The Wall Street Journal reports that the U.S. military and
border-patrol officials are teaming up on a new initiative to bring
dozens of surveillance blimps from Afghanistan war zones to the Mexican
border.
Over the next few weeks, the military will oversee a
test in south Texas to determine if a 72-foot-long, unmanned
surveillance blimp—sometimes called "the floating eye" when used to spot
insurgents in Afghanistan—can help find drug runners and people trying
to cross illegally into the U.S.
The project is part of a broader
attempt by U.S. officials to establish a high-tech surveillance network
along the border and find alternative uses for expensive military
hardware that will be coming back from Afghanistan, along with the
troops.
In other words, hardware recycling. Read more:
Battlefield Blimps to Patrol U.S.-Mexico Borders - WSJ.com.
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