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Los Alamos National Lab Testing New Drone Disabling System

 

LOS ALAMOS, N.M. (AP) — One of the country's premier nuclear weapons labs now has the capability to disable drones or any other unauthorized unmanned aircraft systems flying over its restricted airspace in a swath of northern New Mexico.

Officials at the Los Alamos National Laboratory say they're testing the new system that could serve as a model for other federal installations, the Los Alamos Monitor reportedWednesday.

The airspace over the lab received an additional no drone zone designation by the Federal Aviation Administration.

"All airspace over the laboratory is protected right now against unauthorized drone or UAS flights (unmanned aircraft systems)," said Michael Lansing, head of the lab's security operations. "We can detect and track a UAS and if it poses a threat we have the ability to disrupt control of the system, seize or exercise control, confiscate, or use reasonable force to disable, damage or destroy the UAS."

The lab worked with the National Nuclear Security Administration and the FAA to implement the system. The NNSA received authorization from Congress last year to implement enhanced security measures to protect its sites from drones.

"Implementation guidance by NNSA focuses on high-level actions to be taken to detect, identify, track and mitigate drones that pose a threat to NNSA covered facilities," said Lewis Monroe, director of NNSA's Office of Security Operations and Programmatic Planning.

The lab's Counter-UAS program will serve as a blueprint for other programs planned for the Pantex Plant in Texas, the Y-12 facility in Tennessee and the National Nuclear Security Site in Nevada.

The NNSA has defined drone activity as threatening "if unabated, could inflict or otherwise cause physical harm to a person; inflict or otherwise cause damage to property or systems; interfere with the operational mission of a covered facility or asset; conduct unauthorized surveillance or reconnaissance; or result in unauthorized access to, or disclosure of, classified or otherwise lawfully protected information."

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Information from: Los Alamos Monitor, http://www.lamonitor.com