Military leaders get OK to shoot down drones over bases
The Pentagon has sent new guidance to the armed services that lays out the military's authority to disable or shoot down any drone that violates airspace restrictions over a U.S. base and is deemed a security risk. The Pentagon has sent new guidance to the armed services that lays out the military's authority to disable or shoot down any drone that violates airspace restrictions over a U.S. base and is deemed a security risk. Jeff Davis told Pentagon reporters Monday that a classified policy was approved in July. On Friday, additional public information was sent to military bases around the country so officials can alert their communities about the restrictions and the actions the military can take. He said the new policy provides details about the actions the military can take to stop any threat, including destroying or seizing any unmanned aircraft -- including the smaller ones that the general public can easily buy -- that is flown over a base.
Aug-8-2017
- AI-Alerts:
- 2017 > 2017-08 > AAAI AI-Alert for Aug 8, 2017 (1.00)
- Country:
- North America > United States (0.41)
- Industry:
- Government > Military (1.00)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots > Autonomous Vehicles > Drones (0.85)