Unmanned drone to finally crack down on wild US/Canada border
While much attention is paid to the border between the United States and Mexico, our neighbors to the north have yet to encounter the scrutiny that they deserve. No prison-like fences or vigilante minutemen have stood in the way of people sneaking back and forth between the United States and Canada. Well, the U.S. government has decided that these shenanigans have gone on for long enough. According to Wired and the New York Times, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency will use an unmanned drone aircraft to patrol a stretch of the border between the two North American allies.
The Predator B aircraft will operate out of Grand Forks (ND) Air Force Base and will be the first of its kind on the northern border. Three similar drones currently patrol the border with Mexico. Residents of North Dakota and "a slim part of Minnesota" can now sleep easy knowing that a remote-controlled airplane is buzzing overhead and keeping maple syrup, hockey and the word "eh" where they belong.
Surely a great deal of research went into the decision to have the $10 million unmanned aircraft patrol just a 300 mile stretch of the 5,525 mile long border with our ally, right? Well, John Stanton, executive director of the Customs and Border Protection service's national air security operations was asked if he expected the drone to uncover a rash of drug smuggling, illegal immigration or terrorism. His response: "We hope to actually use this aircraft to measure that. You don't know what you don't know." Neat!
But at least these drones are foolproof. Well, about that. The drone was supposed to arrive in North Dakota last Thursday. Because of maintenance issues, it arrived on Saturday. And a similar drone on the southern border crashed in 2006 outside of Nogales, Arizona. No one was killed, but it did narrowly miss hitting a house. The cause of the accident was found to be human error.
Well, it may sound like a boondoggle, but I am certainly relieved that someone will be keeping an eye on those hosers. We're still recovering from the Celine Dion invasion of the 1990s. There's just no telling what they could sneak in next. Pray that it isn't curling.
Filed under: North America, Canada, News
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
colby Dec 9th 2008 11:47AM
not to state the obvious, but our neighbors to the north don't have the insane drug cartel problems that our neighbors to the south struggle with.
Raymond Dec 9th 2008 12:06PM
Gosh! Only 10million each! Lets get it together and patrol the rest of the 5k or so miles of THAT border! The threat is SOOO big. Why not put that money to good use and make some jobs with it? The U.S. and Canada mounties! Just think! With that much, we could pay Americans and Canadians alike to hold hands all the way across the border!