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Navy’s ‘influx’ of aquatic and aerial drones tested in
the Middle East
By
J.P. LAWRENCE
STARS AND STRIPES • December
1, 2022
Unmanned ships with green boxes containing aerial
drones prowled the waters near Naval Support Activity Bahrain, Dec. 1, 2022, as
part of an exercise that was the first test for 10 systems by the U.S. 5th
Fleet. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)
MANAMA, Bahrain — Unmanned boats with onboard
aerial drones ready to launch sailed through the waters off Bahrain on
Thursday, carrying with them the Navy’s vision of a 100-vessel unmanned surface
fleet in the Middle East by the end of next summer.
A three-week training event dubbed Digital
Horizon, which started last week, features 15 types of unmanned systems, 10 of
which are new to the Navy in the region, service officials said.
“This is a notable influx of new systems that 5th
Fleet hasn’t worked with before, especially at one time,” Cmdr. Timothy
Hawkins, Naval Forces Central Command and 5th Fleet spokesman, said Thursday.
“This event, we haven’t done something like this yet, but we’ve been building
up to it.”
Sailors with the Navy’s Task Force 59 launch a
drone boat from a pier at Naval Support Activity Bahrain, Dec. 1, 2022, as part
of the Digital Horizon exercise. The unmanned vessel, the Ocean Aero triton,
carries sensors that can conduct surveillance. It also can transform between
surface and submarine modes. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)
The Navy aims to rely more on unmanned vessels
aided by artificial intelligence to help patrol Middle East waterways, through
which much of the world’s trade transits.
A naval unit known as Task Force 59 was created
last year to focus on integrating drones and AI into 5th Fleet operations.
Unmanned systems can operate for long stretches on their own as they gather
information.
As boats with observers approached the drones out
at sea Wednesday, the vessels’ artificial intelligence alerted contractors and
sailors at Task Force 59’s robotics operations center at NSA Bahrain.
Some of the drone boats can identify objects in
the water and spot suspicious behavior. This capability allows humans to focus
on priority threats, Navy Capt. Michael Brasseur, commodore of Task Force 59,
said Thursday.
The unmanned vessel Ocean AeroTriton cruises
through international waters between Naval Support Activity Bahrain and Iran,
Nov. 30, 2022, as part of a naval exercise. The solar-powered drone can spend
three months at sea on the surface, or eight days submerged. (J.P.
Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)
“What we want to do ultimately is expand further
how far we can see,” Brasseur said.
“What we want to do ultimately is expand further
how far we can see,” Brasseur said.
“What we want to do ultimately is expand further
how far we can see,” Brasseur said. “And we want to leverage machine learning
and AI to reduce the cognitive load on the watch-standers.”
Over the past year, Task Force 59 operated
unmanned surface ships in the Middle East for more than 25,000 hours, a Naval
Forces Central Command statement last week said.
Some of the vessels known as Saildrone Explorers
have operated at sea for as long as 220 consecutive days, the NAVCENT statement
said.
The Seasats X3, an unmanned surveillance craft, skims the waters of the Persian Gulf, Nov. 30, 2022 as part of a 5th Fleet exercise. The small ship can carry payloads for reconnaissance, electronic warfare and ocean mapping. (J.P. Lawrence/Stars and Stripes)
Iran
seized those drones on separate occasions in August and September. In
both instances, Iranian sailors released them as U.S. warships neared, the Navy
said.
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