SEE ISIS'S SCRATCH-BUILT DRONES
Joan Soley, BBC
News
ISIS Drone Spotted In Mosul
As reported, this drone was downed by Iraqi
Special Forces.
ISIS is building drones and using them in
war. In February, field investigators from Conflict Armament Research found an
ISIS drone-making workshop in Ramadi, two
weeks after the city was liberated
from the violent, insurgent group. Last month, an ISIS-flown drone killed two
Kurdish fighters and injured
two French commandos. Last week, a commander of the Iraqi Special
Forces claimed that his forces were attacked by more explosive drones, and reporters on the ground in
Iraq have seen the remnant of the scratch-built unmanned flying machines.
To better understand ISIS drones, I spoke
with an investigator at Conflict Armament research, who requested anonymity
given the sensitive nature of the work. When the investigator entered the
workshop, there were no completed drones inside. Instead, they saw plywood
fuselages and styrofoam wings, as well as a missile from a man-portable
anti-air defense system, or MANPADS.
“For us it implied
that they were trying to arm it, arm their drones with something that would be
light enough to be carried by a drone, but also that would have the right kind
of explosives for potency,” they said. Many of their finding were published in
a report on the Islamic
State’s Weaponized Drones. Most notably, the missile itself was
taken apart, and the warhead and the steering component disassembled.
The ISIS drones
all appeared to be scratch-built, said the investigator, “it was not like the
off the shelf, like the Phantom or things you can buy.” Mass-produced
quadcopters, like the DJI Phantom series, have many advantages; they can come
with cameras and batteries, they’re known to work, and they’re designed to be
simple to fly, but there are still major limitations in the designs. Most can
only fly for a maximum of around 20 minutes on a full charge, and that flight
time is reduced the more weight the drone is carrying.
So ISIS, instead,
built its own drones. Notably, the investigators found a gyroscope made by
Turkish company Bomec Robot Teknolojileri for the Turkish domestic market in
the workshop, suggesting that ISIS was trying to build a navigation tool for
its scratch-made flying machines.
For as much as
Conflict Armament Research found in the workshop, there’s still a lot left to
discover about ISIS drones. The workshop “looks like they abandoned it while
they were working,” says the investigator, but if ISIS had any working models,
it looks like they took them when they fled. And, apart from the missile parts
and the gyroscope, few electronic components were found. There were no
controllers, cameras, or propulsion systems for the drones in the workshop, so
that information, too, is unknown.
Given the recent
sightings of ISIS drones, is it possible that ISIS could have rebuilt its
workshop? “I would suppose it’s not that hard” said the investigator. They
cited technical limitations for the drones to overcome: the weight of the
payload, the range, and identifying a target. If ISIS was repurposing old
warheads, they could have learned to make better, smaller bombs for the drones.
By building fixed wing, lightweight drones from foam, it’s possible ISIS made
flying machines that could travel longer distances. And any camera system at
all, capable of transmitting video back to the pilots would be a pretty basic
targeting tool.
The investigator
says the lab in Ramadi looked like a research and development thing, a work in
progress. With new drones seen in battle, and with casualties now clearly
linked to ISIS drone bombs, it seems that research has come to deadly fruition.
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