Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • They are Obama's favourite weapon:Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, or drones.

  • Is war becoming like a video game?It's nothing like a video game

  • What's next for these robots of the battlefield?

  • We're in Alamogordo, New Mexico. The US Air Force have invited the mediato

  • Holloman Air Force Base. The main attraction is the Reaper,an unmanned

  • aerial vehicle. I don't know where to go to actually get a

  • shot of the Reaper taking off but we can provide extra B-Roll probably tomorrow.

  • First we meet the squadron commander.

  • This is a MQ-9, this is a Reaper. Why have drones or RPAs as you like to call

  • them become so popular with the US Air Force? Do you have an explanation?Yeh, they work.

  • They are a force multiplier and they save lives. You know I really believe that the

  • Remotely Piloted Aircraft, not drones because we are actually controlling them... But Remotely

  • Piloted Aircrafts save lives. This is a MQ-9, this is a Reaper.

  • What is it used for?It's used primarily for intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance

  • and it does have a strike role too. What is the pay-load? The pay-load is what you see

  • on this airplane, on each side you can carry two hell-fires, you can carry a bomb and on

  • the other side you put another bomb, 500 pound class bomb and two hell-fires so you got four

  • missiles, and two bombs on each airplane.How long can this plane stay in the air?This airplane

  • can stay in the air for probably 16 hours. And that is a big advantage compared to an

  • M-16 or a fighter plane.It is, that's one of the advantages that this one has, it's

  • got persistence, persistence and it's always over the top if they are needing help from

  • above. You don't need to fly back to base to re-fuel you can just stay for 16...We can

  • stay for a long place for a long time, yes Like the colonel said, primary role is intelligence,

  • surveillance and reconnaissance. So to accomplish that we do have the primary payload, cameras

  • both day TV and night vision camera.Do you have a live video link from the aircraft back

  • to base?Yes sir.And how good is that quality? You can really see pretty good what's happening

  • on the ground?Yes sir, its very good quality.Can you give me your name and rank?No sir, uh,

  • my name is Majoy Trey.And your last name?Not able to divulge that.

  • This is an Air Force policy that we are following, so all were doing is following that policy

  • that's been set in place to protect our pilots since they are operators due to much of the

  • occupational security risks that they may face in their line of work.To your right is

  • McDonalds!Anything, nothing? It's early. The Americans claim the drones are vitalin

  • combating terrorism. They're much cheaper and easier.You can do

  • some serious damagewith them.They want to suppress Al Qaedathat way.

  • This is Anwar Al-Awlaki. The CIA say he was the leaderof Al Qaeda in Yemen. Yemen and

  • America are not at war.But the US sent a drone after this manand three fellow passengers

  • anyway. All of them were killed without trial or a

  • public presentation of evidence against them. They were killed when missiles were fired

  • from drones that were operated by the CIA or the US Military.

  • ACLU, a civil rights organisationin New York......is currently suing the state forsummary executions

  • with drones. I think there is certainly concern that the

  • United States is setting the precedent in it's use of drones that it would not be happy

  • with other countries using in the same way. Your absolutely right that the technology

  • of drones is not particularly complicated at its base. And there are dozens of nations

  • now that are developing or already have drone technology. And the United States now claims

  • the ability to use these drones to kill people all over the world. I suspect that the United

  • States will not be so happy if a country like Russia or China or Iran claims the same authority

  • and starts going after United States citizens or others, it's really a dangerous precedent.

  • The Unmanned Aerial Vehicles are controlledfrom these containers in America. The pilots don't

  • gointo the war zone at all. They drive to the base in the morning, kill some Al Qaedaor

  • Taliban fighters and go home for dinner at the end of the day.

  • It is a unique capability to be able to operate State side and then go home to your family.

  • It's kinda weird though, because half of your day your operating and performing missions

  • then you go home to be with your family and for some folks that can be a challenge, for

  • some of the younger guys but the Air Force does a very good job we have a lot of resources,

  • chaplains, medical personnel for any issues they may see they are well taken care of.

  • But are drones precision weapons,or do they cause civilian casualties?

  • I wanna make sure the people understand that actually drones have not caused a huge number

  • of civilian casualties. For the most part they have been very precise, Precision strikes

  • against Al-Qaeda and their affiliates and we are very careful in terms of how its been

  • applied so I think that there is this perception some how that were just setting in a whole

  • bunch of strikes willy-nilly this is a targeted, focused effort at people who are on a list

  • of active terrorists and so on. Mistakes like these, when an Americanchopper

  • pilot shot Iraqi civilians, should now occur less frequently. Drones are said to be more

  • precise.But that turns out to be not entirely true.

  • Shit happens,that's what they say in war.Murphy's Law. Things go wrong. And that goes for UAVs

  • as well as aircrafts.You think you've cornered an Al Qaeda fighter on a farm. So you send

  • a rocket out thereto kill him.When it's about to hit, whether froma manned or a unmanned

  • aircraft......his wife comes out the door.What do you do? The scenarios for such actionsare

  • unchanged. A drone might be a few inches more precise, but the consequences are the same.

  • So you have two people operating the aircraft?That's right, the pilot is flying the airplane, the

  • pilot commander is in charge and the sensor operator is operating the target pod, under

  • the direction of the pilot. You need two to maximize the capabilities of the aircraft

  • so as you can see, the sensor operator is actively involved in moving that targeting

  • pod around, finding the blue forces, convoy etcetera. It's pretty much a full time job,

  • allows the pilot to focus on not just maneuvering the aircraft to produce optimal imaging but

  • also to be in charge of the overall tactical scenario, how your going to employ the weapon

  • system.What is this joystick used for?That's the control stick, its not a joystick, it's

  • the control stick for the aircraft. It's just a big computer game.It's funny how

  • these pilots, although they are 'desk pilots', still wear flight suits, to make them look

  • like real pilots. Is war becoming like a video game?It's nothing

  • like a video game and the reason it's nothing like a video game is because this is connected

  • to a real airplane flying through the real air. These two crew members are acutely aware

  • of that, right and in fact and because they have an egocentric respective they actually

  • start to feel that they are on board the aircraft after a bit of time.

  • In a way the Americans alreadyreached a turning point in 2009, 2010.They trained more screen

  • pilots, than pilots physicallyinside an aircraft.And they purchased more unmannedplanes than manned

  • ones.Which is not surprisingsince they're much cheaper. So it's not science fiction,it's

  • everyday reality?It's everyday reality. This is the Step desk is what we call it and

  • the operation supervisor is in charge of all the missions that go on.Is that a civilian

  • car on the road?It is a civilian car here in New MexicoSo your training, locking on

  • to civilian cars?Were able to track them we do not simulate or actually engage those vehicles

  • it's just simply to track them to be able to follow a moving target.With or without

  • their permission?They do not know that we can see them but we are just following the

  • vehicle with a camera. You were in Afghanistan in 2008 what happened?I

  • was invited to an interview by a Taliban commander, I went to the interview with two afghan colleagues

  • and instead of interviewing us he kidnapped us and took us into the tribal areas of Pakistan

  • and held us prisoner there for 7 months.So you were a hostage.Yeah we were held in an

  • area called North Waziristan its part of the tribal areas of Pakistan, they train suicide

  • bombers there, there are foreign militants and also there are American drones circling

  • overhead in the sky all the time. It was amazing to be on the other side of a drone strike,

  • drones, circled all the time overhead in the tribal areas of Pakistan. These drone strikes

  • happened once every 10 days or 2 weeks and the militants would be angry when they would

  • occur. It was hard for me to tell what was happening but it did seem like militants were

  • being killed in attacks along with some Civilians. The closest missile strike was, we moved to

  • a small town in South Waziristan and there was a car driving next to the house where

  • we were being held and a missile strike hit the car and we were so close that pieces of

  • metal, pieces of shrapnel from the missile actually landed in the courtyard of the place

  • where we were being held. I was afraid that civilians had been killed, I was afraid that

  • I would be killed in revenge for the attack, it turned out that 7 foreigners and Pakistani

  • militants were in the car, all men and they had been killed. One of the things the Obama

  • administration has tried to do is have a light footprint that compared to a Bush style large

  • scale invasion with 100'000 troops in Afghanistan or Iraq; the Obama administration tries to

  • use smaller amounts of force, more precisely targeted against Al-Qaeda not other groups

  • and they think in the Obama administration that the drone strike does this. It doesn't

  • it's not a light precesne, it is a military weapon of war and when you use it, Pakistanis

  • or Yemenese get angry about it. It's not this precise thing that doesn't really bother people.

  • A lot of people thought:Obama is in power now.He's not such a cowboy as Bush was.He

  • probably won't do such things.But precisely because unmanned systems are so clean and

  • outside our scope, and able tohunt down individual terrorists, many Americans think: Go ahead,

  • do it, and don't tell us the dirty details. So even a liberal president does it.He probably

  • thinks:This is already a controversial war. I'd better not endanger my pilots and my special

  • forces.What else do I have? Unmanned Aerial Vehicles. Deploy them.

  • Drones aren't only popularwith the army. Police and security services alsouse them on their

  • own territory, to find criminalsand combat illegal immigration.A privacy organisation

  • from SanFrancisco is suing the state for this. So why are you suing the Government?Well we

  • are suing the Government because were very concerned about the use of drones domestically

  • in the United States. We already know that the State and local law enforcement are using

  • drones but we don't know much about how or why. Drones have the capability to include

  • al different types of privacy invasive technologies, they are able to use thermal imaging technologies

  • to see inside buildings, there able to use communication intercept technologies, to listen

  • in to our phone calls, location tracking technologies to track where we've been, where were going.

  • For all these reasons I think drones are of real privacy concern.

  • Privacy is an issuein Europe too. If our air forces buy drones,the police can use them

  • too. In the Netherlands last year a small drone was deployed justto find an arsonist.

  • What would your advise to the Dutch people be?My advice would be to think through these

  • issues. Spend a little time before Authorising the Government to purchase drones and just

  • go out and use them. Come up with policies about what kind of information can be collected

  • and whether a court order needs to be sought before the information can be collected where

  • drones could be operated legally. I think all of these are important issues.

  • In the Netherlands there are plans to invest funds into drones. There is almost no debate

  • about the legal or the moral issues surrounding them, does that surprise you?There's been

  • very little debate here in the United States and one of the criticisms is that if a republican

  • president had done this many drone strikes as Obama did there would be much more protest

  • from the left. I think Obama and his administration need to do a better job of making the drone

  • strikes public and explaining why they are doing them.After 7 months in captivity, how

  • did it end?We were desperate we thought they would hold us for years and while our guards

  • were asleep we used a car toe-rope I had found to lower ourselves down the wall of the house

  • where we were being held prisoner and we walked to a Pakistani military base. We were nearly

  • shot at the base, they thought I was a suicide bomber; I had a beard down to about here.

  • But a moderate Pakistani military officer let me on the base. My Afghan colleague, the

  • guy I was kidnapped with brought me to the base sp those two moderate Afghan and Pakistani

  • men saved my life and that's the reason why I'm still home today.

  • At about 30 pounds, the man portable 3-10 SUG V Robot is lightweight enough to fit inside

  • a molly or alice pack. It's compact and can be taken anywhere. Designed by iRobot and

  • the Boeing company, the 3-10 SUG V performs dismounted operations like surveillance, reconnaissance,

  • EOD and route clearing missions with ease. And these robots are advancing. The Air force,

  • army and navy are all using them more and more regularly. This is a small spying vehicle

  • with four cameras and night-glasses. And this is a sort of pack mulecarrying communication

  • equipment.

  • What robots are for in general are jobs that are dull dirty and dangerous. Chris Anderson is the editor-in-chief

  • of "Wired", a big technology magazine. Every month it discusses the advance of robots in the military.

  • In general keeping people's boots of the ground and keeping people out of conflict seems like

  • a good thing by and large. You know, to the extent that drones again keep humans out of

  • harms way, I think that's probably good. Were here at Wired's office but you also have a

  • company, whats that about?Well we don't just write about technology, we live with it. Were

  • here in the middle of Silicone Valley and we can't help but participate, drones are

  • my passion, robotics is my life so were doing something about it.You have a company producing

  • drones.I do yeah. Anderson's company is calledDIY Drones.It

  • produces small helicopters withmanual and automatic controls and a recording camera.

  • The reason unmanned vehicles can be so cheap, just a couple hundred dollars at this point

  • is because of these things. The smart-phone revolution has taken sensors and wireless,

  • it has gyroscopes and accelerometers and GPS and radio all that sort of stuff. So inside

  • your phone is everything you need for an autopilot. I can write an 'app' that will allow your

  • phone to fly a 747 with the right cable.

  • The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology inrich, is working on the latest flying

  • robots. They perform complex tasks without any human intervention at all. These drones

  • can build a tower on their own. Right now if you wanna build a big structure

  • like that you need scaffolding but if you use flying vehicles, you don't need scaffolding

  • anymore so that was really a demonstration of how the technology could be used in ways

  • that people hadn't really thought of beforeHow intelligent are these creatures?I would say

  • that they're not very intelligent. As human beings define intelligence. You know, they

  • can't make sophisticated decisions on their own. Most of the time they have to have been

  • programmed to react in a certain way and if something unanticipated happens you may not

  • get the results you desire. Drones also learn to danceto music here, play

  • a game of tennis, perform a taskworking together as a trio, and obey their master.Are you controlling

  • it with your hand?I am, we have a commercially available game sensor called a 'Kinect' which

  • is used to track human motion, so right now its tracking my hands, my arms, my whole body

  • gesture actually. And then we interface that information to the system which allows me

  • to then tell the vehicle exactly where to go and I can even tell it to do things like

  • tell it to go up, do a flip, come to me, move it around in general. Many people are doing

  • research with autonomous flying vehicles and there are many potential applications including

  • search and rescue, people want to use these vehicles to go into spots that human beings

  • would find it difficult to go into. For example in disaster areas, perhaps its radioactive

  • so you want to sent in drones to monitor the area and provide information that humans can't

  • directly access. People are even thinking about using flying vehicles to deliver material

  • across the world in undeveloped arrears and of course theres the military applications

  • the people think of aswell. The Japanese army developed this flying ball.

  • And the Americans are working on drones that operate in swarms. How interested is he Military

  • in this technology? They are extremely interested. In the short term, it gives them a leg up

  • on what the opponents can dos, so it's just a way to get an advantage. You see that's

  • the problem with it too because it leads to an arms race. They develop this technology,

  • they deploy it and the opponents, develop their technology and deploy it. Before you

  • know it we have all of this technology being deployed in warfare and it just raises the

  • overall level of how technology is used in warfare and I think there are a lot of negative

  • effects of having this escalation.In fact the arms race has already started. China and

  • Turkey have UAVs. And Iranian president Ahmadinejad recently presented his first drone. It looks

  • like a Thunderbirds rocket, but it hits distant targets with deadly accuracy. Iran also laid

  • hands on this American espionage drone. It crashed or was brought down.Some even say

  • it was hacked.That would explain its gentle landingin Iran. The Iranians are very interested,and

  • perfectly capable of copying the technology. We know right now that about 45 countries

  • are using drones and have their own drone programs so I think t hat the risk of somebody

  • we don't want to be using drones is pretty high and we just don't know that much about

  • the programs right now Is this the start of a new arms race?- Yes.

  • In this respect too. Future drones will be able to independentlysearch

  • for targets, and decide whether or not to attack.The software is being developed in

  • America right now. I personally think that we should seriously

  • consider putting limitations, self imposed limitations on how much autonomy these weapons

  • could have. Simply from preventing an escalation. As artificial intelligence technology becomes

  • better and more accessible will we have the specter of unmanned drones that fly themselves

  • without even an operator over watching them. That carry missiles and fire them based on

  • their own calculations it's entirely possible that their will be a continuing escalation

  • of the technology that will raise even more chilling questions.

  • That's the one place where I would try to keep humans in the loop as long as possible.

  • That's a judgement. I mean computers are very good at mechanically executing instructions

  • but judgement, you know, right or wrong, top priority or low priority to really is the

  • one place where humans should continue to be in.

  • Soldiers must always know exactlywhat they're doing. If you give 90% of that responsibility

  • to an autonomous robot, that's a problem.You need new regulations at the very least. I

  • think ethically and operationally it's a bad thing. It makes war so remote, it becomes

  • a game, an electronic spectacle. The one thing that should be able to limit war, is human

  • logic and human morals. If you overrule that, it will get easier, to leave the killing to

  • technology. That's a bad idea. I see that there's a map of Kabul, so you're

  • actually training for an Afghanistan situation. A lot of our training scenarios take place

  • in Afghanistan. And what happens if us troops pull out?

  • Then we'll change the scenario.

They are Obama's favourite weapon:Unmanned Aerial Vehicles, or drones.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it