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yellowcanine

(35,693 posts)
Fri Jul 24, 2020, 02:14 PM Jul 2020

Air Force "Cougar" surveillance plane flying tight circles over Portland OR

https://theintercept.com/2020/07/23/air-force-surveillance-plane-portland-protests/?fbclid=IwAR2KllzEgvrjm59A4vxNuW2n3dSeiHpp5ZXofQs0EgU-ZzmjAfTVOVNiozo

WHILE ANONYMOUS FEDERAL agents have thrown protesters into unmarked vans and fired tear gas at Portland’s mayor in recent days, an Air Force surveillance plane designed to carry state-of-the-art sensors typically reserved for war zones has circled the Oregon city’s outskirts from above.

The plane, a DO-328 “Cougar,” was spotted via the open source flight tracking website ADS-B Exchange, allowing the public to monitor its course. The Intercept reviewed this flight data, confirming tight, circular flights consistent with surveillance operations in and around Portland.

The aircraft is a twin-engine plane built in a modular fashion that allows it to be outfitted with long-range surveillance equipment suitable for supporting U.S. Special Operations commandos on the ground, according to Air Force documentation and previous public reporting. It was in Colorado earlier this month, looping over Denver and Boulder, before flying to Portland on July 19, and has been circling above Portland and its suburbs since July 21, according to publicly available flight data aggregated by websites like ADS-B Exchange.

At a Special Operations Forces Industry Conference in 2015, as first reported by the defense blog War Is Boring, Air Force Col. Eric Forsyth detailed the Cougar’s capabilities for conducting intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, or ISR, showing off the equipment’s potential to aid U.S. troops from above. “With jacks for power, Ethernet, GPS and other linkages, engineers can easily install all sorts of gear,” wrote War Is Boring’s Joseph Trevithick at the time. “These systems would potentially be able to run long-range radars, powerful cameras, high-powered radios, laser range finders and more.”


DO-328 “Cougar” capabilities as presented at a May 2015 Special Operations Forces Industry Conference.
The Cougar that has been orbiting Portland is registered to the 645th Aeronautical Engineering Group at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, quite a distance from Portland. The 645th previously operated under the code name “BIG SAFARI,” and was founded in 1952 to centralize the Air Force’s covert surveillance programs during the Cold War. “BIG SAFARI has long been an alternative acquisition source for certain high priority, rapid-reaction, urgent Combatant Commander needs,” former Air Force Secretary Michael Donley said in a 2010 address. A 2018 obit for former BIG SAFARI director Bill Grimes described the entity as “a secretive Air Force acquisition program for specialized special mission aircraft.”

While the Cougar’s impressive potential for wide-area wartime surveillance is clear, it’s less obvious why a warplane is flying tight circles — typically a dead giveaway of aerial surveillance — near domestic protests, or on whose orders. Last month, Motherboard reported similar surveillance flyovers by the National Guard over protests. It’s unclear whether the Air Force is engaging in active surveillance of the protesters or merely testing the plane’s capabilities to do so or doing something entirely unrelated.

The Air Force did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“Big Safari is all about testing new equipment, so maybe we are seeing the next generation of spy tech being used domestically right now, or they are taking advantage of the situation to improve testing,” independent investigative journalist and plane-tracking enthusiast Sam Richards, who has been monitoring the flights, told The Intercept. “I think it is naive to not take these flights seriously given the way this administration is cracking down on these uprisings.”

The flights don’t seem to have taken place directly over downtown Portland, the epicenter of the protests, but rather at a range of 20 to 30 miles from the city’s center. That could still allow for fine-grained surveillance, however; a 2016 Bloomberg report on police aerial surveillance over Baltimore noted the small civilian planes used there could surveil an area of up to 30 square miles.

The mere presence near Portland of a plane designed to stress test SOCOM’s aerial spy gear is enough to concern some observers. “The apparent use of military aircraft in a domestic operation should set off all kinds of alarm bells,” said Steven Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists’ Government Secrecy Project. “What is their mission? Under what authority are they operating, and who authorized them? It seems like the administration is pushing right through what had been established norms of transparency and accountability.”

The vast array of power surveillance gear this plane potentially could be carrying on these flights is cause for concerns over privacy and political expression. “These aircraft are believed to carry SIGINT [signals intelligence] sensors; if that is the case, then circling at that distance would probably (depending on the altitude) allow the sensors to collect data,” David Cenciotti, a retired Italian Air Force officer and aerospace journalist, told The Intercept, though he noted that he could only speculate without knowing the Cougar’s actual payload.


Where are the goddamn "UN Black Helicopter Militia types" who were so worked up during the Clinton and Obama administrations about "Big Government" spying on Americans?
7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Air Force "Cougar" surveillance plane flying tight circles over Portland OR (Original Post) yellowcanine Jul 2020 OP
It is my understanding that any faction of the military Bev54 Jul 2020 #1
No, the article says it is registered at Wright-Patterson AF Base. yellowcanine Jul 2020 #2
I predict the excuse will be . . . gratuitous Jul 2020 #4
The other piece Wellstone ruled Jul 2020 #3
jade helm Mc Mike Jul 2020 #5
I'd Rather the drones then the helicopters judeling Jul 2020 #6
KnR Hekate Jul 2020 #7

Bev54

(10,036 posts)
1. It is my understanding that any faction of the military
Fri Jul 24, 2020, 03:13 PM
Jul 2020

cannot be used in domestic policing at all. Do the Border patrol have these for border surveillance?

yellowcanine

(35,693 posts)
2. No, the article says it is registered at Wright-Patterson AF Base.
Fri Jul 24, 2020, 03:37 PM
Jul 2020

Congress would have to approve any use by BP.

gratuitous

(82,849 posts)
4. I predict the excuse will be . . .
Fri Jul 24, 2020, 04:05 PM
Jul 2020

That the folks at Wright-Patterson "loaned" the plane and its operating personnel to DHS, so it's not really a military operation. And while civil libertarians and the government argue the matter in court, the plane will complete its mission, go back to Ohio, and the Trump administration will ask that the case be dismissed as moot.

Then months or years from now, evidence will surface that the administration was lying its ass off, but by that time the DOJ attorney who did the lying will be safely ensconced on the bench at some Circuit Court of Appeals, beyond any reckoning of being held accountable for his earlier crimes.

 

Wellstone ruled

(34,661 posts)
3. The other piece
Fri Jul 24, 2020, 03:39 PM
Jul 2020

of this puzzle is,the Stinger. Cargo Vans equipped with large whip antennas. Here in Nevada,these vans are kept at our local National Guard Base about forty miles north of Vegas. Usually eight to ten of these are kept at that base.

Assume the Portland and Seattle areas are hearing Drones circling as well.

judeling

(1,086 posts)
6. I'd Rather the drones then the helicopters
Fri Jul 24, 2020, 04:23 PM
Jul 2020

They are quieter when flying overhead.
At least that was my experience in Minneapolis.

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