General Atomics: New radar to turn Gray Eagles
into anti-drone hunters
Oct 9, 08:12 PM
U.S. soldiers assemble an MQ-1C Gray Eagle on May 19, 2023. The unmanned aircraft system replaced the MQ-1 Predator. (Sgt. Kelsea Cook/Indiana National Guard)
Correction: A previous
version of this story misstated the timeline of General Atomics’ testing of the
Eagle Eye radar. The correct time frame is available below.
WASHINGTON — A new multidomain surveillance radar
from General
Atomics Aeronautical Systems, dubbed Eagle Eye, aims
to increase the U.S. Army’s ability to track and shoot down even small drones.
Mike Shortsleeve, vice president of Defense
Department strategic development at the firm, said in a Monday interview at the
Association of the U.S. Army’s conference in Washington that Gray Eagle 25M drones are now
in production with Eagle Eye, a synthetic aperture radar.
A fact sheet from General Atomics said Eagle Eye’s
synthetic aperture radar can spot targets up to 50 miles away at high
resolution, or up to 125 miles when conducting maritime surveillance.
Recent conflicts, such as the Russian invasion of
Ukraine and the days-old fighting between Israel and Hamas, show the growing
importance of small drones in war, Shortsleeve said. Hamas in part used small,
explosive-laden drones to take the Israeli military by surprise, Forbes
reported.
The threat from drones is likely to increase,
according to Shortsleeve, as technical advancements such as artificial intelligence
and machine learning increase their capabilities and as the costs of such
systems come down.
That is where General Atomics sees its Eagle
Eye-equipped Gray Eagles — working hand-in-hand with other systems that could
do the actual shooting down of enemy drones — benefiting the Army, Shortsleeve
said.
For example, he added, it would be prohibitively
expensive for a Gray Eagle to track and shoot down a small enemy drone with a
multimillion-dollar missile. But the Gray Eagle can identify the target, track
it and hand that target off to another counter-drone platform that could down
an enemy UAV with a less expensive weapon, such as a cannon or directed-energy
weapon.
In a May test, he said, the Eagle Eye was able to
detect and track a small fixed-wing drone made out of balsa wood — much smaller
than forces in the field would likely encounter from an enemy. An earlier test
in late 2022 used the radar to shoot down a drone, General Atomics said.
Shortsleeve said Eagle Eye would be able to spot
targets in the air, at sea and on the ground.
General Atomics expects to deliver the first
tranche of 12 Eagle Eye-equipped Gray Eagle
25Ms to the Army National Guard in the second half of 2026,
Shortsleeve said. Another six to 12 will follow for the active duty Army, he
said. General Atomics plans to continue producing Gray Eagles with the new
radars until the service decides to stop buying them or wants to put a
different radar on the new Gray Eagle drones, he added.
The 25M variant of the Gray Eagle also includes
open-architecture aircraft and ground systems, a better engine, advanced data
links, and improved range, the company said.
General Atomics has been evolving the technology
at the core of Eagle Eye for years, but work on the program dramatically
accelerated in the last five years, Shortsleeve said.
And loitering munitions of the kind that have
gotten considerable use in Ukraine could also be targeted by the Eagle Eye
radar, he said.
Some foreign nations have expressed interest in
Eagle Eye-equipped drones, Shortsleeve noted, but he declined to identify the
countries.
It would be possible to adapt this radar to other
platforms besides the Gray Eagle, he said. But in years to come, he added, the
Army is only going to need more capabilities to counter small drones in combat.
“The proliferation [of small drones] in combat operations
is growing exponentially,” Shortsleeve said. In the future, “it’s going to be
undeniable that [unmanned aerial systems] are going to be all over the
battlespace, in any large-scale combat operations.”
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