Friday, 25 March 2016

Dear All,


Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) or Systems have a number of strengths and weaknesses compared to manned aircraft. US is the only country with technology advancement and also widely deploying their advanced military UAV for homeland security.

Brooke-Holland, L (2013) on behalf of UK Armed Forces wrote "Approach to Unmanned Aircraft Systems". I believe many countries in the world, including Singapore, share the view summarized by the author.

Strengths :
  • Good for dull, dirty dangerous tasks 
  • Operations can be conducted without risk to aircrew
  • Can be cheaper (caution – through life costs need to be considered) 
  • Availability - unmanned aircraft can support tactical activity where manned assets would not be available 
  • Small/medium scale can provide immediate, tactical situation awareness (in uncontested airspace) 
  • Reduced manpower footprint in theater 
  • Very good at intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance and attack missions (in uncontested airspace) 
  • Removal of human limitations can allow different performance factors to be developed and exploited 
  • Persistence 
  • Can help reduce harmony issues by operation from rear base 
Weaknesses:
  • Lack of small, tailored weapons 
  • Lack of long air carriage life weapons 
  • Vulnerable to cyber and communications link attack 
  • Legal, ethical, moral thinking needs further development 
  • Law of Armed Conflict may constrain high levels of automation/autonomy
  • Current systems are not built to airworthy standards – costs will rise as these are enforced
  • Integration into non-segregated airspace is problematic, potentially costly and there is uncertainty over when it will happen 
  • No experience of non-urgent operational requirement procurement 
  • Public perception issues (killer drones) 
  • Limited UK experience in the operation of unmanned aircraft across all Classes 
  • Key technologies remain immature 
  • Very good at niche roles but lacks overall flexibility and adaptability compared to manned aircraft 
  • Poor penetration
Opportunities:
  • Focused UAS research and procurement could underpin national industrial sustainment in key areas 
  • Ideal platform to rapidly exploit new and advanced technologies 
  • Directed energy weapon/electromagnetic weapon employment 
  • Novel approach to operations. 
  • Opportunity to develop new acquisition processes 
  • Expand into control of the air and mobility air power roles 
  • Export potential (but International Traffic in Arms Regulations and Missile Technology Control Regime issues) 
  • Civil markets, inter-operability 
  • Cross governmental cooperation 
  • Quicker, cheaper into service UAS pipeline to provide coordinated research and technology program
  • Swarming/networks new ways of working
Threats:
  • Threat to operational sovereignty through declining national industrial capability 
  • Seen by some as policy/financial panacea without appropriate understanding of relative strength and weaknesses of current systems 
  • Entrenched views skew arguments both for/against 
  • Requires new thinking Funding new systems difficult in financial climate 
  • Current defense industrial strategy and procurement system is not agile enough, may not be able to sustain full range of capabilities (particularly the high end) 
  • Research funding under pressure 
  • Technology may promise too much and fail to deliver 
  • Technology may provide effective counter UAS systems 
  • Pressures to increase develop high end systems may starve simpler more affordable systems of funding/development 
  • High accident/loss rates 
  • Bandwidth requirements and spectrum management 
  • Uncertainty over when certain technologies will deliver makes planning of manned/unmanned mix difficult and transition planning problematic
Reference:

Brooke-Holland, L. (2013). Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (drones): an Introduction. International Affairs and Defense, 21.