HomeAmericaFAA, Pentagon sign agreement on deploying anti-drone laser system near Mexico

FAA, Pentagon sign agreement on deploying anti-drone laser system near Mexico

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By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, April ‌10 (Reuters) - The Federal Aviation Administration and Pentagon said on Friday ​they had signed an agreement allowing the government's use of a high-energy laser counter-drone system along the ⁠southern U.S. border with Mexico.

The agreement came after the FAA conducted testing in New Mexico on the laser system used by the Pentagon and Homeland Security Department ​and validated that proper safety controls are in place and do not pose undue risks to passenger ‌aircraft.

Two earlier incidents posed serious concerns.

The U.S. military errantly shot down a government drone with the laser-based system on February 25, leading the FAA to expand an area ⁠in which flights are barred around Fort Hancock, Texas.

The incident followed ⁠the February 18 decision by the FAA to halt all flights for 10 days at the nearby El Paso airport because of the use of the Pentagon laser system by a Homeland Security agency without completion of an FAA safety review. The ‌El Paso shutdown order was lifted by the FAA after about eight hours following ⁠the White House's intervention.

"Following a thorough, data-informed Safety Risk ‌Assessment, we determined that these systems do not present ​an increased risk to the flying public," FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford said on Friday.

The Pentagon has said there are more than 1,000 drone incursions along the U.S.-Mexico ‌border each month. U.S. security officials have increasingly expressed alarm ​about the use of drones ⁠by Mexican cartels to drop drug packages or surveil trafficking routes.

Several media ‌outlets reported last month drones were seen ⁠over Fort McNair in Washington where Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth live.

There is no indication the Pentagon plans to deploy the laser at ​the base, which is close ‌to Reagan Washington National Airport.

Democratic Senator Tammy Duckworth last month called on federal watchdogs ⁠to review the decision-making process leading to ​the use of the systems and the FAA's decision to close airspace.

(Reporting by David Shepardson, ​Editing by Franklin Paul, Rod Nickel)

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