NATO testing underwater drones off the cost of Europe to deter Russia
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg shares why its important for America to stay in the fight between Russia and Ukraine on One Nation. NATO is testing new sea drones that can use artificial intelligence to detect suspicious activity near underwater infrastructure. Fourteen members of the NATO alliance, along with Sweden, have teamed up for multiple exercises over 12 days off the cost of Portugal to test underwater sea drones that have real-time ability to send "a deterrence signal to the enemy, be it Russia or somebody else," said Lt. Gen. Hans-Werner Wiermann, head of NATO's cell for protecting undersea infrastructure, according to a report from Bloomberg. The exercises, dubbed Dynamic Messenger 23 and Robotic Experimentation and Prototyping with Maritime Unmanned Systems (REPMUS 23), will bring together over 2,000 civilian amid military personnel with a focus on integrating maritime unmanned systems into the alliance's operations and test new technologies that are currently under development. NATO personnel test new underwater drone technology during Dynamic Messenger 23 and REPMUS 23 exercises.
Oct-2-2023, 11:29:07 GMT
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