The
General Atomic MQ-1 Predator is an American
unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) built by
General Atomics and used primarily by the
United States Air Force (USAF) and
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Initially conceived in the early 1990s for
aerial reconnaissance
and forward observation roles, the Predator carries cameras and other
sensors but has been modified and upgraded to carry and fire two
AGM-114 Hellfire missiles or other munitions. The aircraft, in use since 1995, has seen combat in
war in Afghanistan,
Pakistan, the
NATO intervention in Bosnia,
Serbia,
Iraq War,
Yemen,
Libyan civil war, the
intervention in Syria, and
Somalia.
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MQ1 predator |
Each Predator air vehicle can be disassembled into six main components
and loaded into a container nicknamed "the coffin." This enables all
system components and support equipment to be rapidly deployed
worldwide. The largest component is the ground control station and it is
designed to roll into a
C-130 Hercules.
The Predator primary satellite link consists of a 6.1 meter (20 ft)
satellite dish and associated support equipment. The satellite link
provides communications between the ground station and the aircraft when
it is beyond line-of-sight and is a link to networks that disseminate
secondary intelligence. The RQ-1A system needs 1,500 by 40 meters (5,000
by 125 ft) of hard surface runway with clear line-of-sight to each end
from the ground control station to the air vehicles. Initially, all
components needed to be located on the same airfield.
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Hellfire missile |
The RQ1 is reinforced with ammunition
Hellfire missile. The RQ-1 conducted its first firing of a
Hellfire anti-tank missile on 16 February 2001; over a bombing range near
Indian Springs Air Force Station north of
Las Vegas, Nevada,
an inert AGM-114C successfully hit a tank target. This led to a series
of tests on 21 February 2001 in which the Predator fired three Hellfire
missiles, scoring hits on a stationary tank with all three missiles.
Following the February tests, the decision was made to move immediately
to increment two of the testing phase, which involved more complex tests
to hunt for simulated moving targets from greater altitudes with the
more advanced AGM-114K version. The scheme was put into service, with
the armed Predators given the new designation of MQ-1A. The Predator
gives little warning of attack; it is relatively quiet and the Hellfire
is supersonic, so it strikes before it is heard by the target.
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MQ1 firing the Hellfire missile. |
On 16 February 2001 at
Nellis Air Force Base, a Predator successfully fired three Hellfire
AGM-114C
missiles into a target. The newly armed Predators were given the
designation of MQ-1A. In the first week of June 2001, a Hellfire missile
was successfully launched on a replica of bin Laden's Afghanistan
Tarnak
residence built at a Nevada testing site. A missile launched from a
Predator exploded inside one of the replica's rooms; it was concluded
that any people in the room would have been killed.
- In February 2002, armed Predators are thought to have been used to destroy a sport utility vehicle belonging to suspected Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar and mistakenly killed Afghan scrap metal collectors near Zhawar Kili because one of them resembled Osama bin Laden.
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- Mohammed Omar and mistakenly killed Afghan scrap metal collectors near Zhawar Kili because one of them resembled Osama bin Laden.
- On 4 March 2002, a CIA-operated Predator fired a Hellfire missile
into a reinforced Taliban machine gun bunker that had pinned down an Army Ranger team whose CH-47 Chinook had crashed on the top of Takur Ghar Mountain in Afghanistan. Previous attempts by flights of F-15 and F-16 Fighting Falcon aircraft were unable to destroy the bunker. This action took place during what has become known as the "Battle of Roberts Ridge", a part of Operation Anaconda. This appears to be the first use of such a weapon in a close air support role.
- On 6 April 2011, the Predator had its first friendly fire incident
when observers at a remote location did not relay their doubts about the
target to the operators at Creech Air Force Base.
- On 5 May 2013, an MQ-1 Predator surpassed 20,000 flight hours over
Afghanistan by a single Predator. Predator P107 achieved the milestone
while flying a 21-hour combat mission; P107 was first delivered in
October 2004.
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THE RQ1 PREDATOR.. |
Information from the GENERAL ATOMICS SITE.
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