
New reporting reveals plans to expand drone program by 50 percent, including broader use of mercenaries
By Lauren McCauley, staff writer

The U.S. Pentagon is poised to dramatically increase the deployment of surveillance drones over "global hot spots" such as Ukraine, Iraq, Syria, the South China Sea, and North Africa, as well as expand its capacity for lethal drone strikes, the Wall Street Journal revealed on Monday.

Citing exclusive interviews with senior U.S. officials, the WSJ's Gordon Lubold reports that the number of daily flights by aircraft such as MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper drones will surge an estimated 50 percent. Further, the expanded drone program will "draw on the Army, as well as Special Operations Command and government contractors," in addition to the U.S. Air Force, which currently carries out most of the operations for the Pentagon and Central Intelligence Agency.

Lobuld reports: "The Pentagon envisions a combined effort that by 2019 would have the Air Force continue flying 60 drone flights a day, the Army contributing as many as 16 and the military’s Special Forces Command pitching in with as many as four. Government contractors would be hired to fly older Predator drones on as many as 10 flights a day, none of them strike missions."

A detailed investigation published late July by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism revealed the great extent to which the U.S. military has already relied on corporate entities for much of its surveillance and analysis. The probe raised the question as to whether a private contractor's "risk assessment"—i.e. the determination whether an individual should become a target— obeys an already "mushy" legal framework.

Monday's WSJ piece notes that other officials are reportedly pushing for even-broader surveillance capabilities, employing technologies known as "wide-area airborne surveillance pods," which increases "by as much as tenfold the quantity of surveillance feeds."

The news follows reporting also by Lobuld, as well as colleague Adam Entous, last week which revealed that the U.S. is currently holding talks with a number of North African countries over the possibility of erecting drone bases within their borders, expanding the military footprint in order allegedly unmask so-called "blind spots" in Islamic State strongholds such as Libya and Tunisia.

According to the latest tally from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, since 2002 there have been as many as 620 total U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, and Afghanistan, killing up to 5,460 people including as many as 1,106 civilians.
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby Grizzly » Mon Aug 24, 2015 10:57 pm

Man Takes Down Drone With T-Shirt, Ends Up in Jail
http://www.activistpost.com/2015/08/man ... -jail.html

He said he motioned for the drone to leave them alone, but it didn’t appear to work. Concerned for the safety of the group, as well as their privacy, he decided to take further action.

He took off his shirt and tossed it at the drone.

“I’m a big guy and my T-shirt is huge. It cannot be tossed more than 6 feet,” he estimated of the height. The shirt wrapped around the propeller of the drone, causing it to drop to the sand.

Lehecka said he considered the situation resolved at that point.

About 10 minutes later, he was met by sheriff’s deputies. They arrested Lehecka on one count of felony vandalism and booked him into Vista jail.

He spent around eight hours behind bars before posting $10,000 bail, said Lehecka, who remained shaken by his experience days later.

Turns out, the operator works for a drone company.
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby Grizzly » Tue Aug 25, 2015 5:12 pm

Duuuude! that's just like, soooo dank, dude... *rolls eyes* :roll:


Cannabis + Drones = Amazing (weedhomie.com)
http://www.weedhomie.com/cannabis-drones-amazing/

San Francisco-based start-up Trees Delivery, which brands itself as “the initial craft marijuana box” is trying to bring its subscription based cannabis delivery to the next level by employing the assistance of automated drones for its service.

Trees is currently manually delivering in San Francisco, but the business has plans to expand to other pot-friendly cities, consisting of Los Angeles and Denver, in order to interrupt the dispensary design.

Presently the business is offering three different kinds of pot boxes which San Franciscans with a prescription can buy via text, their app or on its site: a beginner model for $99 and 2 boxes that cost $149, each of which have a range of flower, extracts and accessories.


Aaaahhhhgggggghhhh! :wallhead:
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby elfismiles » Wed Aug 26, 2015 10:01 am

LOOK OUT! 08.26.151:15 AM ET
First State Legalizes Taser Drones for Cops, Thanks to a Lobbyist
North Dakota police will be free to fire "less than lethal" weapons from the air thanks to the influence of Big Drone.

It is now legal for law enforcement in North Dakota to fly drones armed with everything from Tasers to tear gas thanks to a last-minute push by a pro-police lobbyist.

With all the concern over the militarization of police in the past year, no one noticed that the state became the first in the union to allow police to equip drones with “less than lethal” weapons. House Bill 1328 wasn’t drafted that way, but then a lobbyist representing law enforcement—tight with a booming drone industry—got his hands on it.

The bill’s stated intent was to require police to obtain a search warrant from a judge in order to use a drone to search for criminal evidence. In fact, the original draft of Rep. Rick Becker’s bill would have banned all weapons on police drones.

READ THE REST HERE:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... byist.html
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby elfismiles » Wed Aug 26, 2015 10:05 am

A different case but ...

Man Indicted For Shotgun Blasts At Hovering Drone
New Jerseyan faces two felony counts for firing upon flying object
http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/ ... ase-213450

elfismiles » 16 Apr 2015 13:26 wrote:I'm halfway through the video... As is so often the case these days, one of my first thoughts was "has this been staged"?

It'd be a pretty good investment have your accomplices buy a drone and camera, then claim harassment (over a Kickstarter campaign sign), then setup a situation where you could get great footage from the drone and from the ground. And since the meme of property owners shooting down privacy invading drones is fairly established ... badda boom badda bing - instant publicity for your kickstarter campaign.

So ... I had paused the video and then read down in the article and found that there is indeed suspicion of such...

<snip>

Watch This Homeowner Shoot Down a Drone Flying over His Property (Video)
2:19 PM EDT, April 14, 2015
http://www.insideedition.com/headlines/ ... s-property
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby Grizzly » Fri Aug 28, 2015 8:29 pm



Intel and Yuneec International Announce $60M Investment, Future Product Collaboration


Good Droning..
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby Grizzly » Sat Aug 29, 2015 9:23 pm

Just stumbled upon this...

http://www.dronestagr.am/
dronestagr.am - share arial drone pics

I guess it's a thing, now..

Also, Police Taser drones authorized in N.D.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2015 ... /71319668/

Looks, like we just turned the corner on armed drones in the skys of Merica!

Criminals in North Dakota may soon find themselves zapped by Tasers from on high.

That's one of the possibilities presented by the state's House Bill 1328, which allows police departments to equip drones with non-lethal weapons such as Tasers, tear gas and rubber bullets.

Controversy already is swirling around the new law, which went into effect Aug. 1.

The original piece of legislation, as presented by state Rep. Rick Becker, was aimed at making sure police obtained a search warrant to use a drone to seek out criminal evidence. But when Bruce Burkett, a lobbyist with ties to area police, was allowed to amend the bill, it was rewritten to specify that drones could carry anything except weapons capable of lethal force.
“The more we do to you, the less you seem to believe we are doing it.”

― Joseph mengele
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby Grizzly » Wed Sep 02, 2015 8:07 pm

FAA Approves Corporation’s Use of Drones To Collect Data
http://www.hakspek.com/technology/faa-a ... lect-data/
The FAA has approved a request for corporate use of drones for “aerial data acquisition”. The approved request will allow up to 324 automated drones and will be the largest fleet of commercial drones on record to date.

Measure, the company behind the request, has produced reports with the American Red Cross on how the use of automated drones can help first responders in a disaster situation and the American Farm Bureau showing how farmers seeking to maximize their harvests could utilize drones.

The FAA granted Measure a special exemption for the use of drones. Currently, it is illegal for businesses to fly unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) unless they obtain a FAA waiver. The FAA has granted more than 1,000 exemptions so far as it works on drafting regulations to govern drones.



As another asks, "Is there a limit to what sort of data it collects or is it just a free for all" ? You (dear reader, ) should by now know the answer to that...

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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby elfismiles » Fri Sep 04, 2015 9:05 am

Great links Grizz!

The FAA’s Drone Drill: An Introduction
By Laura Stefani on September 3, 2015
Posted in Broadcast, First Amendment
If you want to use your drone for your business, you’ll need to know what to ask for and how to ask for it.
http://www.commlawblog.com/2015/09/arti ... roduction/
http://www.radioworld.com/article/the-f ... ion/276996
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby conniption » Wed Sep 09, 2015 6:21 am

off-guardian

Published on September 8, 2015

Death by Droning: the World isn’t changing, it is changed


by CJCL


Yesterday David Cameron admitted to murder. He did it loudly, in public, with self-justications primed and a self-important look plastered across his quivering jowls. The repurcussions? He faces applause from some sectors…and “scrutiny” from others. Is that all the outrage our atrophied imaginations can offer?

The metaphor of the boiling frogs has long been over used. It takes its place alongside the “smoking gun” and “ticking all the boxes” in the pantheon of phrases that declare a lack of imagination. And it is no longer apt. The unthinkable is no longer being “normalised”…it is normal. It happens every day, and we shrug it off. The frogs have been simmering for hours, they’re nearly done.

Just for a moment, let us compare the world of today to the world of fifteen years ago…

Doing terrible things in an organized and systematic way rests on “normalization.” This is the process whereby ugly, degrading, murderous, and unspeakable acts become routine and are accepted as “the way things are done.”
Edward S. Herman – THE BANALITY OF EVIL


In 2000, before 9/11 and all the subsequent horror that mental trauma caused a psychotic American Empire to loose upon the world, can we even imagine that a “civilised” government would claim the power to seize people without charge? detain people indefinitely without trial? Would a watching public have stood for that? But nevertheless, that is the world we live in now.

Ten years ago would an American President blithely admitting to torture have passed off the public conciousness with so little notice? Would CIA black sites, extraordinary rendtions and all the stuff – likely worse – we don’t get to hear about be cause for a “debate” about its efficacy? Does a civilised culture ban torture, or simply worry about whether or not it works? Nevertheless, that is the world we live in now.

Five years ago anybody claiming that the Western intelligence agencies were recording the data from millions and millions of people – Were spying on civilians and foreign heads of state and practically the whole world – would have have been met with snorts of derision. “Go find your tin-foil hat!” we would have said, “they can’t do that, it’s illegal” we would have said, “You’re crazy” we would have said. But Edward Snowden is real, and he’s not crazy. And now we know – was there a revolution? Were there speeches railing against the NSA on the floor of the UN? Not even close. “It’s necessary” they said. “OK”, we said. And then the “free press” that reported the goverment’s illegal activities voluntarily smashed up their computers. Since those times Cameron’s government has handed over even greater powers to GCHQ and their brothers. We don’t want to a be spied on. We don’t want a digital panopticon keeping us all inline. But nevertheless, that’s the world we live now.

…and yesterday David Cameron admitted to murder – today he faces scrutiny. Just last week anybody accusing the government of carrying out extra-judicial executions on foreign soil would have been laughed at. Called paranoid. But here we are. Apparently there was a “legal justification”, but we’re not allowed to see it. Apparently it was done at a time and place that “minimised risk to civilians”…minimised, you understand, not removed. We still don’t know if there any civilian casualties – it doesn’t really matter. It was still murder. Apparently he was “planning attacks” and it was “self defence” – there’s plenty of evidence for this, but we’re not allowed to see that either. That’s the world we live in now.

Currently we live in a society where the government claims the right to:

>> Arrest and detain any individual, indefintely, without charge or trial.

>> Extradite any civilian overseas to any foreign power, even those who use torture.

>> Observe and record the internet, email and phone communications of anybody in the world without warning or warrant.

>> Execute, by drone strike or other means, anybody anywhere in the world – regardless of whether or not they have been convicted of a crime


Read those back to yourself – out loud if it helps. There’s a word for that kind of society, and it’s not “democratic”. It’s not “civilised”.

It’s tempting, and easy, to always view yourself as the good guy. Nobody watches a movie and thinks “Man, that villain is just like me!”. But no villains ever realise they are villains. The trick is in mental reversal, to imagine your actions as if someone had done them to you.

Russia currently stands accused of “assassinating” Alexander Litvinenko – the inquiry into his death is being held just down the road from the room where Cameron signed off on the execution of Reyaad Khan. If the story had broken that Putin or Assad or Kim Jong Un had wiped out a “security threat” by setting off a bomb on the streets of Cairo or Mexico City…how would we react? How would our press react? What if Xi Jinping ordered the execution, by drone, of a Chinese national living in Washington DC? Would we shrug it off as “neccesary” or “understandable”? We wouldn’t have time – it would be World War III.

The danger, as Orwell wrote, is in the language. The sterilization of words. Meanings are cleaned and refined and sanded down. Torture is what other people do, we use “enhanced interrogation techniques”. Propaganda is what other people do we “promote democracy”. War is what other people do we “pre-emptively defend ourselves”. Assassination is what other people do….we “carry out targeted strikes to remove threats.” When we eventually declare war on Syria, when NATO bombs start dropping on the only even remotely stable areas left in the country, they won’t be bombing raids they’ll be “humanitarian missions”.

The double-think is everywhere, practically every story in the press. Syria is fighting a civil war against zealots and insurgents, but Assad’s regime is “brutal”. Israel shelling a walled off ghetto because some kids threw stones at them…that is “self defence”. The totally bloodless referendum in Crimea is an “invasion”, but the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq were “spreading democracy”. People like Huey Long, Castro, Chavez and Putin – who redistribute wealth to the poorer sections of society – they are “corrupt”. Whilst the politicians on our side, forever breaking expenses scandals and taking jobs on the boards of banks, pharmaceutical firms and arms manufacturers – they are just trying to make the world a better place, a free place.

Now, to talk specifcally about the RAF and their new toys, the defensive perimeter has already set up, the “justifications” have been deployed. He revoked his citizenship. He joined a terrorist organisation. He declared war on Britain. I don’t know if all that’s true, but I do know it doesn’t matter. The point of a society governed by law is that there are no exceptions. If pyschopaths and murderers aren’t protected by laws, then no one is. If a terrorist can be summarily executed…then anyone can.

I’d give the Devil benefit of law, for my own safety’s sake.
Robert Bolt – A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS


One can’t fall into the trap of separating oneself from ethereal “other”. You can’t sit back, comfortable in the knowledge these laws only apply to them, but never to us. First they came for the Jews and all that. Don’t pretend to yourself that they would never use these tools on you. They are making a machine that will chew us all up and spit us all out eventually. That’s the world we live in now, it’s time to engage with it.

A frog that doesn’t realise it’s boiling still dies just the same.
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby elfismiles » Sun Sep 13, 2015 9:47 am

A changed world indeed ... :-(

Drone policing in US seen as 'Wild West'
AFP By Veronique Dupont
http://news.yahoo.com/drone-policing-us ... 07770.html

Drone shot down at Inhofe fundraiser
POSTED 4:58 PM, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015, BY NADIA JUDITH ENCHASSI, UPDATED AT 05:50PM, SEPTEMBER 12, 2015

An infamous fundraiser that involves shooting pigeons has taken down another flying object.

A group’s drone used to film the event has been grounded.

Showing Animals Respect and Kindness is an animal rights group that secretly filmed a fundraiser for Senator Jim Inhofe last year, where guests were shooting tame, banded pigeons that were thrown into the air.

This year, the group said they tried to use a drone to record the event Friday night in Greer County, but they reported the drone was shot down.

A spokesperson for S.H.A.R.K. also said the sheriff refused to investigate the downing, insisting shooting a drone is not illegal.

http://kfor.com/2015/09/12/drone-shot-d ... undraiser/

SEE ALSO:
http://kfor.com/2015/09/09/animal-right ... undraiser/
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby elfismiles » Mon Sep 21, 2015 11:24 am

Lethal drones are the industry's latest headache
Jacob Pramuk | @jacobpramuk
http://www.cnbc.com/2015/09/18/lethal-d ... dache.html


First driverless pods to travel public roads arrive in the Netherlands
The WEpod will be the first self-driving electric shuttle to run in regular traffic, and take bookings via a dedicated app
The WEpod has already been tested in private areas in Finland and Switzerland
By Madhumita Murgia / 11:06AM BST 21 Sep 2015
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/n ... lands.html

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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby backtoiam » Tue Oct 06, 2015 3:53 pm

These videos of Darpa's plans to release these things into the atmosphere are worth watching with considerable thought as to the future implications of nanotech. Nanotech, in a primal and ancient form, is far from being new, to say the least. There is sooo much that could be said about this nanotechnology, but I decline. Since it has already been on the internet I wouldn't be saying anything truly unknown, but it involves things released into the air, which would bring howls and scowls by people that associate things released into the atmosphere with "chemtrails" which causes their eyes to glaze over. Which I find strange considering these discussions are in the congressional record, not to mention the admissions that it has been done more times than any of us can count since airplanes were invented. Buried deep into the armpit of World 2 as well.

Not to mention that I just don't really want to.

Actually it has been done thousands of years before airplanes were invented at certain points in ancient history by the simple fact that nanotech is easily airborne, electromagnetically reacts with the atmosphere, and can travel own its own using electromagnetic lines of force. It doesn't even have to be airborne, it just needs an electromagnetic line of force to hop onto. It maps all the way back to origin of the human species and the primal soup too.

People that don't understand why things are being released into the atmosphere, and crossing that over to people like Kurzweil and the obvious intentions to take humanity into a transhuman existence, and mapping that back to the primal soup and the very root of religion itself, are missing the biggest key to what is actually happening, the biggest show in human history, and will be the future of the human species unless it is stopped somehow which I seriously doubt. I would explain it, but then I would have to defend it, the evidence would be ignored, and I don't have the energy for it. I can already tell at least one person here understands it, sort of referred to it, and declined to drag the subject out for a beating, which is what would probably happen. The demiurge is not a joke, never has been.

Think smaller than these drones, MUCH smaller, and living entities infected with them, and a picture emerges...


DARPA's Autonomous Microdrones Designed to Patrol Inside Houses
12/23/2014
drones, military tech, Nicholas West, Robots, video

Image

by Nicholas West

As drone expert, P.W. Singer said, "At this point, it doesn't really matter if you are against the technology, because it's coming." According to Singer, "The miniaturization of drones is where it really gets interesting. You can use these things anywhere, put them anyplace, and the target will never even know they're being watched."

This has been the promise that the Air Force made quite clear in their video early last year about nanodrone tech that you can see below. According to the USAF, Micro Air Vehicles (MAVs), combined with the ability to harvest energy, will enable insect-sized drone swarms to be dropped from military aircraft to stay aloft for a prolonged amount of time, offering a host of functions, including assassination.

https://youtu.be/z78mgfKprdg

DARPA is now announcing a new wave of these microdrones under the Fast Lightweight Autonomy program. As the name indicates, they ideally would like humans to be completely removed from the control process.

For now, they clearly state "overseas" as the theater of operation, but it doesn't take much imagination to see how these microdrones could be applied in the U.S., especially amid an increasingly tense urban environment in the wake of confrontations with domestic police. And, as always, the tantalizing application in disaster relief paves the way for easy introduction.

(My emphasis added in press release)

***

DARPA aims to give small unmanned aerial vehicles advanced perception and autonomy to rapidly search buildings or other cluttered environments without teleoperation.

Military teams patrolling dangerous urban environments overseas and rescue teams responding to disasters such as earthquakes or floods currently rely on remotely piloted unmanned aerial vehicles to provide a bird’s-eye view of the situation and spot threats that can’t be seen from the ground. But to know what’s going on inside an unstable building or a threatening indoor space often requires physical entry, which can put troops or civilian response teams in danger.

To address these challenges, DARPA issued a Broad Agency Announcement solicitation today for the Fast Lightweight Autonomy (FLA) program. FLA focuses on creating a new class of algorithms to enable small, unmanned aerial vehicles to quickly navigate a labyrinth of rooms, stairways and corridors or other obstacle-filled environments without a remote pilot. The solicitation is available here: http://go.usa.gov/MGWx

The program aims to develop and demonstrate autonomous UAVs small enough to fit through an open window and able to fly at speeds up to 20 meters per second (45 miles per hour)—while navigating within complex indoor spaces independent of communication with outside operators or sensors and without reliance on GPS waypoints.

"Birds of prey and flying insects exhibit the kinds of capabilities we want for small UAVs," said Mark Micire, DARPA program manager. “Goshawks, for example, can fly very fast through a dense forest without smacking into a tree. Many insects, too, can dart and hover with incredible speed and precision. The goal of the FLA program is to explore non-traditional perception and autonomy methods that would give small UAVs the capacity to perform in a similar way, including an ability to easily navigate tight spaces at high speed and quickly recognize if it had already been in a room before.

https://youtu.be/_bXHLznnQmY

If successful, the algorithms developed in the program could enhance unmanned system capabilities by reducing the amount of processing power, communications, and human intervention needed for low-level tasks, such as navigation around obstacles in a cluttered environment. The initial focus is on UAVs, but advances made through the FLA program could potentially be applied to ground, marine and underwater systems, which could be especially useful in GPS-degraded or denied environments.

“Urban and disaster relief operations would be obvious key beneficiaries, but applications for this technology could extend to a wide variety of missions using small and large unmanned systems linked together with manned platforms as a system of systems,” said Stefanie Tompkins, director of DARPA’s Defense Sciences Office. “By enabling unmanned systems to learn ‘muscle memory’ and perception for basic tasks like avoiding obstacles, it would relieve overload and stress on human operators so they can focus on supervising the systems and executing the larger mission.”

Since the focus of the program is improving perception and reducing dependence on external sources—as opposed to designing new small UAVs—DARPA will provide performers selected for the program with the same small UAV testbed as government-furnished equipment.

Source: DARPA
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby backtoiam » Tue Oct 06, 2015 4:55 pm

"A mind stretched by a new idea can never return to it's original dimensions." Oliver Wendell Holmes
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Re: One Drone Thread to Rule them ALL

Postby elfismiles » Thu Oct 15, 2015 9:06 am

The Drone Papers

The Intercept has obtained a cache of secret documents detailing the inner workings of the U.S. military’s assassination program in Afghanistan, Yemen, and Somalia. The documents, provided by a whistleblower, offer an unprecedented glimpse into Obama’s drone wars.

https://theintercept.com/drone-papers

Illustration by The Intercept

01.
The Assassination Complex

Jeremy Scahill

The whistleblower who leaked the drone papers believes the public is entitled to know how people are placed on kill lists and assassinated on orders from the president.


02.
A Visual Glossary

Josh Begley

Decoding the language of covert warfare.


03.
The Kill Chain

Cora Currier

New details about the secret criteria for drone strikes and how the White House approves targets.


04.
Find, Fix, Finish

Jeremy Scahill

The tip of the spear in the Obama administration’s ramped up wars in Somalia and Yemen was a special operations task force called TF 48-4.


05.
Manhunting in the Hindu Kush

Ryan Devereaux

Leaked documents detailing a multi-year U.S. military campaign in Afghanistan reveal the strategic limits and startling human costs of drone warfare.


06.
Firing Blind

Cora Currier, Peter Maass

A secret Pentagon study highlights the chronic flaws in intelligence used for drone strikes in Yemen and Somalia.


07.
The Life and Death of Objective Peckham

Ryan Gallagher

For years Bilal el-Berjawi traveled freely from the U.K. to Somalia under the watchful eyes of intelligence services. Then the U.S. killed him with a drone strike.


08.
Target Africa

Nick Turse

To reduce the “tyranny of distance,” drones fly from bases in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Navy ships.


09.
Glossary
The Alphabet of Assassination

A guide to the acronyms, abbreviations, and initialisms used in The Drone Papers.


10.
Documents
Small Footprint Operations 2/13
Small Footprint Operations 5/13
Operation Haymaker
Geolocation Watchlist


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