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General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper

The General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper (sometimes called Predator B) is an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV, one component of an unmanned aircraft system (UAS)) capable of remotely controlled or autonomous flight operations, developed by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) primarily for the United States Air Force (USAF). The MQ-9 and other UAVs are referred to as Remotely Piloted Vehicles/Aircraft (RPV/RPA) by the USAF to indicate ground control by humans.[2][3]

MQ-9 Reaper / Predator B
U.S. Air Force MQ-9A Reaper armed with a Paveway and 2 AGM-114 Hellfire missiles
Role Unmanned combat aerial vehicle
National origin United States
Manufacturer General Atomics Aeronautical Systems
First flight 2 February 2001; 23 years ago (2001-02-02)
Introduction 1 May 2007
Status In service
Primary users United States Air Force
Number built 300+ as of 2021[1]
Developed from General Atomics MQ-1 Predator
Developed into

The MQ-9 is a larger, heavier, more capable aircraft than the earlier General Atomics MQ-1 Predator and can be controlled by the same ground systems. The Reaper has a 950-shaft-horsepower (712 kW) turboprop engine (compared to the Predator's 115 hp (86 kW) piston engine). The greater power allows the Reaper to carry 15 times more ordnance payload and cruise at about three times the speed of the MQ-1.[4]

The aircraft is monitored and controlled, including weapons employment, by aircrew in the Ground Control Station (GCS).[5] The MQ-9 is the first hunter-killer UAV designed for long-endurance, high-altitude surveillance.[4] In 2006, Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force General T. Michael Moseley said: "We've moved from using UAVs primarily in intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance roles before Operation Iraqi Freedom, to a true hunter-killer role with the Reaper."[4]

The USAF operated over 300 MQ-9 Reapers as of May 2021.[1] Several MQ-9 aircraft have been retrofitted with equipment upgrades to improve performance in "high-end combat situations", and all new MQ-9s will have those upgrades. 2035 is the projected end of the service life of the MQ-9 fleet.[1] The average unit cost of an MQ-9 is estimated at $31 million in 2023 dollars.[6][7] The Reaper is also used by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection and the militaries of several other countries. The MQ-9A has been further developed into the MQ-9B, which (based on mission and payload) are referred to by General Atomics as SkyGuardian or SeaGuardian.

Development edit

Origins edit

The General Atomics "Predator B-001", a proof-of-concept aircraft, first flew on 2 February 2001. Abraham Karem is the designer of the Predator.[8] The B-001 was powered by an AlliedSignal Garrett TPE331-10T turboprop engine with 950 shaft horsepower (710 kW). It had an airframe that was based on the standard Predator airframe, except with an enlarged fuselage and wings lengthened from 48 feet (15 m) to 66 feet (20 m). The B-001 had a speed of 220 knots (410 km/h; 250 mph) and could carry a payload of 750 pounds (340 kg) to an altitude of 50,000 feet (15,000 m) with an endurance of 30 hours.[9]

The company refined the design, taking it in two separate directions. The first was a jet-powered version; "Predator B-002" was fitted with a Williams FJ44-2A turbofan engine with 10.2 kilonewtons (2,300 lbf) thrust. It had payload capacity of 475 pounds (215 kg), a ceiling of 60,000 feet (18 km) and endurance of 12 hours. The USAF ordered two aircraft for evaluation, delivered in 2007.[10][unreliable source?] The two prototype airframes B-001 and B-002 have been retired to the USAF museum at Wright-Patterson AFB. B-002 was originally equipped with the FJ-44 engine but it was removed and a TPE-331-10T was installed so that the USAF could take delivery of two aircraft in the same configuration.

The second direction the design took, referred to by GA as the "Altair", was the "Predator B-003", which has a new airframe with an 84-foot (26 m) wingspan and a takeoff weight of approximately 7,000 pounds (3,200 kg). Like the Predator B-001, it is powered by a TPE-331-10YGD turboprop. This variant has a payload capacity of 3,000 pounds (1,400 kg), a maximum ceiling of 52,000 feet (16 km), and an endurance of 36 hours.[11][12]

In October 2001, the USAF signed a contract for an initial pair of Predator Bs (001 and 002) for evaluation. Designated YMQ-9s due to their prototype role, they were delivered in 2002.[9] The USAF referred to it as "Predator B" until it was renamed "Reaper". The USAF aimed for the Predator B to provide an improved "deadly persistence" capability, flying over a combat area night-and-day waiting for a target to present itself, complementing piloted attack aircraft, typically used to drop larger quantities of ordnance on a target, while a cheaper RPV can operate almost continuously using ground controllers working in shifts, but carrying less ordnance.[12]

Operation edit

 
The satellite antenna and sensors of an NOAA-NASA flight demonstrator, 2005

MQ-9 Reaper crews (pilots and sensor operators), stationed at bases such as Creech Air Force Base, near Las Vegas, Nevada, can hunt for targets and observe terrain using multiple sensors, including a thermographic camera. One claim was that the onboard camera is able to read a license plate from two miles (3.2 km) away.[13] An operator's command takes 1.2 seconds to reach the drone via a satellite link.

The MQ-9 is fitted with six stores pylons. The inner stores pylons can carry a maximum of 1,500 pounds (680 kg) each and allow carriage of external fuel tanks. The mid-wing stores pylons can carry a maximum of 600 pounds (270 kg) each, while the outer stores pylons can carry a maximum of 200 pounds (91 kg) each. An MQ-9 with two 1,000-pound (450 kg) external fuel tanks and 1,000 pounds (450 kg) of munitions has an endurance of 42 hours.[12] The Reaper has an endurance of 14 hours when fully loaded with munitions.[4]

The MQ-9 carries a variety of weapons including the GBU-12 Paveway II laser-guided bomb, the AGM-114 Hellfire II air-to-ground missiles, the AIM-9 Sidewinder,[13] and the GBU-38 Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM). Tests are underway to allow for the addition of the AIM-92 Stinger air-to-air missile.[citation needed]

By October 2007, the USAF owned nine Reapers,[14] and by December 2010 had 57 with plans to buy another 272, for a total of 329 Reapers.[15] Critics have stated that the USAF's insistence on qualified pilots flying RPVs is a bottleneck to expanding deployment. USAF Major General William Rew stated on 5 August 2008, "For the way we fly them right now"—fully integrated into air operations and often flying missions alongside manned aircraft—"we want pilots to fly them."[16] This reportedly has exacerbated losses of USAF aircraft in comparison with US Army operations.[17] In March 2011, U.S. Department of Defense Secretary Robert Gates stated that, while manned aircraft are needed, the USAF must recognize "the enormous strategic and cultural implications of the vast expansion in remotely piloted vehicles..." and stated that as the service buys manned fighters and bombers, it must give equal weight to unmanned drones and "the service's important role in the cyber and space domains."[18]

As of 2018 the USAF had taken delivery of 287 out of 366 MQ-9 Reapers on contract with General Atomics. The total program quantity is set at 433, including Foreign Military Sales.[7]

In 2013, the Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) sought the ability to pack up an MQ-9 in less than eight hours, fly it anywhere in the world aboard a C-17 Globemaster III, and then have it ready to fly in another eight hours to support special operations teams at places with no infrastructure. MQ-1 and MQ-9 drones must fly aboard cargo aircraft to travel long distances as they lack the refueling technology or speed to travel themselves; the C-17 is large enough to carry the aircraft and support systems and can land on short runways. Pilots traveling with the Reaper will use the ground control station to launch and land the aircraft, while most of the flying will be done by US-based pilots.[19]

Testbed and upgrades edit

In November 2012, Raytheon completed ground verification tests for the ADM-160 MALD and MALD-J for integration onto the Reaper for an unmanned suppression of enemy air defenses capability.[20] On 12 April 2013, a company-owned MQ-9 equipped with a jamming pod and digital receiver/exciter successfully demonstrated its electronic warfare capability at Marine Corps Air Station (MCAS) Yuma, performing its mission in coordination with over 20 participating aircraft.[21] A second electronic warfare test, fitted with the Northrop Grumman Pandora EW System, was conducted on 22 October 2013 with other unmanned aircraft and Northrop Grumman EA-6B Prowlers, showing effectiveness in a multi-node approach against a more capable IADS.[22]

In 2011, the U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) reported its interest in using the Reaper and its MTS-B sensor to provide firing quality data for early interception of ballistic missile launches. The MDA is exploring concepts to use the UAV's EO/IR sensor to achieve "launch-on-remote" capabilities with missile interceptors before detection by Aegis radars. At least two aircraft would be needed to triangulate a target to provide high-fidelity data. The MTS-B includes short and mid-wave IR bands, optimal for tracking launch and rocket burn.[23]

In 2013, the MDA terminated plans to build a follow-on to the two orbiting Space Tracking and Surveillance System (STSS) satellites due to near-term costs, opting to continue testing the Reaper for ballistic missile target discrimination. The MDA planned to test the improved MTS-C sensor, which adds a long-wave IR detector optimized for tracking cold bodies such as missiles and warheads after booster burnout, or plumes and exhaust. The goal is to use data from multiple high-flying UAVs to provide an offboard cue to launch an SM-3 missile from an Aegis ship.[24] Two Reapers demonstrated their ability to track ballistic missiles using their MTS-B EO/IR turret during a test in late June 2016.[25]

In June 2015, a study by the USAF's Scientific Advisory Board identified several improvements for operating the Reaper in contested airspace; adding readily available sensors, weapons, and threat detection and countermeasures could increase situational awareness and enable riskier deployments. Suggestions included a radar warning receiver (RWR) to know when it's being targeted, air-to-air and miniature air-to-ground weapons, manned-unmanned teaming, multi-UAV control, automatic take-offs and landings, and precision navigation and timing systems to fly in GPS-denied areas. Another idea was redesigned ground control stations with user-friendly video game-like controllers and touchscreen maps to access data without overwhelming operators.[26][27]

In October 2015, Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff for ISR Robert Otto suggested redesigning the MQ-9's GCS to be operated by one person for most missions rather than two (to fly and work the sensors) to simplify operations and reduce manpower requirements by hundreds of sensor operators. Introducing an auto-land capability would also reduce the Reaper's manpower requirements to staff launch and recovery teams.[28] Automatic take-off and landing capabilities are already present in the RQ-4 Global Hawk and MQ-1C Gray Eagle, and are planned to be provided to the MQ-9 in 2017. The Air Force requires the manually loaded Reaper to operate from a runway at least 5,000 ft (1.5 km) long, but automated take-offs and landings would enable it to operate from a 3,000 ft (0.91 km) runway.[29]

In April 2017, an MQ-9 Block 5 flew with a Raytheon ALR-69A RWR in its payload pod to demonstrate the aircraft's ability to conduct missions in the proximity of threat radars and air defenses, the first time this capability was demonstrated on a remotely piloted aircraft.[30] In September 2020, a Reaper was flown carrying two Hellfire missiles on each of the stations previously reserved for 500 lb bombs or fuel tanks. A software upgrade doubled the aircraft's capacity to eight missiles.[31][32][33]

Pentagon wants to upgrade MQ-9 Reaper with directed-energy weapons such as low-powered laser and high-powered microwave beams. A high-field optical module to act on the human nervous system is also under consideration.[34]

In September 2020, GA-ASI conducted captive carry tests of the Sparrowhawk Small Unmanned Aircraft System (sUAS) on the MQ-9, with the Reaper itself acting as a drone mothership. The MQ-9B Sky Guardian will be able to carry up to four Sparrowhawks.[35]

Design edit

 
An MQ-9 taxiing in Afghanistan, 2007

A typical MQ-9 system consists of multiple aircraft, ground control station, communications equipment, maintenance spares, and personnel. A military flight crew includes a pilot, sensor operator, and Mission Intelligence Coordinator.[5] The aircraft is powered by a 950 horsepower (710 kW) turboprop, with a maximum speed of about 260 knots (480 km/h; 300 mph) and a cruising speed of 150–170 knots (170–200 mph; 280–310 km/h).[36]

With a 66 ft (20 m) wingspan, and a maximum payload of 3,800 lb (1,700 kg), the MQ-9 can be armed with a variety of weaponry, including Hellfire missiles and 500 lb (230 kg) laser-guided bomb units.[36] Its endurance is 30 hours when conducting ISR missions, which decreases to 23 hours if it is carrying a full weapons load.[37] The Reaper has a range of 1,000 nmi (1,150 mi; 1,850 km)[dubious ] and an operational altitude of 25,000 ft (7,600 m), which makes it especially useful for long-term loitering operations, both for surveillance and support of ground troops.[38]

 
The first MQ-9 arriving at Creech AFB, March 2007

The Predator and Reaper were designed for military operations and not intended to operate among crowded airline traffic. The aircraft typically lack systems capable of complying with FAA See-And-Avoid regulations.[39] In 2005, requests were made for MQ-9s to be used in search and rescue operations following Hurricane Katrina but, as there was no FAA authorization in place at the time, it was not used. On 18 May 2006, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) issued a certificate of authorization allowing MQ-1 and MQ-9 UAVs to fly in U.S. civil airspace to search for survivors of disasters.[40]

An MQ-9 can adopt various mission kits and combinations of weapon and sensor payloads to meet combat requirements. Its Raytheon AN/AAS-52[citation needed] multi-spectral targeting sensor suite includes a color/monochrome daylight TV, infrared, and image-intensified TV with laser rangefinder/laser designator to designate targets for laser guided munitions.[citation needed] The aircraft is also equipped with the Lynx Multi-mode Radar that contains synthetic aperture radar (SAR) that can operate in both spotlight and strip modes, and ground moving target indication (GMTI) with Dismount Moving Target Indicator (DMTI) and Maritime Wide-Area Search (MWAS) capabilities.[41]

The Reaper was used as a test bed for Gorgon Stare, a wide-area surveillance sensor system.[42] Increment 1 of the system was first fielded in March 2011 on the Reaper and could cover an area of 16 km2 (6.2 sq mi); increment 2, incorporating ARGUS-IS and expanding the coverage area to 100 km2 (39 sq mi), achieved initial operating capability (IOC) in early 2014. The system has 368 cameras capable of capturing five million pixels each to create an image of about 1.8 billion pixels; video is collected at 12 frames per second, producing several terabytes of data per minute.[43]

In January 2012, General Atomics released a new trailing arm design for the Reaper's main landing gear. Benefits include an over 30% increase in landing weight capacity, a 12% increase in gross takeoff weight (from 10,500 pounds (4,800 kg) to 11,700 pounds (5,300 kg)), a maintenance-free shock absorber (eliminating the need for nitrogen pressurization), a fully rejected takeoff brake system, and provisions for automatic takeoff and landing capability and Anti-lock Brake System (ABS) field upgrades.[44] In April 2012, General Atomics announced possible upgrades to USAF Reapers, including two extra 100-US-gallon (380 L) fuel pods under the wings to increase endurance to 37 hours. The wingspan can also be increased to 88 feet (27 m), increasing endurance to 42 hours.[45][46]

The USAF has bought 38 Reaper Extended Range (ER) versions, carrying external fuel tanks (which don't affect weapon capacity), the heavy-weight landing gear, a four-bladed propeller, a new fuel management system that ensures fuel and thermal balance among external tank, wing, and fuselage fuel sources, and an alcohol-water injection (AWI) system to shorten required runway takeoff length. These features increase endurance from 27 to 33–35 hours, while the company is still pitching the lengthened wing option. The Reaper ER first flew operationally in August 2015.[47][48]

The aircraft also has the sensor ball replaced with a high-definition camera, better communications that allow ground controllers to see the higher quality video, software to enable automatic detection of threats and tracking of 12 moving targets at once, and the ability to "super ripple"-fire missiles within 0.32 seconds of each other.[49]

On 25 February 2016, General Atomics announced a successful test flight of the new Predator-B/ER version. The new version had an extended wingspan of 79 feet (24 m), increasing its endurance to 40 hours. Other improvements included short-field takeoff and landing performance, spoilers on the wings to enable precision automatic landings and provision on the wings for leading-edge de-ice and integrated low- and high-band RF antennas.[50]

Operational history edit

U.S. Air Force edit

 
MQ-1 UAV Flight Crew at Joint Base Balad (LSA Anaconda), Iraq, 7 August 2007

On 1 May 2007, the U.S. Air Force activated its 432nd Wing to operate MQ-9 Reapers and MQ-1 Predators at Creech Air Force Base, Nevada. The pilots first conducted combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan that summer.[51] On 28 October 2007, an MQ-9 achieved its first "kill", firing a Hellfire missile against Afghan insurgents in the Deh Rawood region of the mountainous Oruzgan province.[52] By 6 March 2008, according to Air Force Lieutenant General Gary North, the Reaper had attacked 16 targets in Afghanistan using 500 lb (230 kg) bombs and Hellfire missiles.[53]

In 2008, the New York Air National Guard 174th Attack Wing began to switch from F-16 fighters to Reapers, becoming the first fighter unit to convert entirely to unmanned combat aerial vehicle (UCAV) use.[54] On 17 July 2008, the USAF began flying Reaper missions within Iraq from Balad Air Base.[55][56] It was reported on 11 August 2008 that the 174th Fighter Wing would consist entirely of Reapers.[57] By March 2009 the USAF had 28 operational Reapers.[58] Beginning in September 2009, Reapers were deployed by the Africa Command to the Seychelles islands for use in Indian Ocean anti-piracy patrols.[59]

On 13 September 2009, positive control of an MQ-9 was lost during a combat mission over Afghanistan, after which the control-less drone started flying towards the Afghan border with Tajikistan.[60] An F-15E Strike Eagle fired an AIM-9 missile at the drone, successfully destroying its engine. Before the drone impacted the ground, contact was reestablished with the drone, and it was flown into a mountain to destroy it. It was the first US drone to be destroyed intentionally by allied forces.[61]

By July 2010, thirty-eight Predators and Reapers had been lost during combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, another nine were lost in training missions in the U.S.[62] In 2010, the USAF conducted over 33,000 close air support missions, a more-than-20 percent increase compared with 2009.[18] By March 2011, the USAF had 48 Predator and Reaper combat air patrols flying in Iraq and Afghanistan compared with 18 in 2007.[18]

 
An MQ-9A Reaper in Afghanistan, 2007

As of March 2011, the USAF was training more pilots for advanced unmanned aerial vehicles than for any other single weapons system.[18] In 2012, the Reaper, Predator and Global Hawk were described as "... the most accident-prone aircraft in the Air Force fleet."[63]

In October 2011, the USAF began operating Reapers out of Arba Minch Airport in Ethiopia for surveillance-only operations in Somalia.[64] In 2012, both Reapers and Predators were deployed in Benghazi, Libya after the attack that killed the US ambassador in that city.[65] In February 2013, the U.S. stationed a Predator at Niamey to provide intelligence for French forces during Operation Serval in Mali; it was later replaced by two MQ-9 Reapers. In April 2013, one of these Reapers crashed on a surveillance flight due to mechanical failure.[66]

On 22 October 2013, the USAF fleets of MQ-1 Predator and MQ-9 Reaper UAVs reached 2,000,000 flight hours. The RPA program began in the mid-1990s, taking 16 years to reach 1 million flight hours; the 2 million hour mark was reached just two and a half years later.[67]

The high demand for UAVs has caused Air Combat Command to increase pilot output from 188 in 2015 to 300 in 2017 at Holloman.[68]

On 13 November 2015, the Pentagon reported that an MQ-9 had killed ISIL member Mohammed Emwazi, popularly known as "Jihadi John", who was responsible for executing several Western prisoners.[69]

In 2015, a record number (20) of USAF drones crashed; investigators identified three parts of the starter-generator that were susceptible to breakdowns, but could not determine why they were failing. Col. William S. Leister informed Pentagon officials that investigators from the USAF, General Atomics and Skurka had investigated the problem for more than a year. The team, he said, had identified "numerous manufacturing quality issues" yet had been unable to determine the exact cause of the failures.[70]

On 2 October 2017, U.S. Central Command stated that an MQ-9 had been shot down by Houthi air defense systems over Sanaa in western Yemen the previous day. The aircraft took off from Chabelley Airport in Djibouti, and was armed.[71][72][73]

On 18 September 2018, the USAF announced that an MQ-9 armed with an air-to-air missile successfully shot down a smaller target drone in November 2017. The drone was operated by the 432nd Wing.[74] While the destruction of a target drone is a routine USAF exercise, this event was the first instance of a Reaper destroying a small, maneuvering aerial target.

 
MQ-9 Reaper at a FARP (forward area refueling point) in December 2022

On 6 June 2019, Houthis shot down a US MQ-9 Reaper over Yemen. According to United States Central Command, it was shot down by an SA-6 surface-to-air missile that was enabled with Iranian assistance.[75] On 21 August 2019, another unarmed MQ-9 was shot down by Houthis over Dhamar, Yemen,[76] by a Yemini-made Fater-1 missile, an improved SA-6.[77]

On 23 November 2019, a US MQ-9 Reaper was shot down by a Pantsir system operated by the Libyan National Army or Wagner Group over Tripoli, Libya. According to journalist David Cenciotti, the drone was lost after being jammed by Russian Wagner militias working in support of the Libyan National Army.[78]

On 3 January 2020, a US MQ-9 missile strike at Baghdad International Airport killed Qasem Soleimani, the commander of the Iranian Quds Force, and Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis, the deputy commander of Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces.[79]

On 18 August 2020, US Department of Defense announced that two US MQ-9 Reapers had crashed in a mid-air collision over Syria.[80][81] However, claims from local media said that at least one drone might have been shot down by Syrian Opposition rebel fighters or Turkish forces.[82][83]

In April 2021, U.S. and Polish militaries agreed on a long-negotiated plan to increase the American presence in Poland with two units of MQ-9 Reapers deployed by the USAF.[84]

On 14 July 2022, an MQ-9 Reaper operated by the 25th Attack Group crashed during a training mission in Romania. The MQ-9 drones have been deployed to the Romanian 71st Air Base in 2021, starting their operational flights on 1 February 2021.[85][86]

On 14 March 2023, one of two intercepting Russian Su-27 fighters collided with an MQ-9 Reaper flying in international airspace over the Black Sea. US Air Force Gen. James Hecker, commander of the United States Air Forces in Europe – Air Forces Africa, stated, "At approximately 7:03 am (CET), one of the Russian Su-27 aircraft struck the propeller of the MQ-9, causing U.S. forces to have to bring the MQ-9 down in international waters. Several times before the collision, the Su-27s dumped fuel on and flew in front of the MQ-9 in a reckless, environmentally unsound and unprofessional manner. This incident demonstrates a lack of competence in addition to being unsafe and unprofessional."[87] Russia says it will attempt to retrieve the drone.[88] The US government claimed that it was prepared for such an outcome. John Kirby, National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications, said that "their ability to exploit useful intelligence will be highly minimised". While the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark A. Milley said that there were "mitigating measures" to ensure that Russia obtained no access to valuable tech. He also confirmed that the US would look for the drone as well; however, the water in which it crashed was 4,000 to 5,000 feet (1,200 to 1,500 m) deep. Brigadier General Pat Ryder claimed that drone was "unflyable and uncontrollable" and it likely damaged the Su-27 during the collision.[89] The US has since released footage over the Black Sea.[90]

On 23 July 2023, a Russian fighter aircraft intercepted a US Air Force MQ-9 over Syria and deployed flares in front of it, damaging the propeller. The drone returned to base safely. It was the third near-collision of an MQ-9 with Russian aircraft over Syria that month, with previous incidents on 5 July and 6 July.[91]

On 8 November 2023, Houthi rebels in Yemen shot down a US Air Force MQ-9 over the Red Sea amid the attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq and Syria.[92]

On 18 January 2024, the Islamic Resistance of Iraq claims to have shot down a US MQ-9 Reaper drone after it took off from Kuwait near Muqdadiyah, Diyala Governorate.[93]

On 19 February 2024, Houthi rebels in Yemen shot down a US Air Force MQ-9 over the port city Al Hudaydah amid the attacks on U.S. bases in Iraq and Syria.[94]

During the Israel–Hamas war, at least six US MQ-9 Reaper drones were flown over the Gaza Strip to assist Israel with reconnaissance efforts.[95]

NASA edit

NASA Predator B variants
 
NASA's Predator B, Altair variant
 
NASA's Predator B, Ikhana variant

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) initially expressed interest in a production version of the B-002 turbofan-powered variant,[12] but instead leased an unarmed Reaper variant, which carries the GA-ASI company name "Altair". Altair is one of the first three "Predator-B" airframes. The other two airframes, known as "Predator-B 001" and "Predator-B 002", had a maximum gross weight of 7,500 pounds (3,400 kg).[96]

The Altair differs in that it has an 86-foot (26 m) wingspan (20 ft (6.1 m) greater than early and current MQ-9s). The Altair has enhanced avionics systems to better enable flights in FAA-controlled civil airspace and demonstrate "over-the-horizon" command and control capability from a ground station. These aircraft are used by NASA's Earth Science Enterprise as part of the NASA ERAST Program to perform on-location science missions.[96]

In November 2006, NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center obtained an MQ-9 (and mobile ground control station), named Ikhana, for the Suborbital Science Program within the Science Mission Directorate.[97] In 2007, Ikhana was used to survey the Southern California wildfires, supporting firefighter deployments based upon the highest need. The California Office of Emergency Services requested NASA support for the Esperanza Fire, and the General Atomics Altair was launched less than 24 hours later on a 16-hour mission to map the fire's perimeter. The fire mapping research is a joint project with NASA and the US Forest Service.[98][99]

The NASA Ikhana was used to survey the descent of the Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 (EFT-1) module on its first test mission 5 December 2014. The aircraft loitered at 27,000 ft (8,200 m), used its IR camera to detect the capsule, then switched to the optical camera to observe its descent through parachute deployment and landing in the Pacific Ocean.[100]

U.S. Homeland Security edit

U.S. Customs and Border Protection's Predator B
 
CBP's Predator B
 
CBP's Predator B, Guardian variant
A CBP Predator B directs border agents towards a migrant group crossing the US–Mexico border using thermal video, circa 2008

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operated nine MQ-9s in August 2012. Two were based in North Dakota at Grand Forks Air Force Base, four were based in Arizona, at Fort Huachuca and one was based at the Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas.[101] These aircraft were equipped with GA-ASI's Lynx synthetic aperture radar and Raytheon's MTS-B electro-optical infrared sensors.[102]

The CBP also had two maritime MQ-9s, called Guardians, based at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida, and Naval Air Station Corpus Christi, Texas.[103] The Guardians were equipped with the SeaVue marine search radar; their electro-optical infrared sensor was optimized for maritime operations.[101] The CBP operates one MQ-9 Guardian jointly with the U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) out of land-based stations in Florida and Texas.[104]

The United States Department of Homeland Security initially ordered one Predator B for border protection duty, referred to as MQ-9 CBP-101. It began operations 4 October 2005 and crashed in the Arizona desert on 25 April 2006. The US's NTSB determined that the crash's most likely cause was pilot error by the ground-based pilot, inadvertently shutting down the UAV's engine by failing to follow the checklist.[105] During its operational period, the aircraft flew 959 hours on patrol and played a role in 2,309 arrests. It also contributed to the seizure of four vehicles and 8,267 pounds (3,750 kg) of marijuana.[106]

A second Predator B, called "CBP-104" (initially referred to as "CBP-102"), was delivered in September 2006 and commenced limited border protection operations on 18 October 2006. The president's FY2006 emergency supplemental budget request added $45 million for the program and the FY2007 Homeland Security Appropriations Bill added an additional $20 million. In October 2006, GA-ASI announced a $33.9 million contract to supply two more Predator B systems by the fall 2007.[107] On 16 February 2009, the program was further expanded to include patrols of the Canada–US border.[108]

In February 2009, an MQ-9 began patrolling the Manitoba portion of the U.S.-Canada border and the Great Lakes region, as well as Akwesasne Mohawk territory in Ontario and northern New York. The UAV was based at Grand Forks Air Force Base and watched the 400 km (250 mi)-long border. The drone does not carry weapons and needs permission to enter Canadian airspace.[109]

In January 2014, Customs and Border Protection grounded its UAVs temporarily after an unmanned aircraft was ditched off the coast of California by the operator due to a mechanical failure on 27 January 2014.[110]

On 29 May 2020, during the George Floyd protests, CBP flew an unarmed Predator B drone above Minneapolis to watch protesters. The agency said it was at the request of federal law enforcement in Minneapolis.[111][112]

U.S. Marine Corps edit

Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 1 (VMU-1) began operations with the MQ-9 on a contractor-owned, contractor-operated basis in 2018, and accepted delivery of the Marine Corps' first two MQ-9A air frames[113] in September 2021. Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 3 (VMU-3), based out of MCAS Kaneohe Bay, HI, received their first two MQ-9A air frames in April 2023,[114] and reached initial operational capability (IOC) ahead of schedule in August 2023.[115] Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 2 (VMU-2) was re-designated as VMUT-2 in July 2023. VMUT-2 will serve as the Fleet Replacement Squadron and training squadron for the Marine Corps' UAS officers and enlisted sensor operators.[116]

Other users edit

Belgium edit

In January 2018, the Belgian Ministry of Defence reportedly decided on the MQ-9 to fulfill its medium-altitude long-range UAV requirement. Ministry officials stated that a request for information had been sent to potential suppliers of the system, and that they had received responses from all of them.[117] In October 2018, Belgium confirmed its selection of the MQ-9B SkyGuardian variant, adding that it would be considered a "reconnaissance" asset, suggesting it will not be used to carry weapons.[118][119] In March 2019, the US Department of State approved the sale of four MQ-9B SkyGuardian UAVs to Belgium for $600 million (~$705 million in 2023), pending approval by US Congress.[120][121] In July 2022, work began on adapting the Florennes Air Base to host, fly and maintain the planes.[citation needed]

Dominican Republic edit

The Predator UAV "Guardian" has been used by the Dominican Republic, under U.S. supervision and funding, against drug trafficking from mid-2012.[122]

France edit

On 31 May 2013, French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian confirmed the order of two MQ-9 Reapers, to be delivered by the end of 2013. It was chosen to replace the EADS Harfang and was picked over the Israeli Heron TP.[123] On 27 June 2013, the U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to France for 16 unarmed MQ-9s, associated equipment, ground control hardware, and support, worth up to $1.5 billion total.[124] On 26 August 2013, France and the US Department of Defense concluded the deal for 16 Reapers and 8 ground control stations, with French operators beginning training.[125]

On 24 September 2013, France's first pair of MQ-9 pilots conducted a two-hour training sortie at Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico. Both French pilots had prior UAV experience and went through a five-week ground-based training course and 5 hours on a flight simulator before the first flight. Two additional crews were also receiving instruction at the facility. General Atomics is due to deliver two Reapers and one ground control station to the French Air Force by the end of 2013.[126] On 26 November 2013, France declared that six pilots in three teams were operational, following 100 hours on flight simulators and 4 flights. French MQ-9s were first put into action in January 2014 at Niamey Air Base in Niger for border reconnaissance in the Sahel desert.[127]

On 16 January 2014, France's first MQ-9 flight occurred from Niger. The first two Reapers to enter French service are designated Block 1 and use U.S. equipment; further orders are to be modified with European payloads such as sensors and datalinks.[128] On 31 March 2014, French Air Force Reapers accumulated 500 flight hours in support of Operation Serval.[129] In July 2014, a French MQ-9 helped to locate the wreckage of Air Algérie Flight 5017, which had crashed in Mali.[130]

Germany edit

Germany made a request to purchase five Reapers and four ground control stations, plus related support material and training. The request, being made through the Foreign Military Sales process, was presented to Congress through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency on 1 August 2008 and is valued at US$205 million (~$285 million in 2023).[131][132] However, Germany did not go through with this procurement for the time being and decided to lease the IAI Heron offered by IAI and Rheinmetall instead, initially for the duration of one year, representing a stop-gap measure before a long-term decision on a Medium-Altitude, Long-Endurance (MALE) system is being made.[133][134][135][136]

Greece edit

On 21 April 2022, a well-known Greek military journalist revealed in an interview that the Hellenic Air Force is discussing the purchase of three MQ-9 UCAVs along with the Israeli Heron TPs. Given that the US Air Force has long been operating MQ-9s from Larissa Air Base, Greece has some past experience with it from joint exercises.[137] On 5 July 2022, the Hellenic Parliament approved the acquisition of 3 MQ-9B SeaGuardian UAVs along with two ground stations.[138] On 28 July 2022, the Greek Minister for National Defence, Nikolaos Panagiotopoulos, confirmed the acquisition of the three UAVs.[139]

India edit

In June 2017, the US State Department approved the sale of 22 drones to India, costing around $2–3 billion.[140] As of February 2020, a deal to purchase 30 drones with 10 drones for each of the three Indian armed services, was expected to be signed by the end of the fiscal year.[141][142][143] In November 2020, the Indian Navy began operating two leased MQ-9B SeaGuardians. The lease agreement was valid for one year and has been extended subsequently.[144] The drones are deployed at the Naval Air Station Rajali located in Tamil Nadu and had logged close to 3,000 hours covering over 14 million square miles by August 2022.[145][144] In February 2022, it was reported that Indian Navy had put the deal on the back burner and was instead looking at more indigenous options from the DRDO as well as upgrading its current fleet of IAI Heron drones.[146] On 27 February 2022, PTI reported that the procurement for the 30 armed Predator B drones – 10 each for the Indian Army, Indian Navy and Indian Air Force is in the advanced stage and disputed earlier reports of the deal being put on the back burner with India reportedly providing "good feedback" on the SeaGuardians already on lease.[147] On 15 June 2023, Reuters reported that the Indian side has approved the purchase of 31 drones worth slightly over $3 billion.[148] The formal announcement of the deal is expected during Modi's visit to the U.S. later in the month.[149]

Italy edit

On 1 August 2008, Italy submitted a FMS request through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency for four aircraft, four ground stations and five years of maintenance support, all valued at US$330 million.[131][150] Italy ordered two more aircraft in November 2009.[151] On 30 May 2012, it was reported that the U.S. planned to sell kits to arm Italy's six Reapers with Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs.[152] However Gen. Alberto Rosso has expressed frustration at American delays in integrating additional weapons onto the platform and suggested that Italy may have to seek UAS alternatives.[153] Italian Reapers were used:

  • in Libya, since 10 August 2011,[154] as part of its contribution to NATO's Operation Unified Protector (flew about 300 hours)
  • in Kosovo, since 13 March 2012[155] inbound NATO KFOR "Joint Enterprise" operation
  • on "Mare Nostrum" mission (Mediterranean sea, migrants search and rescue operation) by October 2013[156]
  • into Afghanistan theater by January 2014[157] (to replace Predator A+).

On 3 November 2015, the U.S. approved a deal covering weapons integration onto Italy's Reaper aircraft, which would make it the first country outside the UK to weaponize the drone. The potential for increased contribution to NATO coalition operations, improved operational flexibility, and enhanced survivability for Italian forces prompted the request.[158]

On 20 November 2019, an Italian Air Force MQ-9 was shot down by a Pantsir system operated by the Libyan National Army or Wagner Group, near the city of Tarhuna, Libya.[159] The Libyan National Army claimed to have shot down the drone that, based on the initial reports, was thought to be a Turkish operated drone, supporting the opposed Government of National Accord. The Italian Defense confirmed the loss stating the cause of the crash is under investigation.[160]

Netherlands edit

On 19 June 2013, General Atomics and Fokker Technologies signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to offer the MQ-9 Reaper to the Dutch government to meet their need for a MALE UAV. The MOU recognizes that Fokker will assist in maintenance and support of the aircraft in the Netherlands if a deal goes through.[161]

On 21 November 2013, the Dutch Minister of Defense announced that the Royal Netherlands Air Force (RNLAF) had selected the MQ-9 Reaper Block-V as its new MALE UAV. The new MALE UAV 306 squadron will be based at Leeuwarden Air Base. In July 2018, the Dutch government signed a Letter of Acceptance for the acquisition through the Foreign Military Sales process.[162]

The Dutch MQ-9 is to have the Synthetic Aperture Radar with the Maritime Search option and also a special ground search radar with more range and electronic sensors to detect ground radar and signals. The RNLAF bought four ground stations (two at Homebase, two at forward operating base) and four MQ-9s Block-V. The aircraft are to reach full operational status in 2023.[163] Four more systems are ordered.[164] The decision was also made to arm the Reapers.[165]

Spain edit

On 6 August 2015, the Spanish Ministry of Defence announced it would buy four Reaper surveillance aircraft with two ground control stations for €25 million ($27 million) in 2016, costing €171 million over five years. General Atomics will partner with Spanish Company SENER to deliver unarmed versions to Spain, making it the fifth European country to order the Reaper. In addition to selecting the Reaper, Spain is interested in the joint German-French-Italian project to develop a European MALE UAV.[166]

The Defense Department cleared the purchase on 6 October 2015. Spain selected the Reaper over the Heron TP to perform homeland security, counter-insurgency, and counter-terrorism operations.[167] The Spanish government agreed to purchase the system on 30 October.[158] The Reaper was selected over the Heron TP mainly for commonality with NATO allies who also use the airframe. Although Spain's immediate priority is for surveillance, they will eventually try to weaponize the platform. The first two aircraft and first GCS is planned for delivery in 2017, with the third aircraft in 2018 when they achieve IOC, and the last in 2020 achieving full operational capability (FOC).[168]

United Kingdom edit

 
A British MQ-9A Reaper operating over Afghanistan in 2009

On 27 September 2006, the U.S. Congress was notified by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency that the United Kingdom was seeking to purchase a pair of MQ-9A Reapers. They were initially operated by No. 39 Squadron from Creech Air Force Base, Nevada, later moving to RAF Waddington.[169] A third MQ-9A was in the process of being purchased by the RAF in 2007.[169] On 9 November 2007, the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) announced that its Reapers had begun operations in Afghanistan against the Taliban.[170] In April 2008, following the crash of one of the UK's two Reapers, British special forces were sent to recover sensitive material from the wreckage before it was blown up to prevent the enemy from obtaining it.[171] By May 2011, five Reapers were in operation, with a further five on order.[172]

The second RAF squadron to operate five Reapers is No. XIII Squadron, which was formally activated and commissioned on 26 October 2012.[173] No. 39 Squadron personnel were planned to gradually return to the UK in 2013 and in time both squadrons would each operate five Reapers from RAF Waddington.[174] In April 2013, XIII Squadron started full operations from RAF Waddington, exercising control over a complement of 10 Reapers, at that point all based in Afghanistan.[175]

Five Reapers can provide 36 hours of combined surveillance coverage in Afghanistan with individual sorties lasting up to 16 hours. A further five vehicles increases this to 72 hours. In total, RAF Reapers flew 71,000 flight hours in Afghanistan, and dropped 510 guided weapons (compared to 497 for Harrier and Tornado).[176][177]

In April 2013, it was revealed that the MoD was studying the adoption of MBDA's Brimstone missile for the MQ-9.[178] In December 2013, several successful test firings of the Brimstone missile from a Reaper at Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake were completed to support integration with RAF Reapers.[179] Nine missiles were fired at an altitude of 20,000 ft, at distances of 7 to 12 km (4.3 to 7.5 mi) from the targets; all nine scored direct hits against static, accelerating, weaving, and fast remotely controlled targets.[180]

In 2014, the MoD decided that its Reaper fleet will be brought into the RAF's core fleet once operations over Afghanistan cease. Procurement of the MQ-9A was via an urgent operational capability requirement and funded from the Treasury reserve, but induction into the core fleet will have them funded from the MoD's budget. The Reapers were retained for contingent purposes, mainly to perform intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR), until its replacement enters service around 2018.[181] On 4 October 2015 David Cameron announced that the RAF would replace its existing fleet of 10 Reapers with more than 20 of the "latest generation of RPAS", named as "Protector",[182][183]

On 16 October 2014, the MoD announced the deployment of armed Reapers in Operation Shader, the UK's contribution to the United States-led military intervention against Islamic State, the first occasion the UK had used its Reapers outside Afghanistan. The number of aircraft from the RAF's 10-strong fleet was not disclosed, but it was expected that at least two were sent; more were dispatched as the UK drew down from Afghanistan. The RAF Reapers' primary purpose is to provide surveillance support and situational awareness to coalition forces.[184][185] On 10 November 2014, the MoD reported that an RAF Reaper had conducted its first airstrike against Islamic State forces, firing a Hellfire missile at militants placing an IED near Bayji.[186]

RAF Reapers based at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus conducted a single surveillance mission over Syria in November 2014, four in December 2014, and eight in January 2015. On 7 September 2015, Prime Minister David Cameron announced that two Islamic State fighters from Britain had been killed in an intelligence-led strike by an RAF Reaper near Raqqa, Syria, the first armed use of RAF assets in Syria during the civil war.[187] By January 2016, RAF Reapers had flown 1,000 sorties in support of Operation Shader.[188] Compared to operations in Afghanistan, where RAF Reapers fired 16 Hellfire missiles in 2008, 93 in 2013, and 94 in 2014, in operations against ISIL, 258 Hellfires were fired in 2015.[189]

Protector edit

In April 2016, the United Kingdom announced that it intended to place an order for the Certifiable Predator B (MQ-9B) as part of its Protector MALE UAV program for the Royal Air Force.[190][191] According to the 2015 Strategic Defence and Security Review, the Royal Air Force was to operate at least 20 Protector systems by 2025, replacing all of the ten MQ-9A Reapers.[192] The order was subsequently limited to 16 systems. In RAF service the aircraft would be designated as the Protector RG Mk 1 with aircraft to be acquired from 2018-2030 with the first delivery scheduled in 2023.[193][194]

On 15 July 2018, a GA-ASI Company-owned MQ-9B SkyGuardian was flown from the United States to RAF Fairford in the UK for the first transatlantic flight of a MALE UAV. It was displayed at the Royal International Air Tattoo (RIAT) air show, where the aircraft was given markings of No. 31 Squadron. This followed an announcement by the RAF's Chief of Air Staff that No. 31 Squadron would be the first RAF Squadron to operate a similar version of the MQ-9B aircraft, to be known as the Protector RG Mark 1 (RG1), starting in 2023.[195][196]The squadron reformed at RAF Waddington in October 2023.[197] In July 2020, the Ministry of Defence signed a contract for three Protector UAVs with an option on an additional thirteen aircraft.[198] It was announced in September 2021 that No. XIII Squadron will become the second Protector squadron.[199]

Protector will be able to carry up to 18 Brimstone 3 missiles or Paveway IV bombs.[200] The first of 16 Protector UAVs was delivered in September 2023 with initial operating capability expected in 2025[201] and full operating capability expected from 2026.[202]

Mojave edit

In May 2023, the UK announced it would be acquiring a carrier-based variant of the MQ-9, the General Atomics Mojave, for seven months of trials aboard its Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers.[203]

United Arab Emirates edit

On 10 November 2020, the US State Department approved the sale of up to 18 MQ-9Bs to the UAE pending approval by Congress.[204][205]

Taiwan edit

On 3 November 2020, the US State Department approved the sale of 4 MQ-9B, along with Control Stations and Embedded Global Positioning System/Inertial Navigations Systems (EGI) with Selective Availability Anti-Spoofing Module (SAASM) to Taiwan.[206]

Japan edit

On 15 October 2020, General Atomics Aeronautical Systems conducted validation flights of the SeaGuardian UAV for the Japan Coast Guard (JCG). The test flight was conducted at a Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) air base in Hachinohe. Both the JCG and JMSDF have expressed interest in acquiring SeaGuardian UAVs in order to conduct more ocean surveillance.[207][208]

On 15 March 2023, the JMSDF will acquire an MQ-9B SeaGuardian for trials as part of its MALE RPAS Trial Operation Project.[209]

Morocco edit

After the Israel–Morocco normalization agreement in 2020, the US is to approve the sale of four MQ-9B SeaGuardians to Morocco.[210]

Potential operators edit

Canada edit

As of 25 September 2023, Royal Canadian Air Force was looking at purchasing the MQ-9 along with AGM-114 Hellfire missiles, in a CA$5 billion contract. The drones were reportedly to be stationed at CFB Greenwood and CFB Comox, with personnel in Ottawa and Yellowknife to support the program. A contract was announced on 19 December 2023 for 11 MQ-9B drones, 219 Hellfire missiles, and 12 Mk82 500-pound bombs.[211]

Finland edit

As of Autumn 2021, Finnish Defence Forces is doing test flights with the MQ-9.[212]

Poland edit

The Polish Ministry of National Defense announced on 28 February 2022 that it plans to purchase an unspecified number of MQ-9 Reaper drones.[213]

Cancelled acquisitions edit

Australia edit

In September 2006, the General Atomics Mariner demonstrator aircraft was operated by the Australian Defence Science and Technology Group (DSTO) in an exercise designed to evaluate the aircraft's ability to aid in efforts to stem illegal fishing, drug running and illegal immigration. The Mariner operated from Royal Australian Air Force bases Edinburgh, South Australia and Learmonth, Western Australia in conjunction with a Royal Australian Navy Armidale class patrol boat, the Joint Offshore Protection Command, and the Pilbara Regiment.[214]

In February 2015, it was announced that six RAAF personnel had been sent to Holloman AFB, New Mexico and Creech AFB, Nevada to undergo training.[215]

In August 2015, it was revealed that Australians had begun flying MQ-9s over Syria, the first time Australia expanded operations past Iraq during the Military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Five RAAF personnel were embedded with the USAF 432nd Operations Group, which flies armed Reapers, performing operational duties with the unit as MQ-9 system pilots and sensor operators.[216]

In November 2018, the Defence Minister Christopher Pyne announced that Australia would purchase 12 to 16 MQ-9s.[217] In November 2019, Australia announced the selection of the MQ-9B for its armed Medium-Altitude Long-Endurance (MALE) RPAS requirement under Project Air 7003.[citation needed]

In April 2021, the State Department approved a possible Foreign Military Sale to the Government of Australia of 12 MQ-9B Reapers and related equipment for an estimated cost of $1.651 billion (~$1.83 billion in 2023).[218]

The Australian Government canceled the planned Reaper acquisition in March 2022. The funding intended for the project was redirected to expanding the Australian Signals Directorate.[219]

Variants edit

MQ-9 edit

Mariner edit

A navalized Reaper, named Mariner, was proposed for the U.S. Navy's Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) program. It had an increased fuel capacity for an endurance of up to 49 hours.[220] Variations included one for aircraft carrier operations with folding wings for storage, shortened, reinforced landing gear, an arresting hook, cut-down or eliminated ventral flight surfaces and six stores pylons for a total load of 3,000 pounds (1,360 kilograms).[12] The Northrop Grumman RQ-4N was selected as the BAMS winner.[citation needed]

Guardian edit

US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) operates two maritime variants of the MQ-9, known as Guardians.[101] The U.S. Coast Guard evaluated the Guardian, including performing joint operations with CBP.[221] CBP and the Coast Guard operate one MQ-9 Guardian jointly out of land-based stations in Florida and Texas.[104]

MQ-9 Block 5 edit

On 24 May 2012, General Atomics conducted the successful first flight of its upgraded MQ-9 Block 1-plus Reaper. The Block 1-plus version was designed for increased electrical power, secure communications, automatic landing, increased gross takeoff weight (GTOW), weapons growth, and streamlined payload integration capabilities. A new high-capacity starter generator offers increased electrical power capacity to provide growth capacity; a backup generator is also present and is sufficient for all flight-critical functions, improving the electrical power system's reliability via three independent power sources.[222][223]

New communications capabilities, including dual ARC-210 VHF/UHF radios with wingtip antennas, allow for simultaneous communications between multiple air-to-air and air-to-ground parties, secure data links, and an increased data transmission capacity. The new trailing arm main landing gear allows the carriage of heavier payloads or additional fuel. Development and testing were completed, and Milestone C was achieved in September 2012. Follow-on aircraft will be redesignated MQ-9 Block 5.[222][223] On 15 October 2013, the USAF awarded General Atomics a $377.4 million contract for 24 MQ-9 Block 5 Reapers.[224] The MQ-9 Block 5 flew its first combat mission on 23 June 2017.[225]

Mojave edit

A developed of the General Atomics MQ-1C Gray Eagle incorporating some technologies from the MQ-9 family to facilitate Short take-off and landing operations from both austere and naval environments.

MQ-9B (Certifiable Predator B) edit

SkyGuardian edit

 
The SkyGuardian at Laguna Army Airfield for testing and certification, including a 48.2-hour endurance record and first FAA certification of an unmanned aircraft to fly in civilian air space.[226]

International demand for a MALE RPAS capable of being certified for operation within civilian airspace drove General Atomics to develop a version of the platform known by GA-ASI as MQ-9B SkyGuardian, previously called Certifiable Predator B, to make it compliant with European flight regulations to get more sales in European countries. In order to fly over national airspace, the aircraft meets NATO STANAG 4671 airworthiness requirements with lightning protection, different composite materials, and sense and avoid technology.[227][228]

The MQ-9Bs performance changes include a 79 ft (24 m) wingspan that has winglets and enough fuel for a 40-hour endurance at 50,000 ft (15,000 m). Features include High Definition EO/IR Full Motion Video sensor, De/Anti-Icing System, TCAS, and Automatic Take-Off & Land. The system also includes a completely redesigned & modernized integrated ground control station with 4 crew stations.[227][228]

On 28 November 2019, the Australian Government announced the selection of the General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) MQ-9B SkyGuardian as its preferred version of the Predator B for the RAAF's Project AIR 7003 MALE armed remotely piloted aircraft system (RPAS) requirement.[229] The Australian Government cancelled the planned acquisition in March 2022.

On 19 December 2023, the Canadian Government announced the purchase of eleven MQ-9B SkyGuardian aircraft to be operated by the Royal Canadian Air Force.[230][231][232]

SeaGuardian edit

General Atomics continued with the development of a Naval Reaper concept, eventually culminating in a variant of the MQ-9B known as the SeaGuardian. It has an endurance of more than 18 hours and can mount an eight-hour patrol at a radius of 1,200 nmi (1,400 mi; 2,200 km)[needs update]. A key part of its mission set is the Leonardo Seaspray 7500E V2 AESA radar mounted as a centerline pod with inverse synthetic aperture radar that can spot surface targets including ships, submarine periscopes, and people during search and rescue operations.[233] The SeaGuardian can be fitted with Multimode 360 Maritime Surface Search Radar and automatic identification system (AIS).[228]

General Atomics studied testing a sonobuoy launch capability from the Guardian in 2016 to demonstrate its ability to carry them, control them, and send information back to the ground station over a SATCOM link.[234] In November 2020, a company-owned Reaper carried out a trial releasing sonobuoys, then processing information from them to track a training target. This led to the creation of an anti-submarine warfare package for the SeaGuardian, the first self-contained ASW package for a UAS. The package comprises podded sonobuoy dispenser systems (SDS), using a pneumatic launch system to launch ten A-size or twenty G-size buoys from each pod, and a sonobuoy management and control system (SMCS); the aircraft can carry up to four pods.[233]

MQ-9B STOL edit

AT INDO PACIFIC 2022 in Sydney, Australia, General Atomics revealed their concept for a short-take-off-and-landing kit capable of being applied to any MQ-9B aircraft. This kit would replace the wings, tail and propeller with STOL optimised equivalents allowing for use from austere environments and particularly aircraft carriers as well as Landing-Helicopter-Docks/Platforms.[235][236][237][238]

Operators edit

 
Map with MQ-9 users in blue
  France
  India
  Italy
  Japan
  Netherlands
  Poland
  Spain
  United Kingdom
  United States

Specifications edit

 
Honeywell turboprop
 
MQ-9 Reaper taxiing

MQ-9A Reaper edit

Data from USAF Fact Sheet,[5]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 0 onboard, 2 in ground station
  • Length: 36 ft 1 in (11 m)
  • Wingspan: 65 ft 7 in (20 m)
  • Height: 12 ft 6 in (3.81 m)
  • Empty weight: 4,901 lb (2,223 kg)
  • Max takeoff weight: 10,494 lb (4,760 kg)
  • Fuel capacity: 4,000 lb (1,800 kg)
  • Payload: 3,800 lb (1,700 kg)
    • Internal: 800 lb (360 kg)
    • External: 3,000 lb (1,400 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Honeywell TPE331-10 turboprop, 900 hp (671 kW) with Digital Electronic Engine Control (DEEC)[257]

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 300 mph (482 km/h, 260 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 194 mph (313 km/h, 169 kn) [258]
  • Range: 1,200 mi (1,900 km, 1,000 nmi)
  • Endurance: 27 hr[259]
  • Service ceiling: 50,000 ft (15,420 m)
  • Operational altitude: 25,000 ft (7.5 km)[260]

Armament

  • 7 hardpoints
    • Up to 1,500 lb (680 kg) on the two inboard weapons stations[261]
    • Up to 750 lb (340 kg) on the two middle stations[261]
    • Up to 150 lb (68 kg) on the outboard stations[261]
    • Center station not used
  • Up to eight AGM-114 Hellfire air to ground missiles can be carried or four Hellfire missiles and two 500 lb (230 kg) GBU-12 Paveway II laser-guided bombs. The 500 lb (230 kg) GBU-38 Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM) can also be carried. Testing is underway[needs update] to support the operation of the Air-to-Air Stinger (ATAS). In March 2014, MBDA successfully test fired a dual mode Brimstone missile from a Reaper aircraft on behalf of the UK Ministry of Defence and Royal Air Force.[262] Depending on mission requirements, the MQ-9 Reaper can carry multiple AIM-9 Sidewinder Block 2 missiles.[263]

Avionics

  • AN/DAS-1 MTS-B Multi-Spectral Targeting System[264]
  • AN/APY-8 Lynx II radar[265]
  • Raytheon SeaVue Marine Search Radar (Guardian variants)[101]

MQ-9B Skyguardian edit

Data from General Atomics Catalog[266]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 0 onboard, 2 in ground station
  • Length: 38 ft 5 in (11.7 m)
  • Wingspan: 78 ft 9 in (24 m)
  • Max takeoff weight: 12,500 lb (5,670 kg)
  • Fuel capacity: 6,000 lb (2,721 kg)
  • Payload: 5,550 lb (2,520 kg)
    • Internal: 800 lb (360 kg)
    • External: 4,750 lb (2,150 kg)
  • Powerplant: 1 × Honeywell TPE331-10 turboprop, 900 hp (671 kW) with Digital Electronic Engine Control (DEEC)[257]

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 240 mph (390 km/h, 210 kn)
  • Range: 6,900 mi (11,000 km, 6,000 nmi)
  • Endurance: Over 40 hours
  • Service ceiling: 40,000 ft (12,200 m)
  • Operational altitude:

Armament

  • 9 hardpoints
    • 1 centreline hardpoint
    • 8 wing hardpoints
  • Up to ten air to ground Brimstone missile can be carried or 500 lb (230 kg) Paveway IV laser-guided bombs.[267]

Avionics

  • AN/DAS-1 MTS-B Multi-Spectral Targeting System[264]
  • AN/APY-8 Lynx II radar[265]
  • Optional mission kits
    • Multi-mode 360° maritime surface search radar
    • Automatic Identification System (AIS)
    • Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW)
    • Tactical and strategic SIGINT
    • Tactical data link (Link-16)
    • Airborne Early Warning (AEW)
    • Communications gateway / relay

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

References edit

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  2. ^ Escutia, Sondra (29 October 2009). "4 remotely piloted vehicle squadrons stand up at Holloman". US Air Force. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  3. ^ Peterson, Kyle (16 December 2009). "You say "drone," I say "remotely piloted"". Reuters. from the original on 26 July 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d . US Air Force. 14 September 2006. Archived from the original on 14 September 2011. Retrieved 1 January 2012.
  5. ^ a b c "MQ-9 REAPER fact sheet". US Air Force. 18 August 2010. from the original on 26 August 2013. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
  6. ^ Cooper, Helene; Schmitt, Eric (15 March 2023). "Pentagon chief says he spoke to his Russian counterpart about the drone incident". The New York Times.
  7. ^ a b "Selected Acquisition Report (SAR): MQ-9 UAS Reaper" (PDF). Washington Headquarters Services. Department of Defense. December 2018. DD-A&T(Q&A)823-424.
  8. ^ Whittle, Richard. "The Man Who Invented the Predator". Air & Space Magazine. from the original on 4 February 2016. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
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  11. ^ Note: endurance figures vary greatly from source to source. The current figure being publicized by the USAF is 14 hours.
  12. ^ a b c d e Greg Goebel (1 March 2010). . Archived from the original on 10 November 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  13. ^ a b "Reaper: A New Way to Wage War". Time. 1 June 2009. p. 40.
  14. ^ . US Air Force. 10 November 2007. Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  15. ^ Spencer Ackerman (14 December 2010). "Air Force Is Through With Predator Drones". Wired. from the original on 5 January 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  16. ^ Shaun Waterman (5 August 2008). "Bigger, Deadlier Reaper Drone Deployed in Iraq". The Washington Times. from the original on 28 June 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2008.
  17. ^ "USAF slammed for pranging Predators on manual". The Register. 29 April 2009. from the original on 3 February 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
  18. ^ a b c d . Department of Defense News Transcript. 4 March 2011. Archived from the original on 10 April 2011.
  19. ^ SOCOM Wants to Deploy MQ-9 Drones to Remote Areas 15 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine – Military.com, 16 September 2013
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  • This article contains material that originally came from the web article by Greg Goebel, which exists in the public domain.

External links edit

  • MQ-9 Predator Factsheet on U.S. Air Force site
  • General Atomics Aeronautical Systems YMQ-9 Reaper – National Museum of the United States Air Force
  • Defense-Update.com
  • General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper (Predator B), Designation-Systems.net

general, atomics, reaper, sometimes, called, predator, unmanned, aerial, vehicle, component, unmanned, aircraft, system, capable, remotely, controlled, autonomous, flight, operations, developed, general, atomics, aeronautical, systems, primarily, united, state. The General Atomics MQ 9 Reaper sometimes called Predator B is an unmanned aerial vehicle UAV one component of an unmanned aircraft system UAS capable of remotely controlled or autonomous flight operations developed by General Atomics Aeronautical Systems GA ASI primarily for the United States Air Force USAF The MQ 9 and other UAVs are referred to as Remotely Piloted Vehicles Aircraft RPV RPA by the USAF to indicate ground control by humans 2 3 MQ 9 Reaper Predator BU S Air Force MQ 9A Reaper armed with a Paveway and 2 AGM 114 Hellfire missilesRole Unmanned combat aerial vehicleNational origin United StatesManufacturer General Atomics Aeronautical SystemsFirst flight 2 February 2001 23 years ago 2001 02 02 Introduction 1 May 2007Status In servicePrimary users United States Air ForceU S Customs and Border Protection Italian Air Force Royal Air ForceNumber built 300 as of 2021 update 1 Developed from General Atomics MQ 1 PredatorDeveloped into General Atomics Avenger General Atomics MojaveThe MQ 9 is a larger heavier more capable aircraft than the earlier General Atomics MQ 1 Predator and can be controlled by the same ground systems The Reaper has a 950 shaft horsepower 712 kW turboprop engine compared to the Predator s 115 hp 86 kW piston engine The greater power allows the Reaper to carry 15 times more ordnance payload and cruise at about three times the speed of the MQ 1 4 The aircraft is monitored and controlled including weapons employment by aircrew in the Ground Control Station GCS 5 The MQ 9 is the first hunter killer UAV designed for long endurance high altitude surveillance 4 In 2006 Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force General T Michael Moseley said We ve moved from using UAVs primarily in intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance roles before Operation Iraqi Freedom to a true hunter killer role with the Reaper 4 The USAF operated over 300 MQ 9 Reapers as of May 2021 update 1 Several MQ 9 aircraft have been retrofitted with equipment upgrades to improve performance in high end combat situations and all new MQ 9s will have those upgrades 2035 is the projected end of the service life of the MQ 9 fleet 1 The average unit cost of an MQ 9 is estimated at 31 million in 2023 dollars update 6 7 The Reaper is also used by the U S Customs and Border Protection and the militaries of several other countries The MQ 9A has been further developed into the MQ 9B which based on mission and payload are referred to by General Atomics as SkyGuardian or SeaGuardian Contents 1 Development 1 1 Origins 1 2 Operation 1 3 Testbed and upgrades 2 Design 3 Operational history 3 1 U S Air Force 3 2 NASA 3 3 U S Homeland Security 3 4 U S Marine Corps 3 5 Other users 3 5 1 Belgium 3 5 2 Dominican Republic 3 5 3 France 3 5 4 Germany 3 5 5 Greece 3 5 6 India 3 5 7 Italy 3 5 8 Netherlands 3 5 9 Spain 3 5 10 United Kingdom 3 5 10 1 Protector 3 5 10 2 Mojave 3 5 11 United Arab Emirates 3 5 12 Taiwan 3 5 13 Japan 3 5 14 Morocco 3 6 Potential operators 3 6 1 Canada 3 6 2 Finland 3 6 3 Poland 3 7 Cancelled acquisitions 3 7 1 Australia 4 Variants 4 1 MQ 9 4 1 1 Mariner 4 1 2 Guardian 4 1 3 MQ 9 Block 5 4 2 Mojave 4 3 MQ 9B Certifiable Predator B 4 3 1 SkyGuardian 4 3 2 SeaGuardian 4 3 3 MQ 9B STOL 5 Operators 6 Specifications 6 1 MQ 9A Reaper 6 2 MQ 9B Skyguardian 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDevelopment editOrigins edit The General Atomics Predator B 001 a proof of concept aircraft first flew on 2 February 2001 Abraham Karem is the designer of the Predator 8 The B 001 was powered by an AlliedSignal Garrett TPE331 10T turboprop engine with 950 shaft horsepower 710 kW It had an airframe that was based on the standard Predator airframe except with an enlarged fuselage and wings lengthened from 48 feet 15 m to 66 feet 20 m The B 001 had a speed of 220 knots 410 km h 250 mph and could carry a payload of 750 pounds 340 kg to an altitude of 50 000 feet 15 000 m with an endurance of 30 hours 9 The company refined the design taking it in two separate directions The first was a jet powered version Predator B 002 was fitted with a Williams FJ44 2A turbofan engine with 10 2 kilonewtons 2 300 lbf thrust It had payload capacity of 475 pounds 215 kg a ceiling of 60 000 feet 18 km and endurance of 12 hours The USAF ordered two aircraft for evaluation delivered in 2007 10 unreliable source The two prototype airframes B 001 and B 002 have been retired to the USAF museum at Wright Patterson AFB B 002 was originally equipped with the FJ 44 engine but it was removed and a TPE 331 10T was installed so that the USAF could take delivery of two aircraft in the same configuration The second direction the design took referred to by GA as the Altair was the Predator B 003 which has a new airframe with an 84 foot 26 m wingspan and a takeoff weight of approximately 7 000 pounds 3 200 kg Like the Predator B 001 it is powered by a TPE 331 10YGD turboprop This variant has a payload capacity of 3 000 pounds 1 400 kg a maximum ceiling of 52 000 feet 16 km and an endurance of 36 hours 11 12 In October 2001 the USAF signed a contract for an initial pair of Predator Bs 001 and 002 for evaluation Designated YMQ 9s due to their prototype role they were delivered in 2002 9 The USAF referred to it as Predator B until it was renamed Reaper The USAF aimed for the Predator B to provide an improved deadly persistence capability flying over a combat area night and day waiting for a target to present itself complementing piloted attack aircraft typically used to drop larger quantities of ordnance on a target while a cheaper RPV can operate almost continuously using ground controllers working in shifts but carrying less ordnance 12 Operation edit nbsp The satellite antenna and sensors of an NOAA NASA flight demonstrator 2005MQ 9 Reaper crews pilots and sensor operators stationed at bases such as Creech Air Force Base near Las Vegas Nevada can hunt for targets and observe terrain using multiple sensors including a thermographic camera One claim was that the onboard camera is able to read a license plate from two miles 3 2 km away 13 An operator s command takes 1 2 seconds to reach the drone via a satellite link The MQ 9 is fitted with six stores pylons The inner stores pylons can carry a maximum of 1 500 pounds 680 kg each and allow carriage of external fuel tanks The mid wing stores pylons can carry a maximum of 600 pounds 270 kg each while the outer stores pylons can carry a maximum of 200 pounds 91 kg each An MQ 9 with two 1 000 pound 450 kg external fuel tanks and 1 000 pounds 450 kg of munitions has an endurance of 42 hours 12 The Reaper has an endurance of 14 hours when fully loaded with munitions 4 The MQ 9 carries a variety of weapons including the GBU 12 Paveway II laser guided bomb the AGM 114 Hellfire II air to ground missiles the AIM 9 Sidewinder 13 and the GBU 38 Joint Direct Attack Munition JDAM Tests are underway to allow for the addition of the AIM 92 Stinger air to air missile citation needed By October 2007 the USAF owned nine Reapers 14 and by December 2010 had 57 with plans to buy another 272 for a total of 329 Reapers 15 Critics have stated that the USAF s insistence on qualified pilots flying RPVs is a bottleneck to expanding deployment USAF Major General William Rew stated on 5 August 2008 For the way we fly them right now fully integrated into air operations and often flying missions alongside manned aircraft we want pilots to fly them 16 This reportedly has exacerbated losses of USAF aircraft in comparison with US Army operations 17 In March 2011 U S Department of Defense Secretary Robert Gates stated that while manned aircraft are needed the USAF must recognize the enormous strategic and cultural implications of the vast expansion in remotely piloted vehicles and stated that as the service buys manned fighters and bombers it must give equal weight to unmanned drones and the service s important role in the cyber and space domains 18 As of 2018 update the USAF had taken delivery of 287 out of 366 MQ 9 Reapers on contract with General Atomics The total program quantity is set at 433 including Foreign Military Sales 7 In 2013 the Air Force Special Operations Command AFSOC sought the ability to pack up an MQ 9 in less than eight hours fly it anywhere in the world aboard a C 17 Globemaster III and then have it ready to fly in another eight hours to support special operations teams at places with no infrastructure MQ 1 and MQ 9 drones must fly aboard cargo aircraft to travel long distances as they lack the refueling technology or speed to travel themselves the C 17 is large enough to carry the aircraft and support systems and can land on short runways Pilots traveling with the Reaper will use the ground control station to launch and land the aircraft while most of the flying will be done by US based pilots 19 Testbed and upgrades edit In November 2012 Raytheon completed ground verification tests for the ADM 160 MALD and MALD J for integration onto the Reaper for an unmanned suppression of enemy air defenses capability 20 On 12 April 2013 a company owned MQ 9 equipped with a jamming pod and digital receiver exciter successfully demonstrated its electronic warfare capability at Marine Corps Air Station MCAS Yuma performing its mission in coordination with over 20 participating aircraft 21 A second electronic warfare test fitted with the Northrop Grumman Pandora EW System was conducted on 22 October 2013 with other unmanned aircraft and Northrop Grumman EA 6B Prowlers showing effectiveness in a multi node approach against a more capable IADS 22 In 2011 the U S Missile Defense Agency MDA reported its interest in using the Reaper and its MTS B sensor to provide firing quality data for early interception of ballistic missile launches The MDA is exploring concepts to use the UAV s EO IR sensor to achieve launch on remote capabilities with missile interceptors before detection by Aegis radars At least two aircraft would be needed to triangulate a target to provide high fidelity data The MTS B includes short and mid wave IR bands optimal for tracking launch and rocket burn 23 In 2013 the MDA terminated plans to build a follow on to the two orbiting Space Tracking and Surveillance System STSS satellites due to near term costs opting to continue testing the Reaper for ballistic missile target discrimination The MDA planned to test the improved MTS C sensor which adds a long wave IR detector optimized for tracking cold bodies such as missiles and warheads after booster burnout or plumes and exhaust The goal is to use data from multiple high flying UAVs to provide an offboard cue to launch an SM 3 missile from an Aegis ship 24 Two Reapers demonstrated their ability to track ballistic missiles using their MTS B EO IR turret during a test in late June 2016 25 In June 2015 a study by the USAF s Scientific Advisory Board identified several improvements for operating the Reaper in contested airspace adding readily available sensors weapons and threat detection and countermeasures could increase situational awareness and enable riskier deployments Suggestions included a radar warning receiver RWR to know when it s being targeted air to air and miniature air to ground weapons manned unmanned teaming multi UAV control automatic take offs and landings and precision navigation and timing systems to fly in GPS denied areas Another idea was redesigned ground control stations with user friendly video game like controllers and touchscreen maps to access data without overwhelming operators 26 27 In October 2015 Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff for ISR Robert Otto suggested redesigning the MQ 9 s GCS to be operated by one person for most missions rather than two to fly and work the sensors to simplify operations and reduce manpower requirements by hundreds of sensor operators Introducing an auto land capability would also reduce the Reaper s manpower requirements to staff launch and recovery teams 28 Automatic take off and landing capabilities are already present in the RQ 4 Global Hawk and MQ 1C Gray Eagle and are planned to be provided to the MQ 9 in 2017 The Air Force requires the manually loaded Reaper to operate from a runway at least 5 000 ft 1 5 km long but automated take offs and landings would enable it to operate from a 3 000 ft 0 91 km runway 29 In April 2017 an MQ 9 Block 5 flew with a Raytheon ALR 69A RWR in its payload pod to demonstrate the aircraft s ability to conduct missions in the proximity of threat radars and air defenses the first time this capability was demonstrated on a remotely piloted aircraft 30 In September 2020 a Reaper was flown carrying two Hellfire missiles on each of the stations previously reserved for 500 lb bombs or fuel tanks A software upgrade doubled the aircraft s capacity to eight missiles 31 32 33 Pentagon wants to upgrade MQ 9 Reaper with directed energy weapons such as low powered laser and high powered microwave beams A high field optical module to act on the human nervous system is also under consideration 34 In September 2020 GA ASI conducted captive carry tests of the Sparrowhawk Small Unmanned Aircraft System sUAS on the MQ 9 with the Reaper itself acting as a drone mothership The MQ 9B Sky Guardian will be able to carry up to four Sparrowhawks 35 Design edit nbsp An MQ 9 taxiing in Afghanistan 2007A typical MQ 9 system consists of multiple aircraft ground control station communications equipment maintenance spares and personnel A military flight crew includes a pilot sensor operator and Mission Intelligence Coordinator 5 The aircraft is powered by a 950 horsepower 710 kW turboprop with a maximum speed of about 260 knots 480 km h 300 mph and a cruising speed of 150 170 knots 170 200 mph 280 310 km h 36 With a 66 ft 20 m wingspan and a maximum payload of 3 800 lb 1 700 kg the MQ 9 can be armed with a variety of weaponry including Hellfire missiles and 500 lb 230 kg laser guided bomb units 36 Its endurance is 30 hours when conducting ISR missions which decreases to 23 hours if it is carrying a full weapons load 37 The Reaper has a range of 1 000 nmi 1 150 mi 1 850 km dubious discuss and an operational altitude of 25 000 ft 7 600 m which makes it especially useful for long term loitering operations both for surveillance and support of ground troops 38 nbsp The first MQ 9 arriving at Creech AFB March 2007The Predator and Reaper were designed for military operations and not intended to operate among crowded airline traffic The aircraft typically lack systems capable of complying with FAA See And Avoid regulations 39 In 2005 requests were made for MQ 9s to be used in search and rescue operations following Hurricane Katrina but as there was no FAA authorization in place at the time it was not used On 18 May 2006 the Federal Aviation Administration FAA issued a certificate of authorization allowing MQ 1 and MQ 9 UAVs to fly in U S civil airspace to search for survivors of disasters 40 An MQ 9 can adopt various mission kits and combinations of weapon and sensor payloads to meet combat requirements Its Raytheon AN AAS 52 citation needed multi spectral targeting sensor suite includes a color monochrome daylight TV infrared and image intensified TV with laser rangefinder laser designator to designate targets for laser guided munitions citation needed The aircraft is also equipped with the Lynx Multi mode Radar that contains synthetic aperture radar SAR that can operate in both spotlight and strip modes and ground moving target indication GMTI with Dismount Moving Target Indicator DMTI and Maritime Wide Area Search MWAS capabilities 41 The Reaper was used as a test bed for Gorgon Stare a wide area surveillance sensor system 42 Increment 1 of the system was first fielded in March 2011 on the Reaper and could cover an area of 16 km2 6 2 sq mi increment 2 incorporating ARGUS IS and expanding the coverage area to 100 km2 39 sq mi achieved initial operating capability IOC in early 2014 The system has 368 cameras capable of capturing five million pixels each to create an image of about 1 8 billion pixels video is collected at 12 frames per second producing several terabytes of data per minute 43 In January 2012 General Atomics released a new trailing arm design for the Reaper s main landing gear Benefits include an over 30 increase in landing weight capacity a 12 increase in gross takeoff weight from 10 500 pounds 4 800 kg to 11 700 pounds 5 300 kg a maintenance free shock absorber eliminating the need for nitrogen pressurization a fully rejected takeoff brake system and provisions for automatic takeoff and landing capability and Anti lock Brake System ABS field upgrades 44 In April 2012 General Atomics announced possible upgrades to USAF Reapers including two extra 100 US gallon 380 L fuel pods under the wings to increase endurance to 37 hours The wingspan can also be increased to 88 feet 27 m increasing endurance to 42 hours 45 46 The USAF has bought 38 Reaper Extended Range ER versions carrying external fuel tanks which don t affect weapon capacity the heavy weight landing gear a four bladed propeller a new fuel management system that ensures fuel and thermal balance among external tank wing and fuselage fuel sources and an alcohol water injection AWI system to shorten required runway takeoff length These features increase endurance from 27 to 33 35 hours while the company is still pitching the lengthened wing option The Reaper ER first flew operationally in August 2015 47 48 The aircraft also has the sensor ball replaced with a high definition camera better communications that allow ground controllers to see the higher quality video software to enable automatic detection of threats and tracking of 12 moving targets at once and the ability to super ripple fire missiles within 0 32 seconds of each other 49 On 25 February 2016 General Atomics announced a successful test flight of the new Predator B ER version The new version had an extended wingspan of 79 feet 24 m increasing its endurance to 40 hours Other improvements included short field takeoff and landing performance spoilers on the wings to enable precision automatic landings and provision on the wings for leading edge de ice and integrated low and high band RF antennas 50 Operational history editU S Air Force edit nbsp MQ 1 UAV Flight Crew at Joint Base Balad LSA Anaconda Iraq 7 August 2007On 1 May 2007 the U S Air Force activated its 432nd Wing to operate MQ 9 Reapers and MQ 1 Predators at Creech Air Force Base Nevada The pilots first conducted combat missions in Iraq and Afghanistan that summer 51 On 28 October 2007 an MQ 9 achieved its first kill firing a Hellfire missile against Afghan insurgents in the Deh Rawood region of the mountainous Oruzgan province 52 By 6 March 2008 according to Air Force Lieutenant General Gary North the Reaper had attacked 16 targets in Afghanistan using 500 lb 230 kg bombs and Hellfire missiles 53 In 2008 the New York Air National Guard 174th Attack Wing began to switch from F 16 fighters to Reapers becoming the first fighter unit to convert entirely to unmanned combat aerial vehicle UCAV use 54 On 17 July 2008 the USAF began flying Reaper missions within Iraq from Balad Air Base 55 56 It was reported on 11 August 2008 that the 174th Fighter Wing would consist entirely of Reapers 57 By March 2009 the USAF had 28 operational Reapers 58 Beginning in September 2009 Reapers were deployed by the Africa Command to the Seychelles islands for use in Indian Ocean anti piracy patrols 59 On 13 September 2009 positive control of an MQ 9 was lost during a combat mission over Afghanistan after which the control less drone started flying towards the Afghan border with Tajikistan 60 An F 15E Strike Eagle fired an AIM 9 missile at the drone successfully destroying its engine Before the drone impacted the ground contact was reestablished with the drone and it was flown into a mountain to destroy it It was the first US drone to be destroyed intentionally by allied forces 61 By July 2010 thirty eight Predators and Reapers had been lost during combat operations in Afghanistan and Iraq another nine were lost in training missions in the U S 62 In 2010 the USAF conducted over 33 000 close air support missions a more than 20 percent increase compared with 2009 18 By March 2011 the USAF had 48 Predator and Reaper combat air patrols flying in Iraq and Afghanistan compared with 18 in 2007 18 nbsp An MQ 9A Reaper in Afghanistan 2007As of March 2011 update the USAF was training more pilots for advanced unmanned aerial vehicles than for any other single weapons system 18 In 2012 the Reaper Predator and Global Hawk were described as the most accident prone aircraft in the Air Force fleet 63 In October 2011 the USAF began operating Reapers out of Arba Minch Airport in Ethiopia for surveillance only operations in Somalia 64 In 2012 both Reapers and Predators were deployed in Benghazi Libya after the attack that killed the US ambassador in that city 65 In February 2013 the U S stationed a Predator at Niamey to provide intelligence for French forces during Operation Serval in Mali it was later replaced by two MQ 9 Reapers In April 2013 one of these Reapers crashed on a surveillance flight due to mechanical failure 66 On 22 October 2013 the USAF fleets of MQ 1 Predator and MQ 9 Reaper UAVs reached 2 000 000 flight hours The RPA program began in the mid 1990s taking 16 years to reach 1 million flight hours the 2 million hour mark was reached just two and a half years later 67 The high demand for UAVs has caused Air Combat Command to increase pilot output from 188 in 2015 to 300 in 2017 at Holloman 68 On 13 November 2015 the Pentagon reported that an MQ 9 had killed ISIL member Mohammed Emwazi popularly known as Jihadi John who was responsible for executing several Western prisoners 69 In 2015 a record number 20 of USAF drones crashed investigators identified three parts of the starter generator that were susceptible to breakdowns but could not determine why they were failing Col William S Leister informed Pentagon officials that investigators from the USAF General Atomics and Skurka had investigated the problem for more than a year The team he said had identified numerous manufacturing quality issues yet had been unable to determine the exact cause of the failures 70 On 2 October 2017 U S Central Command stated that an MQ 9 had been shot down by Houthi air defense systems over Sanaa in western Yemen the previous day The aircraft took off from Chabelley Airport in Djibouti and was armed 71 72 73 On 18 September 2018 the USAF announced that an MQ 9 armed with an air to air missile successfully shot down a smaller target drone in November 2017 The drone was operated by the 432nd Wing 74 While the destruction of a target drone is a routine USAF exercise this event was the first instance of a Reaper destroying a small maneuvering aerial target nbsp MQ 9 Reaper at a FARP forward area refueling point in December 2022On 6 June 2019 Houthis shot down a US MQ 9 Reaper over Yemen According to United States Central Command it was shot down by an SA 6 surface to air missile that was enabled with Iranian assistance 75 On 21 August 2019 another unarmed MQ 9 was shot down by Houthis over Dhamar Yemen 76 by a Yemini made Fater 1 missile an improved SA 6 77 On 23 November 2019 a US MQ 9 Reaper was shot down by a Pantsir system operated by the Libyan National Army or Wagner Group over Tripoli Libya According to journalist David Cenciotti the drone was lost after being jammed by Russian Wagner militias working in support of the Libyan National Army 78 On 3 January 2020 a US MQ 9 missile strike at Baghdad International Airport killed Qasem Soleimani the commander of the Iranian Quds Force and Abu Mahdi al Muhandis the deputy commander of Iraqi Popular Mobilization Forces 79 On 18 August 2020 US Department of Defense announced that two US MQ 9 Reapers had crashed in a mid air collision over Syria 80 81 However claims from local media said that at least one drone might have been shot down by Syrian Opposition rebel fighters or Turkish forces 82 83 In April 2021 U S and Polish militaries agreed on a long negotiated plan to increase the American presence in Poland with two units of MQ 9 Reapers deployed by the USAF 84 On 14 July 2022 an MQ 9 Reaper operated by the 25th Attack Group crashed during a training mission in Romania The MQ 9 drones have been deployed to the Romanian 71st Air Base in 2021 starting their operational flights on 1 February 2021 85 86 nbsp U S Air Force MQ 9 intercepted by Russian Su 27 over the Black Sea 0 42 source source source source source source On 14 March 2023 one of two intercepting Russian Su 27 fighters collided with an MQ 9 Reaper flying in international airspace over the Black Sea US Air Force Gen James Hecker commander of the United States Air Forces in Europe Air Forces Africa stated At approximately 7 03 am CET one of the Russian Su 27 aircraft struck the propeller of the MQ 9 causing U S forces to have to bring the MQ 9 down in international waters Several times before the collision the Su 27s dumped fuel on and flew in front of the MQ 9 in a reckless environmentally unsound and unprofessional manner This incident demonstrates a lack of competence in addition to being unsafe and unprofessional 87 Russia says it will attempt to retrieve the drone 88 The US government claimed that it was prepared for such an outcome John Kirby National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications said that their ability to exploit useful intelligence will be highly minimised While the US Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen Mark A Milley said that there were mitigating measures to ensure that Russia obtained no access to valuable tech He also confirmed that the US would look for the drone as well however the water in which it crashed was 4 000 to 5 000 feet 1 200 to 1 500 m deep Brigadier General Pat Ryder claimed that drone was unflyable and uncontrollable and it likely damaged the Su 27 during the collision 89 The US has since released footage over the Black Sea 90 On 23 July 2023 a Russian fighter aircraft intercepted a US Air Force MQ 9 over Syria and deployed flares in front of it damaging the propeller The drone returned to base safely It was the third near collision of an MQ 9 with Russian aircraft over Syria that month with previous incidents on 5 July and 6 July 91 On 8 November 2023 Houthi rebels in Yemen shot down a US Air Force MQ 9 over the Red Sea amid the attacks on U S bases in Iraq and Syria 92 On 18 January 2024 the Islamic Resistance of Iraq claims to have shot down a US MQ 9 Reaper drone after it took off from Kuwait near Muqdadiyah Diyala Governorate 93 On 19 February 2024 Houthi rebels in Yemen shot down a US Air Force MQ 9 over the port city Al Hudaydah amid the attacks on U S bases in Iraq and Syria 94 During the Israel Hamas war at least six US MQ 9 Reaper drones were flown over the Gaza Strip to assist Israel with reconnaissance efforts 95 NASA edit NASA Predator B variants nbsp NASA s Predator B Altair variant nbsp NASA s Predator B Ikhana variant The National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA initially expressed interest in a production version of the B 002 turbofan powered variant 12 but instead leased an unarmed Reaper variant which carries the GA ASI company name Altair Altair is one of the first three Predator B airframes The other two airframes known as Predator B 001 and Predator B 002 had a maximum gross weight of 7 500 pounds 3 400 kg 96 The Altair differs in that it has an 86 foot 26 m wingspan 20 ft 6 1 m greater than early and current MQ 9s The Altair has enhanced avionics systems to better enable flights in FAA controlled civil airspace and demonstrate over the horizon command and control capability from a ground station These aircraft are used by NASA s Earth Science Enterprise as part of the NASA ERAST Program to perform on location science missions 96 In November 2006 NASA s Dryden Flight Research Center obtained an MQ 9 and mobile ground control station named Ikhana for the Suborbital Science Program within the Science Mission Directorate 97 In 2007 Ikhana was used to survey the Southern California wildfires supporting firefighter deployments based upon the highest need The California Office of Emergency Services requested NASA support for the Esperanza Fire and the General Atomics Altair was launched less than 24 hours later on a 16 hour mission to map the fire s perimeter The fire mapping research is a joint project with NASA and the US Forest Service 98 99 The NASA Ikhana was used to survey the descent of the Orion Exploration Flight Test 1 EFT 1 module on its first test mission 5 December 2014 The aircraft loitered at 27 000 ft 8 200 m used its IR camera to detect the capsule then switched to the optical camera to observe its descent through parachute deployment and landing in the Pacific Ocean 100 U S Homeland Security edit U S Customs and Border Protection s Predator B nbsp CBP s Predator B nbsp CBP s Predator B Guardian variant source source source source source source A CBP Predator B directs border agents towards a migrant group crossing the US Mexico border using thermal video circa 2008 U S Customs and Border Protection CBP operated nine MQ 9s in August 2012 Two were based in North Dakota at Grand Forks Air Force Base four were based in Arizona at Fort Huachuca and one was based at the Naval Air Station Corpus Christi Texas 101 These aircraft were equipped with GA ASI s Lynx synthetic aperture radar and Raytheon s MTS B electro optical infrared sensors 102 The CBP also had two maritime MQ 9s called Guardians based at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Florida and Naval Air Station Corpus Christi Texas 103 The Guardians were equipped with the SeaVue marine search radar their electro optical infrared sensor was optimized for maritime operations 101 The CBP operates one MQ 9 Guardian jointly with the U S Coast Guard USCG out of land based stations in Florida and Texas 104 The United States Department of Homeland Security initially ordered one Predator B for border protection duty referred to as MQ 9 CBP 101 It began operations 4 October 2005 and crashed in the Arizona desert on 25 April 2006 The US s NTSB determined that the crash s most likely cause was pilot error by the ground based pilot inadvertently shutting down the UAV s engine by failing to follow the checklist 105 During its operational period the aircraft flew 959 hours on patrol and played a role in 2 309 arrests It also contributed to the seizure of four vehicles and 8 267 pounds 3 750 kg of marijuana 106 A second Predator B called CBP 104 initially referred to as CBP 102 was delivered in September 2006 and commenced limited border protection operations on 18 October 2006 The president s FY2006 emergency supplemental budget request added 45 million for the program and the FY2007 Homeland Security Appropriations Bill added an additional 20 million In October 2006 GA ASI announced a 33 9 million contract to supply two more Predator B systems by the fall 2007 107 On 16 February 2009 the program was further expanded to include patrols of the Canada US border 108 In February 2009 an MQ 9 began patrolling the Manitoba portion of the U S Canada border and the Great Lakes region as well as Akwesasne Mohawk territory in Ontario and northern New York The UAV was based at Grand Forks Air Force Base and watched the 400 km 250 mi long border The drone does not carry weapons and needs permission to enter Canadian airspace 109 In January 2014 Customs and Border Protection grounded its UAVs temporarily after an unmanned aircraft was ditched off the coast of California by the operator due to a mechanical failure on 27 January 2014 110 On 29 May 2020 during the George Floyd protests CBP flew an unarmed Predator B drone above Minneapolis to watch protesters The agency said it was at the request of federal law enforcement in Minneapolis 111 112 U S Marine Corps edit Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 1 VMU 1 began operations with the MQ 9 on a contractor owned contractor operated basis in 2018 and accepted delivery of the Marine Corps first two MQ 9A air frames 113 in September 2021 Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 3 VMU 3 based out of MCAS Kaneohe Bay HI received their first two MQ 9A air frames in April 2023 114 and reached initial operational capability IOC ahead of schedule in August 2023 115 Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 2 VMU 2 was re designated as VMUT 2 in July 2023 VMUT 2 will serve as the Fleet Replacement Squadron and training squadron for the Marine Corps UAS officers and enlisted sensor operators 116 Other users edit Belgium edit In January 2018 the Belgian Ministry of Defence reportedly decided on the MQ 9 to fulfill its medium altitude long range UAV requirement Ministry officials stated that a request for information had been sent to potential suppliers of the system and that they had received responses from all of them 117 In October 2018 Belgium confirmed its selection of the MQ 9B SkyGuardian variant adding that it would be considered a reconnaissance asset suggesting it will not be used to carry weapons 118 119 In March 2019 the US Department of State approved the sale of four MQ 9B SkyGuardian UAVs to Belgium for 600 million 705 million in 2023 pending approval by US Congress 120 121 In July 2022 work began on adapting the Florennes Air Base to host fly and maintain the planes citation needed Dominican Republic edit The Predator UAV Guardian has been used by the Dominican Republic under U S supervision and funding against drug trafficking from mid 2012 122 France edit On 31 May 2013 French Defense Minister Jean Yves Le Drian confirmed the order of two MQ 9 Reapers to be delivered by the end of 2013 It was chosen to replace the EADS Harfang and was picked over the Israeli Heron TP 123 On 27 June 2013 the U S Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress of a possible Foreign Military Sale to France for 16 unarmed MQ 9s associated equipment ground control hardware and support worth up to 1 5 billion total 124 On 26 August 2013 France and the US Department of Defense concluded the deal for 16 Reapers and 8 ground control stations with French operators beginning training 125 On 24 September 2013 France s first pair of MQ 9 pilots conducted a two hour training sortie at Holloman Air Force Base New Mexico Both French pilots had prior UAV experience and went through a five week ground based training course and 5 hours on a flight simulator before the first flight Two additional crews were also receiving instruction at the facility General Atomics is due to deliver two Reapers and one ground control station to the French Air Force by the end of 2013 126 On 26 November 2013 France declared that six pilots in three teams were operational following 100 hours on flight simulators and 4 flights French MQ 9s were first put into action in January 2014 at Niamey Air Base in Niger for border reconnaissance in the Sahel desert 127 On 16 January 2014 France s first MQ 9 flight occurred from Niger The first two Reapers to enter French service are designated Block 1 and use U S equipment further orders are to be modified with European payloads such as sensors and datalinks 128 On 31 March 2014 French Air Force Reapers accumulated 500 flight hours in support of Operation Serval 129 In July 2014 a French MQ 9 helped to locate the wreckage of Air Algerie Flight 5017 which had crashed in Mali 130 Germany edit Germany made a request to purchase five Reapers and four ground control stations plus related support material and training The request being made through the Foreign Military Sales process was presented to Congress through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency on 1 August 2008 and is valued at US 205 million 285 million in 2023 131 132 However Germany did not go through with this procurement for the time being and decided to lease the IAI Heron offered by IAI and Rheinmetall instead initially for the duration of one year representing a stop gap measure before a long term decision on a Medium Altitude Long Endurance MALE system is being made 133 134 135 136 Greece edit On 21 April 2022 a well known Greek military journalist revealed in an interview that the Hellenic Air Force is discussing the purchase of three MQ 9 UCAVs along with the Israeli Heron TPs Given that the US Air Force has long been operating MQ 9s from Larissa Air Base Greece has some past experience with it from joint exercises 137 On 5 July 2022 the Hellenic Parliament approved the acquisition of 3 MQ 9B SeaGuardian UAVs along with two ground stations 138 On 28 July 2022 the Greek Minister for National Defence Nikolaos Panagiotopoulos confirmed the acquisition of the three UAVs 139 India edit In June 2017 the US State Department approved the sale of 22 drones to India costing around 2 3 billion 140 As of February 2020 update a deal to purchase 30 drones with 10 drones for each of the three Indian armed services was expected to be signed by the end of the fiscal year 141 142 143 In November 2020 the Indian Navy began operating two leased MQ 9B SeaGuardians The lease agreement was valid for one year and has been extended subsequently 144 The drones are deployed at the Naval Air Station Rajali located in Tamil Nadu and had logged close to 3 000 hours covering over 14 million square miles by August 2022 145 144 In February 2022 it was reported that Indian Navy had put the deal on the back burner and was instead looking at more indigenous options from the DRDO as well as upgrading its current fleet of IAI Heron drones 146 On 27 February 2022 PTI reported that the procurement for the 30 armed Predator B drones 10 each for the Indian Army Indian Navy and Indian Air Force is in the advanced stage and disputed earlier reports of the deal being put on the back burner with India reportedly providing good feedback on the SeaGuardians already on lease 147 On 15 June 2023 Reuters reported that the Indian side has approved the purchase of 31 drones worth slightly over 3 billion 148 The formal announcement of the deal is expected during Modi s visit to the U S later in the month 149 Italy edit On 1 August 2008 Italy submitted a FMS request through the Defense Security Cooperation Agency for four aircraft four ground stations and five years of maintenance support all valued at US 330 million 131 150 Italy ordered two more aircraft in November 2009 151 On 30 May 2012 it was reported that the U S planned to sell kits to arm Italy s six Reapers with Hellfire missiles and laser guided bombs 152 However Gen Alberto Rosso has expressed frustration at American delays in integrating additional weapons onto the platform and suggested that Italy may have to seek UAS alternatives 153 Italian Reapers were used in Libya since 10 August 2011 154 as part of its contribution to NATO s Operation Unified Protector flew about 300 hours in Kosovo since 13 March 2012 155 inbound NATO KFOR Joint Enterprise operation on Mare Nostrum mission Mediterranean sea migrants search and rescue operation by October 2013 156 into Afghanistan theater by January 2014 157 to replace Predator A On 3 November 2015 the U S approved a deal covering weapons integration onto Italy s Reaper aircraft which would make it the first country outside the UK to weaponize the drone The potential for increased contribution to NATO coalition operations improved operational flexibility and enhanced survivability for Italian forces prompted the request 158 On 20 November 2019 an Italian Air Force MQ 9 was shot down by a Pantsir system operated by the Libyan National Army or Wagner Group near the city of Tarhuna Libya 159 The Libyan National Army claimed to have shot down the drone that based on the initial reports was thought to be a Turkish operated drone supporting the opposed Government of National Accord The Italian Defense confirmed the loss stating the cause of the crash is under investigation 160 Netherlands edit On 19 June 2013 General Atomics and Fokker Technologies signed a Memorandum of Understanding MOU to offer the MQ 9 Reaper to the Dutch government to meet their need for a MALE UAV The MOU recognizes that Fokker will assist in maintenance and support of the aircraft in the Netherlands if a deal goes through 161 On 21 November 2013 the Dutch Minister of Defense announced that the Royal Netherlands Air Force RNLAF had selected the MQ 9 Reaper Block V as its new MALE UAV The new MALE UAV 306 squadron will be based at Leeuwarden Air Base In July 2018 the Dutch government signed a Letter of Acceptance for the acquisition through the Foreign Military Sales process 162 The Dutch MQ 9 is to have the Synthetic Aperture Radar with the Maritime Search option and also a special ground search radar with more range and electronic sensors to detect ground radar and signals The RNLAF bought four ground stations two at Homebase two at forward operating base and four MQ 9s Block V The aircraft are to reach full operational status in 2023 163 Four more systems are ordered 164 The decision was also made to arm the Reapers 165 Spain edit On 6 August 2015 the Spanish Ministry of Defence announced it would buy four Reaper surveillance aircraft with two ground control stations for 25 million 27 million in 2016 costing 171 million over five years General Atomics will partner with Spanish Company SENER to deliver unarmed versions to Spain making it the fifth European country to order the Reaper In addition to selecting the Reaper Spain is interested in the joint German French Italian project to develop a European MALE UAV 166 The Defense Department cleared the purchase on 6 October 2015 Spain selected the Reaper over the Heron TP to perform homeland security counter insurgency and counter terrorism operations 167 The Spanish government agreed to purchase the system on 30 October 158 The Reaper was selected over the Heron TP mainly for commonality with NATO allies who also use the airframe Although Spain s immediate priority is for surveillance they will eventually try to weaponize the platform The first two aircraft and first GCS is planned for delivery in 2017 with the third aircraft in 2018 when they achieve IOC and the last in 2020 achieving full operational capability FOC 168 United Kingdom edit nbsp A British MQ 9A Reaper operating over Afghanistan in 2009On 27 September 2006 the U S Congress was notified by the Defense Security Cooperation Agency that the United Kingdom was seeking to purchase a pair of MQ 9A Reapers They were initially operated by No 39 Squadron from Creech Air Force Base Nevada later moving to RAF Waddington 169 A third MQ 9A was in the process of being purchased by the RAF in 2007 169 On 9 November 2007 the UK Ministry of Defence MoD announced that its Reapers had begun operations in Afghanistan against the Taliban 170 In April 2008 following the crash of one of the UK s two Reapers British special forces were sent to recover sensitive material from the wreckage before it was blown up to prevent the enemy from obtaining it 171 By May 2011 five Reapers were in operation with a further five on order 172 The second RAF squadron to operate five Reapers is No XIII Squadron which was formally activated and commissioned on 26 October 2012 173 No 39 Squadron personnel were planned to gradually return to the UK in 2013 and in time both squadrons would each operate five Reapers from RAF Waddington 174 In April 2013 XIII Squadron started full operations from RAF Waddington exercising control over a complement of 10 Reapers at that point all based in Afghanistan 175 Five Reapers can provide 36 hours of combined surveillance coverage in Afghanistan with individual sorties lasting up to 16 hours A further five vehicles increases this to 72 hours In total RAF Reapers flew 71 000 flight hours in Afghanistan and dropped 510 guided weapons compared to 497 for Harrier and Tornado 176 177 In April 2013 it was revealed that the MoD was studying the adoption of MBDA s Brimstone missile for the MQ 9 178 In December 2013 several successful test firings of the Brimstone missile from a Reaper at Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake were completed to support integration with RAF Reapers 179 Nine missiles were fired at an altitude of 20 000 ft at distances of 7 to 12 km 4 3 to 7 5 mi from the targets all nine scored direct hits against static accelerating weaving and fast remotely controlled targets 180 In 2014 the MoD decided that its Reaper fleet will be brought into the RAF s core fleet once operations over Afghanistan cease Procurement of the MQ 9A was via an urgent operational capability requirement and funded from the Treasury reserve but induction into the core fleet will have them funded from the MoD s budget The Reapers were retained for contingent purposes mainly to perform intelligence surveillance and reconnaissance ISR until its replacement enters service around 2018 181 On 4 October 2015 David Cameron announced that the RAF would replace its existing fleet of 10 Reapers with more than 20 of the latest generation of RPAS named as Protector 182 183 On 16 October 2014 the MoD announced the deployment of armed Reapers in Operation Shader the UK s contribution to the United States led military intervention against Islamic State the first occasion the UK had used its Reapers outside Afghanistan The number of aircraft from the RAF s 10 strong fleet was not disclosed but it was expected that at least two were sent more were dispatched as the UK drew down from Afghanistan The RAF Reapers primary purpose is to provide surveillance support and situational awareness to coalition forces 184 185 On 10 November 2014 the MoD reported that an RAF Reaper had conducted its first airstrike against Islamic State forces firing a Hellfire missile at militants placing an IED near Bayji 186 RAF Reapers based at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus conducted a single surveillance mission over Syria in November 2014 four in December 2014 and eight in January 2015 On 7 September 2015 Prime Minister David Cameron announced that two Islamic State fighters from Britain had been killed in an intelligence led strike by an RAF Reaper near Raqqa Syria the first armed use of RAF assets in Syria during the civil war 187 By January 2016 RAF Reapers had flown 1 000 sorties in support of Operation Shader 188 Compared to operations in Afghanistan where RAF Reapers fired 16 Hellfire missiles in 2008 93 in 2013 and 94 in 2014 in operations against ISIL 258 Hellfires were fired in 2015 189 Protector edit In April 2016 the United Kingdom announced that it intended to place an order for the Certifiable Predator B MQ 9B as part of its Protector MALE UAV program for the Royal Air Force 190 191 According to the 2015 Strategic Defence and Security Review the Royal Air Force was to operate at least 20 Protector systems by 2025 replacing all of the ten MQ 9A Reapers 192 The order was subsequently limited to 16 systems In RAF service the aircraft would be designated as the Protector RG Mk 1 with aircraft to be acquired from 2018 2030 with the first delivery scheduled in 2023 193 194 On 15 July 2018 a GA ASI Company owned MQ 9B SkyGuardian was flown from the United States to RAF Fairford in the UK for the first transatlantic flight of a MALE UAV It was displayed at the Royal International Air Tattoo RIAT air show where the aircraft was given markings of No 31 Squadron This followed an announcement by the RAF s Chief of Air Staff that No 31 Squadron would be the first RAF Squadron to operate a similar version of the MQ 9B aircraft to be known as the Protector RG Mark 1 RG1 starting in 2023 195 196 The squadron reformed at RAF Waddington in October 2023 197 In July 2020 the Ministry of Defence signed a contract for three Protector UAVs with an option on an additional thirteen aircraft 198 It was announced in September 2021 that No XIII Squadron will become the second Protector squadron 199 Protector will be able to carry up to 18 Brimstone 3 missiles or Paveway IV bombs 200 The first of 16 Protector UAVs was delivered in September 2023 with initial operating capability expected in 2025 201 and full operating capability expected from 2026 202 Mojave edit Further information General Atomics Mojave In May 2023 the UK announced it would be acquiring a carrier based variant of the MQ 9 the General Atomics Mojave for seven months of trials aboard its Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carriers 203 United Arab Emirates edit On 10 November 2020 the US State Department approved the sale of up to 18 MQ 9Bs to the UAE pending approval by Congress 204 205 Taiwan edit On 3 November 2020 the US State Department approved the sale of 4 MQ 9B along with Control Stations and Embedded Global Positioning System Inertial Navigations Systems EGI with Selective Availability Anti Spoofing Module SAASM to Taiwan 206 Japan edit On 15 October 2020 General Atomics Aeronautical Systems conducted validation flights of the SeaGuardian UAV for the Japan Coast Guard JCG The test flight was conducted at a Japan Maritime Self Defense Force JMSDF air base in Hachinohe Both the JCG and JMSDF have expressed interest in acquiring SeaGuardian UAVs in order to conduct more ocean surveillance 207 208 On 15 March 2023 the JMSDF will acquire an MQ 9B SeaGuardian for trials as part of its MALE RPAS Trial Operation Project 209 Morocco edit After the Israel Morocco normalization agreement in 2020 the US is to approve the sale of four MQ 9B SeaGuardians to Morocco 210 Potential operators edit Canada edit As of 25 September 2023 update Royal Canadian Air Force was looking at purchasing the MQ 9 along with AGM 114 Hellfire missiles in a CA 5 billion contract The drones were reportedly to be stationed at CFB Greenwood and CFB Comox with personnel in Ottawa and Yellowknife to support the program A contract was announced on 19 December 2023 for 11 MQ 9B drones 219 Hellfire missiles and 12 Mk82 500 pound bombs 211 Finland edit As of Autumn 2021 Finnish Defence Forces is doing test flights with the MQ 9 212 Poland edit The Polish Ministry of National Defense announced on 28 February 2022 that it plans to purchase an unspecified number of MQ 9 Reaper drones 213 Cancelled acquisitions edit Australia edit In September 2006 the General Atomics Mariner demonstrator aircraft was operated by the Australian Defence Science and Technology Group DSTO in an exercise designed to evaluate the aircraft s ability to aid in efforts to stem illegal fishing drug running and illegal immigration The Mariner operated from Royal Australian Air Force bases Edinburgh South Australia and Learmonth Western Australia in conjunction with a Royal Australian Navy Armidale class patrol boat the Joint Offshore Protection Command and the Pilbara Regiment 214 In February 2015 it was announced that six RAAF personnel had been sent to Holloman AFB New Mexico and Creech AFB Nevada to undergo training 215 In August 2015 it was revealed that Australians had begun flying MQ 9s over Syria the first time Australia expanded operations past Iraq during the Military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Five RAAF personnel were embedded with the USAF 432nd Operations Group which flies armed Reapers performing operational duties with the unit as MQ 9 system pilots and sensor operators 216 In November 2018 the Defence Minister Christopher Pyne announced that Australia would purchase 12 to 16 MQ 9s 217 In November 2019 Australia announced the selection of the MQ 9B for its armed Medium Altitude Long Endurance MALE RPAS requirement under Project Air 7003 citation needed In April 2021 the State Department approved a possible Foreign Military Sale to the Government of Australia of 12 MQ 9B Reapers and related equipment for an estimated cost of 1 651 billion 1 83 billion in 2023 218 The Australian Government canceled the planned Reaper acquisition in March 2022 The funding intended for the project was redirected to expanding the Australian Signals Directorate 219 Variants editThis article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources General Atomics MQ 9 Reaper news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs expansion with The article contains mentions of a number of other MQ 9 variants not present such as the MQ 9A and Reaper ER Furthermore several parts such as the Australian and Canadian acquisitions of the MQ 9B are better placed in operation history with their respective users You can help by adding to it January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message MQ 9 edit Mariner edit A navalized Reaper named Mariner was proposed for the U S Navy s Broad Area Maritime Surveillance BAMS program It had an increased fuel capacity for an endurance of up to 49 hours 220 Variations included one for aircraft carrier operations with folding wings for storage shortened reinforced landing gear an arresting hook cut down or eliminated ventral flight surfaces and six stores pylons for a total load of 3 000 pounds 1 360 kilograms 12 The Northrop Grumman RQ 4N was selected as the BAMS winner citation needed Guardian edit US Customs and Border Protection CBP operates two maritime variants of the MQ 9 known as Guardians 101 The U S Coast Guard evaluated the Guardian including performing joint operations with CBP 221 CBP and the Coast Guard operate one MQ 9 Guardian jointly out of land based stations in Florida and Texas 104 MQ 9 Block 5 edit On 24 May 2012 General Atomics conducted the successful first flight of its upgraded MQ 9 Block 1 plus Reaper The Block 1 plus version was designed for increased electrical power secure communications automatic landing increased gross takeoff weight GTOW weapons growth and streamlined payload integration capabilities A new high capacity starter generator offers increased electrical power capacity to provide growth capacity a backup generator is also present and is sufficient for all flight critical functions improving the electrical power system s reliability via three independent power sources 222 223 New communications capabilities including dual ARC 210 VHF UHF radios with wingtip antennas allow for simultaneous communications between multiple air to air and air to ground parties secure data links and an increased data transmission capacity The new trailing arm main landing gear allows the carriage of heavier payloads or additional fuel Development and testing were completed and Milestone C was achieved in September 2012 Follow on aircraft will be redesignated MQ 9 Block 5 222 223 On 15 October 2013 the USAF awarded General Atomics a 377 4 million contract for 24 MQ 9 Block 5 Reapers 224 The MQ 9 Block 5 flew its first combat mission on 23 June 2017 225 Mojave edit Main article General Atomics Mojave A developed of the General Atomics MQ 1C Gray Eagle incorporating some technologies from the MQ 9 family to facilitate Short take off and landing operations from both austere and naval environments MQ 9B Certifiable Predator B edit SkyGuardian edit nbsp The SkyGuardian at Laguna Army Airfield for testing and certification including a 48 2 hour endurance record and first FAA certification of an unmanned aircraft to fly in civilian air space 226 International demand for a MALE RPAS capable of being certified for operation within civilian airspace drove General Atomics to develop a version of the platform known by GA ASI as MQ 9B SkyGuardian previously called Certifiable Predator B to make it compliant with European flight regulations to get more sales in European countries In order to fly over national airspace the aircraft meets NATO STANAG 4671 airworthiness requirements with lightning protection different composite materials and sense and avoid technology 227 228 The MQ 9Bs performance changes include a 79 ft 24 m wingspan that has winglets and enough fuel for a 40 hour endurance at 50 000 ft 15 000 m Features include High Definition EO IR Full Motion Video sensor De Anti Icing System TCAS and Automatic Take Off amp Land The system also includes a completely redesigned amp modernized integrated ground control station with 4 crew stations 227 228 On 28 November 2019 the Australian Government announced the selection of the General Atomics Aeronautical Systems GA ASI MQ 9B SkyGuardian as its preferred version of the Predator B for the RAAF s Project AIR 7003 MALE armed remotely piloted aircraft system RPAS requirement 229 The Australian Government cancelled the planned acquisition in March 2022 On 19 December 2023 the Canadian Government announced the purchase of eleven MQ 9B SkyGuardian aircraft to be operated by the Royal Canadian Air Force 230 231 232 SeaGuardian edit General Atomics continued with the development of a Naval Reaper concept eventually culminating in a variant of the MQ 9B known as the SeaGuardian It has an endurance of more than 18 hours and can mount an eight hour patrol at a radius of 1 200 nmi 1 400 mi 2 200 km needs update A key part of its mission set is the Leonardo Seaspray 7500E V2 AESA radar mounted as a centerline pod with inverse synthetic aperture radar that can spot surface targets including ships submarine periscopes and people during search and rescue operations 233 The SeaGuardian can be fitted with Multimode 360 Maritime Surface Search Radar and automatic identification system AIS 228 General Atomics studied testing a sonobuoy launch capability from the Guardian in 2016 to demonstrate its ability to carry them control them and send information back to the ground station over a SATCOM link 234 In November 2020 a company owned Reaper carried out a trial releasing sonobuoys then processing information from them to track a training target This led to the creation of an anti submarine warfare package for the SeaGuardian the first self contained ASW package for a UAS The package comprises podded sonobuoy dispenser systems SDS using a pneumatic launch system to launch ten A size or twenty G size buoys from each pod and a sonobuoy management and control system SMCS the aircraft can carry up to four pods 233 MQ 9B STOL edit AT INDO PACIFIC 2022 in Sydney Australia General Atomics revealed their concept for a short take off and landing kit capable of being applied to any MQ 9B aircraft This kit would replace the wings tail and propeller with STOL optimised equivalents allowing for use from austere environments and particularly aircraft carriers as well as Landing Helicopter Docks Platforms 235 236 237 238 Operators edit nbsp Map with MQ 9 users in blue nbsp FranceFrench Air and Space Force Armee de l air et de l espace Cognac Chateaubernard Air Base Charente Escadron de Drones 1 33 Belfort 239 nbsp IndiaIndian Navy 2 on lease since Nov 2020 240 INS Rajali Tamil Nadu nbsp ItalyItalian Air Force Aeronautica Militare 241 Amendola Air Base Province of Foggia 32 Stormo 242 28 Gruppo Naval Air Station Sigonella Sicily 32 Stormo 61 Gruppo Volo nbsp JapanJapan Coast Guard 3 SeaGuardian in operational use since October 2022 243 nbsp NetherlandsRoyal Netherlands Air Force 4 in service with 4 more ordered 244 245 Leeuwarden Air Base Friesland No 306 Squadron Tdy at Curacao International Airport nbsp PolandPolish Air Force unspecified number of leased units in service since Feb 2023 246 nbsp SpainSpanish Air and Space Force 247 Talavera la Real Air Base Extremadura ALA 23 248 249 233 Escuadron nbsp United KingdomRoyal Air Force 10 ordered with 9 in active service 1 more ordered in March 2021 250 16 Protector UAVs ordered for delivery starting in 2023 to replace Reaper 202 RAF Waddington Lincolnshire No XIII Squadron 251 252 No 54 Squadron Operational Conversion Unit converting to Protector UAV from 2023 24 253 No 31 Squadron forming on Protector UAV from 2023 202 Former Creech Air Force Base Nevada No 39 Squadron 2007 2022 254 nbsp United StatesUnited States Air Force Air Combat Command 49th Wing Holloman Air Force Base New Mexico 6th Attack Squadron 16th Training Squadron 9th Attack Squadron 29th Attack Squadron 53d Wing Eglin Air Force Base Florida 556th Test and Evaluation Squadron Creech Air Force Base Nevada 432d Wing Creech Air Force Base Nevada 11th Attack Squadron 15th Attack Squadron 20th Attack Squadron Whiteman Air Force Base Missouri 22d Attack Squadron 50th Attack Squadron Shaw Air Force Base South Carolina 89th Attack Squadron Ellsworth Air Force Base South Dakota 482d Attack Squadron Shaw Air Force Base South Carolina 489th Attack Squadron United States Air Forces in Europe Air Forces Africa 31st Operations Group 731st Expeditionary Attack Squadron 71st Air Base Romania 255 52d Expeditionary Operations Group Detachment 2 12th Air Base Poland 256 Air Force Special Operations Command 27th Special Operations Wing Cannon Air Force Base New Mexico 33d Special Operations Squadron 58th Special Operations Wing Kirtland Air Force Base New Mexico 551st Special Operations Squadron Air National Guard 107th Attack Wing Niagara Falls Air Force Base New York 136th Attack Squadron 174th Attack Wing Hancock Field Air National Guard Base New York 138th Attack Squadron 111th Attack Wing Horsham Air Guard Station Montgomery Pennsylvania 103d Attack Squadron 118th Wing Berry Field Nashville Tennessee 105th Attack Squadron 132d Wing Des Moines Air National Guard Base Des Moines Iowa 124th Attack Squadron 147th Attack Wing Ellington Field Joint Reserve Base Houston Texas 111th Reconnaissance Squadron 163d Attack Wing March AFB California 160th Attack Squadron 196th Attack Squadron 178th Wing Springfield Beckley Air National Guard Station Springfield Ohio 188th Wing 188 WG Ebbing Air National Guard Station Fort Smith Arkansas 184th Attack Squadron 110th Wing Battle Creek Air National Guard Base Battle Creek Michigan 172d Attack Squadron Air Force Reserve Command 919th Special Operations Wing Duke Field Florida 2d Special Operations Squadron U S Customs and Border Protection Sierra Vista Arizona Grand Forks Air Force Base North Dakota Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Florida Naval Air Station Corpus Christi TexasSpecifications edit nbsp Honeywell turboprop nbsp MQ 9 Reaper taxiingMQ 9A Reaper edit Data from USAF Fact Sheet 5 General characteristicsCrew 0 onboard 2 in ground station Length 36 ft 1 in 11 m Wingspan 65 ft 7 in 20 m Height 12 ft 6 in 3 81 m Empty weight 4 901 lb 2 223 kg Max takeoff weight 10 494 lb 4 760 kg Fuel capacity 4 000 lb 1 800 kg Payload 3 800 lb 1 700 kg Internal 800 lb 360 kg External 3 000 lb 1 400 kg Powerplant 1 Honeywell TPE331 10 turboprop 900 hp 671 kW with Digital Electronic Engine Control DEEC 257 Performance Maximum speed 300 mph 482 km h 260 kn Cruise speed 194 mph 313 km h 169 kn 258 Range 1 200 mi 1 900 km 1 000 nmi Endurance 27 hr 259 Service ceiling 50 000 ft 15 420 m Operational altitude 25 000 ft 7 5 km 260 Armament 7 hardpoints Up to 1 500 lb 680 kg on the two inboard weapons stations 261 Up to 750 lb 340 kg on the two middle stations 261 Up to 150 lb 68 kg on the outboard stations 261 Center station not used Up to eight AGM 114 Hellfire air to ground missiles can be carried or four Hellfire missiles and two 500 lb 230 kg GBU 12 Paveway II laser guided bombs The 500 lb 230 kg GBU 38 Joint Direct Attack Munition JDAM can also be carried Testing is underway needs update to support the operation of the Air to Air Stinger ATAS In March 2014 MBDA successfully test fired a dual mode Brimstone missile from a Reaper aircraft on behalf of the UK Ministry of Defence and Royal Air Force 262 Depending on mission requirements the MQ 9 Reaper can carry multiple AIM 9 Sidewinder Block 2 missiles 263 Avionics AN DAS 1 MTS B Multi Spectral Targeting System 264 AN APY 8 Lynx II radar 265 Raytheon SeaVue Marine Search Radar Guardian variants 101 MQ 9B Skyguardian edit Data from General Atomics Catalog 266 General characteristicsCrew 0 onboard 2 in ground station Length 38 ft 5 in 11 7 m Wingspan 78 ft 9 in 24 m Max takeoff weight 12 500 lb 5 670 kg Fuel capacity 6 000 lb 2 721 kg Payload 5 550 lb 2 520 kg Internal 800 lb 360 kg External 4 750 lb 2 150 kg Powerplant 1 Honeywell TPE331 10 turboprop 900 hp 671 kW with Digital Electronic Engine Control DEEC 257 Performance Maximum speed 240 mph 390 km h 210 kn Range 6 900 mi 11 000 km 6 000 nmi Endurance Over 40 hours Service ceiling 40 000 ft 12 200 m Operational altitude Armament 9 hardpoints 1 centreline hardpoint 8 wing hardpoints Up to ten air to ground Brimstone missile can be carried or 500 lb 230 kg Paveway IV laser guided bombs 267 Avionics AN DAS 1 MTS B Multi Spectral Targeting System 264 AN APY 8 Lynx II radar 265 Optional mission kits Multi mode 360 maritime surface search radar Automatic Identification System AIS Anti Submarine Warfare ASW Tactical and strategic SIGINT Tactical data link Link 16 Airborne Early Warning AEW Communications gateway relaySee also edit nbsp Aviation portalDrone strikes in Pakistan during the 2000s War on Terror usually attributed to either the MQ 1 or MQ 9 Measurement and signature intelligenceRelated development General Atomics Avenger formerly Predator C General Atomics MQ 1 Predator General Atomics MQ 1C Gray Eagle General Atomics MojaveAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Elbit Hermes 900 BAE Systems Mantis Baykar Bayraktar Akinci IAI Eitan CAIG Wing Loong II Shahed 149 GazaRelated lists List of active United States military aircraft List of unmanned aerial vehiclesReferences edit a b c Insinna Valerie 26 May 2021 Get ready for another fight over the future of the 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2020 Retrieved 30 July 2021 a b AN DAS 1 Multi spectral Targeting System MTS B United States Jane s Electronic Mission Aircraft 15 March 2010 Archived from the original on 24 September 2009 Retrieved 8 September 2010 a b Lynx AN APY 8 Defense Update com 23 August 2006 Archived from the original on 5 January 2010 Retrieved 8 September 2010 MQ 9B SkyGuardian Protector RG Mk 1 MQ 9B Royal Air Force Retrieved 30 April 2023 This article contains material that originally came from the web articleUnmanned Aerial Vehiclesby Greg Goebel which exists in the public domain External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to General Atomics MQ 9 Reaper MQ 9 Predator Factsheet on U S Air Force site General Atomics Aeronautical Systems YMQ 9 Reaper National Museum of the United States Air Force MQ 9 Reaper Predator B UAV Defense Update com General Atomics MQ 9 Reaper Predator B Designation Systems net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title General Atomics MQ 9 Reaper amp 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