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Well, not so grim, unless you happen to be a Taleban in Afghanistan – the first of the RAF's Reaper Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have arrived, (rightly) hailed as "Britain's most sophisticated unmanned surveillance system".
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That aside, the procurement is another "success" for the Urgent Operational Requirement (UOR) system which has brought the Reapers into the field in a mere 15 months. In MoD terms, this is roughly equivalent to Star Trek's USS Enterprise doing Warp 9 – perhaps Drayson's parting gift to the troops.
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With the three machines planned, each with a 42-hour endurance in the surveillance mode, they will be able to provide genuine 24-hour coverage over operational areas when needed. They will thus take much of the load from the ageing Nimrods, which are currently providing much of the ISTAR function.
Had these, or their predecessor, the Predator, been available earlier, perhaps we would not have had the well-rehearsed problems with the Nimrod.
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The betting is, however, that this development will receive scant attention from the media which is happy to report on shortages of kit and its inadequacies, when it suits it, but rarely (as with the Warriors ) reports the good news. We, on this blog – as far as we can – will continue to report both.
Reaper photos courtesy of MoD. Click the pics to enlarge.
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