The US military is adding more drones and expanding its video surveillance in the skies over Afghanistan to meet the needs of American forces as 30,000 more troops head into the war zone, a top Air Force general has said.
The bolstered eyes in the sky will come from a mix of manned and unmanned aircraft and added technology that allows each MQ-9 Reaper drone to collect 10 video transmissions and beam them back to 10 different users on the ground, Air Force Lt Gen David Deptula, deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, told reporters.
Deptula's comments came as Defense Secretary Robert Gates continues to press the Air Force to find ways to more rapidly provide better intelligence to the US and its allies in Afghanistan.
The first troop units of the surge ordered by President Barack Obama have begun to arrive in Afghanistan, a Pentagon official said yesterday, adding to the 68,000 US forces already deployed to counter emboldened insurgents.
Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said a Marine battalion ordered to move in earlier this month already has "some boots on the ground," with the rest to be flown in before Christmas. "So the surge has begun in earnest," he said.