World

Pentagon combines sea drones, AI to police Gulf region

Incidents with Iranian ships illuminate year-old US programme

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 10 Sep 2022 2:30PM

Pentagon combines sea drones, AI to police Gulf region
A Saildrone Explorer unmanned surface vessel in the Arabian Gulf off Bahrain’s coast, which the US Naval Forces Central Command began operationally testing as part of an initiative to integrate new unmanned systems and artificial intelligence into US 5th Fleet operations. – AFP pic, September 10, 2022

WASHINGTON – Iran’s recent seizure of unmanned US Navy boats shined a light on a pioneering Pentagon programme to develop networks of air, surface, and underwater drones for patrolling large regions, meshing their surveillance with artificial intelligence.

The year-old programme operates numerous unmanned surface vessels, or USVs, in the waters around the Arabian peninsula, gathering data and images to be beamed back to collection centres in the Gulf.

The programme operated without incident until Iranian forces tried to grab three 7m Saildrone Explorer USVs in two incidents, on August 29-30  and September 1.

In the first, a ship of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps hooked a line to a Saildrone in the Gulf and began towing it away, only releasing it when a US Navy Patrol boat and helicopter sped to the scene. 

In the second, an Iranian destroyer picked up two Saildrones in the Red Sea, hoisting them aboard.

Two US Navy destroyers and helicopters quickly descended, and persuaded the Iranians to give them up the next day, but only after stripping cameras from them, according to the US military.

The Iranians said the USVs were in international shipping lanes and were picked up “to prevent possible accidents”.

The US Navy said the USVs were operating well out of shipping lanes and unarmed.

Vice-Admiral Brad Cooper, commander of US Naval Forces Central Command, called the Iranian actions “flagrant, unwarranted, and inconsistent with the behaviour of a professional maritime force”.

US forces “will continue to fly, sail and operate anywhere international law allows,” he added.

The drones are operated by the Bahrain-based US 5th Fleet’s Task Force 59, created last year to integrate unmanned systems and artificial intelligence into Middle East operations.

Airborne and subsea drones are pretty well developed and proven, but unmanned surface boats are much newer and yet essential for the future, 5th Fleet spokesman Commander Tim Hawkins said. 

Since starting last year, the US Navy and regional partners have deployed both slow USVs like Saildrones and battery-powered speedboats like the Mantas T-12.

Equipped with solar panels and sail wings, the Saildrones carry multiple sensors and cameras, and are designed to spend up to a year at sea transmitting data by satellite.

San Francisco-based Saildrone operates around 100 vessels around the world for clients including the Pentagon, major oceanographic institutes, meteorological agencies, and groups studying fisheries and pollution.

“Having circumnavigated Antarctica in 2019 and then having sailed through the eye of a category-four hurricane last year, there really isn’t any maritime environment where our drones cannot operate,” said Saildrone spokesman Susan Ryan.

In the Gulf, Hawkins would only say that they collect information for “enhancing our vigilance of the surrounding seas and strengthening our regional deterrence posture”.

But Iranian activities are likely the main target. 

Iran also patrols the region and has accosted and seized foreign commercial vessels and harassed US Navy ships in several tense confrontations in recent years.

The US Navy has sought to prevent Iran from shipping weapons to Yemen’s Houthi rebels and other groups, and also helps enforce sanctions on Iran.

The key, Hawkins said, is taking the information collected from all sorts of unmanned sources, in the air, on the ground and on the sea, and making sense of it quickly.

Artificial intelligence helps identify unusual activity, like unnoticed vessels, in the USV data that human observers might miss.

“You need artificial intelligence to pick out what warrants more attention,” he said.

Hawkins said it was unclear why only after a year into the programme that the Iranians suddenly decided to try to retrieve some Saildrones.

None of what the US is doing is secret, he noted. 

The programme was announced last September, and in February the 5th Fleet hosted International Maritime Exercise 2022, which brought together 10 countries and more than 80 USVs to try out in the Gulf.

Even so, the US chose to place Task Force 59 in the tension-filled Gulf instead of another less challenging region, and the activities apparently have Tehran bothered. 

The US military says the programme is in part about developing tactics and doctrines for operating USVs, including learning how to deal with a country like Iran trying to grab them off the sea.

Right now the US operates them with manned surface vessels nearby to deal with interference.

“You can’t just go pick up stuff out of the ocean that has a country’s flag on it,” said one US official.

“If it’s the sovereign property of our nation, they have to give it over,” the official said. – AFP, September 10, 2022

Related News

Opinion / 9h

Has the sleeping giant been awakened with a terrible resolve?

Opinion / 2d

Trump’s strategy in the Strait of Hormuz could lead to his downfall

Opinion / 1w

US attacks in the Gulf show the weaknesses of MOUs

World / 2w

Iran’s My Lai: The Minab school bombing and the reckoning that never comes

World / 3w

Oil prices rise after Iran shuts Hormuz again, Trump threatens new attacks

Malaysia / 4w

The calm in the Strait of Hormuz could be very brief

Spotlight

Malaysia

Aminuddin denies abandoning Sikamat

Malaysia

BN-PN cooperation talks revive questions over political loyalty as PAS shifts closer to Umno

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Malaysian teen held in Hong Kong with RM260k cannabis haul believed to be drug mule

World

Starmer bids farewell as UK PM ahead of Labour leadership handover

Malaysia

BNPL users hit eight million as outstanding balances reach RM5.3b

Malaysia

KWAP fell victim to eFishery scam, invested nearly RM200 million - PM Anwar

Malaysia

Penang signs landmark Perak water deal to secure 40-year supply from 2032

Malaysia

PRN Negeri Sembilan: Hopes of KJ becoming MB dashed as name not on candidate list

World

US strikes Iranian missile sites as Tehran warns of wider energy disruption

Malaysia

Bersatu to contest Negeri polls under own logo as Muhyiddin blasts PAS-BN tie-up

Malaysia

“There are traitors among us waiting to topple Aminuddin” - Loke

You may be interested

World

Trump escalates air strikes on Iran as ceasefire collapses

World

SpaceX starship launch aborted seconds before liftoff after engine failure

World

US-Iran war escalates as Washington expands strikes, Tehran threatens regional infrastructure

World

Starmer bids farewell as UK PM ahead of Labour leadership handover

World

Europe heatwave linked to around 12,000 deaths as climate risks intensify

World

Singapore: Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon to retire in Feb 2027, succeeded by Justice Sushil Nair

World

Andy Burnham to be made UK Labour leader on way to becoming prime minister

World

Cyanide fumes killed Bangkok bar fire victims within minutes, autopsies show