Mysterious drones raise oversight questions. What can be done?

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For months, people have reported drones flying near U.S. military installations – most recently in New Jersey. 

An FBI official said there “has been a slight overreaction” to the drones, but the federal government’s inability to provide definitive explanations and solutions has generated annoyance, suspicion, and calls for action.

Why We Wrote This

A spate of unusual drone sightings in the U.S. is raising questions about oversight. Shooting down drones is illegal unless they are deemed a national security threat. But many wonder if there’s a lack of options beyond that. Just what should be done?

The Federal Aviation Administration notes that it’s illegal to shoot down drones, unless they pose an immediate threat to national security. But the lack of options short of that has led to questions about whether oversight of the U.S. skies is too lax. The FAA has guidelines for hobbyists and commercial drone pilots, but some lawmakers say they’re not enough.

Proposed legislation would give state and local officials more power to track and counter drones. The FBI supports that, a bureau official has told lawmakers.

Security expert Stacie Pettyjohn says the Defense Department needs to beef up its system of sensors to detect and track drones above military bases and secret government installations. 

Or, Dr. Pettyjohn says, GPS jamming or spoofing could allow defenders to hijack control of a drone and land it.

For now, a Pentagon official said, the flights aren’t necessarily criminal, but they are irresponsible. 

Last month, drones flying over two military installations on the East Coast prompted “thousands” of phone calls to report them, raising the latest in a series of questions that have swirled for months around mysterious drones spotted above U.S. military bases and other sensitive locations throughout the country.

The most recent were in New Jersey, including over a Defense Department research center, Picatinny Arsenal, specializing in developing weapons, some secret, for future wars. 

This comes on the heels of reports of drones that loitered over Langley Air Force Base in Virginia off and on for nearly two weeks. There were more sightings earlier this month at Ramstein, the Pentagon’s premiere hub in Germany, and at U.S. military facilities in the United Kingdom late last month.

Why We Wrote This

A spate of unusual drone sightings in the U.S. is raising questions about oversight. Shooting down drones is illegal unless they are deemed a national security threat. But many wonder if there’s a lack of options beyond that. Just what should be done?

Rep. Jeff Van Drew, a New Jersey Republican, theorized that the drones at U.S. sites were being deployed by an Iranian “mothership” in the Atlantic, prompting some eye rolls and a denial by the Pentagon. But the concern is bipartisan, with some Democrats pointing to the possibility of Chinese meddling. 

The Biden administration has tried to assuage fears. “I think there has been a slight overreaction,” an official with the FBI said in a background call with reporters Saturday.

But the inability of the federal government to provide definitive explanations and solutions has generated annoyance, suspicion, and calls for action.

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