• Les forces armées yéménites ont confirmé une attaque contre le #porte-avions USS « Harry S. #Truman » hier à l’aide de missiles et de drones, le forçant à se replier vers l’extrême nord de la #mer_Rouge - Le Père Peinard
    https://www.leperepeinard.com/breves/les-forces-armees-yemenites-ont-confirme-une-attaque-contre-le-porte-

    Il est probable que cette même attaque ait causé la perte d’un #F/A-18 » #Super_Hornet » de l’#US_Navy, survenue après que le porte-avions eut effectué un virage serré pour » éviter les tirs « . Un tracteur de remorquage a également été perdu et un marin a été blessé.

    • pas de mention de manœuvre d’évitement dans ma source maritime – reprenant le communiqué officiel de NAVCENT

      F/A-18 Super Hornet Lost Overboard in Red Sea
      https://gcaptain.com/f-a-18-super-hornet-lost-overboard-in-red-sea

      The USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75) Carrier Strike Group reported the loss of an F/A-18E Super Hornet and tow tractor during a routine operation in the Red Sea on April 28, 2025.

      According to naval officials in Manama, Bahrain, the incident occurred during a hangar bay operation when the move crew lost control of the aircraft. Quick action by sailors involved in the towing operation allowed them to clear the area before both the aircraft and tow tractor went overboard.

      One sailor sustained minor injuries in the incident. Naval authorities have launched an investigation into the cause of the accident.

      The Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group, which includes nine squadrons of Carrier Air Wing 1, three guided-missile destroyers from Destroyer Squadron 28, and the Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS Gettysburg (CG 64), remains fully mission capable despite the loss.

      The incident comes during an extended deployment for the carrier. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth extended the Truman’s Middle East deployment in March 2025. The carrier has been operating continuously since departing Naval Station Norfolk in September 2024.

      This is not the first incident involving the Truman during its current deployment. In February, the carrier sustained damage to its starboard quarter following a collision with the Panama-flagged bulk carrier MV Besiktas-M near Port Said, Egypt. That incident resulted in damage to storage rooms, maintenance space, line handling space, and the fantail, though aircraft elevator three remained operational.

      The Truman is currently engaged in Operation Rough Rider, a U.S. Central Command campaign targeting Houthi forces in Yemen. The operation, which began on March 15, 2025, aims to restore freedom of navigation and American deterrence in the region. Working alongside the Carl Vinson Carrier Strike Group, the Truman has been part of operations that have struck over 800 targets.

      Naval officials have not released details about potential recovery operations for the lost aircraft and equipment, citing operational security concerns.

      The USS Harry S. Truman is commanded by Captain Christopher Hill, having assumed command after Captain Dave Snowden’s removal following the collision. 

      The F/A-18E Super Hornet is manufactured by Boeing and costs approximately $60 million per aircraft.

      pour l’incident devant Port-Saïd, cf. https://seenthis.net/messages/1098410

    • Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group F/A-18 Super Hornet Lost at Sea > United States Navy > display-pressreleases
      https%3A%2F%2Fwww.navy.mil%2FPress-Office%2FPress-Releases%2Fdisplay-pressreleases%2FArticle%2F4167948%2Fharry-s-truman-carrier-strike-group-fa-18-super-hornet-lost-at-sea%2F

      MANAMA, Bahrain – USS Harry S. Truman (CVN 75) lost an F/A-18E Super Hornet assigned to Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 136 and a tow tractor as the aircraft carrier operated in the Red Sea, April 28. All personnel are accounted for, with one Sailor sustaining a minor injury.

      The F/A-18E was actively under tow in the hangar bay when the move crew lost control of the aircraft. The aircraft and tow tractor were lost overboard.

      Sailors towing the aircraft took immediate action to move clear of the aircraft before it fell overboard. An investigation is underway.

      The Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group and embarked air wing remain fully mission capable.

      The strike group consists of flagship Harry S. Truman, the nine squadrons of Carrier Air Wing 1, three guided-missile destroyers of Destroyer Squadron 28, and the Ticonderoga-class cruiser USS Gettysburg (CG 64).

    • Houthis Get « Soft Kill » on U.S. Navy Jet - YouTube
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=siL417q1BgM

      An F/A-18E from VFA-136 being towed on the hangar bay fell over the side of the USS Harry S Truman as the ship was maneuvering to avoid getting hit by a Houthi weapon. One sailor was injured while jumping from the jet before it went into the water, but there was no loss of life.

      il s’agit bien d’une manœuvre d’évitement… (3:14 de la vidéo, dont le début ne contient que de la pub du sponsor)
      je la mets car il y a, à suivre, d’intéressants détails sur le fonctionnement du porte-avions notamment le déplacement des avions sur les ponts et, à 3:54, la vue du poste de travail du superviseur des mouvements de pont…

    • L’US Navy a perdu un autre F/A-18 Super Hornet cette semaine, après sa chute dans la mer Rouge lors d’une tentative d’atterrissage sur le porte-avions USS Harry S. Truman - Le Père Peinard
      https://www.leperepeinard.com/breves/lus-navy-a-perdu-un-autre-f-a-18-super-hornet-cette-semaine-apres-sa-

      07 mai 2025 8h44

      Les pertes d’avions américains lors des opérations » #Prosperity_Guardian » et » #Rough_Rider » contre le #Yémen s’élèvent à au moins 930 millions de dollars, dont 22 drones #MQ-9 » #Reaper » et trois jets F/A-18 » Super Hornet « .

  • Drone Surveillance Operations in the Mediterranean: The Central Role of the Portuguese Economy and State in EU Border Control

    Much has been written in the past years about the dystopic vision of EU borders increasingly equipped with drone surveillance (see here: http://www.europeanpublicaffairs.eu/high-tech-fortress-europe-frontex-and-the-dronization-of-borde, here: http://eulawanalysis.blogspot.com/2018/10/the-next-phase-of-european-border-and.html, here: https://www.heise.de/tp/features/EU-startet-Langstreckendrohnen-zur-Grenzueberwachung-4038306.html and here: https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2018/11/role-technology). Yet, when the first joint drone surveillance operation of #Frontex, the #European_Maritime_Safety_Agency (#EMSA) and Portuguese authorities was launched on 25 September 2018, there was a lack of response both from the media and concerned activists or researchers. Yet, the EMSA offered details about the operation on its website, and Frontex as well. In addition, Frontex mentioned in its press statement parallel operations undertaken in Italy and Greece in the same period.

    These operations were a crucial step for the setup of the joint European information system for border surveillance, #EUROSUR. The drone surveillance program in the context of Frontex operations is a major step in the operational setup of the EUROSUR program that aims to integrate databases and national coordination centres of 24 European countries. EUROSUR was officially introduced with a policy paper in 2008, and the system itself was launched on 1 December 2013 as a mechanism of information exchange among EU member states. But it is not yet fully operational, and drone surveillance is commonly seen as a central component for full operationability. Thus, the cooperation between the EMSA, Frontex and the Portuguese state in the recent operation is a crucial milestone to achieve the aim of EUROSUR to create a unified European border surveillance system.

    This is why the operation launched in Portugal in September 2018 is of higher significance to the ones in Italy and Greece since it includes not only national authorities but also the EMSA, located in Lisbon, as a new key actor for border surveillance. EMSA was founded in 2002 as a response to various shipping disasters that lead to environmental pollution and originally focuses on monitoring the movement of ships, with a focus on the safety of shipping operations, environmental safety at sea and the trading of illegal goods via maritime transport.

    In 2016 the EMSA was allocated 76 million Euros in a bid for the production of drones for the surveillance of the Mediterranenan in the context of Frontex missions. EMSA`s bid foresaw that drones would be hired by EMSA itself. EMSA would run the operation of drones and share real-time data with Frontex. The largest part of this bid, 66 million Euros, went to the Portuguese company #Tekever, while smaller portions went to the Italian defence company #Leonardo and to the Portuguese air force that will operate drones produced by the Portuguese company #UA_Vision. At the same time, the successful bid of Tekever and the integration of Portuguese authorities in surveillance operations catapults Portugal onto the map of the defence and surveillance industry that profits immensely from the recent technological craze around border surveillance (see here, here and here).

    Lisbon-based Tekever set up a factory for the production of drones in the Portuguese mainland in #Ponte_de_Sor, an emerging new hub for the aerospace industry. Together with French #Collecte_Localisation_Service, which specialises in maritime surveillance, Tekever founded the consortium #REACT in order to produce those specific drones. Under the Portuguese operation, ground control, i.e. the technical coordination of the flight of the drones, was located in Portugal under the authority of the Portuguese air force, while the operation was coordinated remotely by Frontex experts and Portuguese authorities in the #Frontex_Situational_Centre in Poland where data were shared in real-time with EMSA. This first operation is a crucial step, testing the technical and administrative cooperation between EMSA and Frontex, and the functionality of the drones that were specifically produced for this purpose. These drones are lighter than the ones used in Greece and Italy, and they are equipped with special cameras and #radars that can detect ship movements and receive emergency calls from the sea. This allows to run data collected by the drones through an algorithm that is programmed to distinguish so-called ´#migrant_vessels´ from other ships and boats.

    The Portuguese government has set up a number of initiatives to foster this industry. For example, a national strategy called #Space_2030 (#Estratégia_Portugal_Espaço_2030) was launched in 2018, and the newly founded #Portuguese_Space_Agency (#Agência_Espacial_Portuguesa) will begin to work in the first months of 2019. The fact that border surveillance is one of the larger European programs boosting the defence and surveillance industry financially has not generated any controversy in Portugal; neither the fact that a center-left government, supported by two radical left parties is propping up surveillance, aerospace and defence industries. The colonial continuities of this industrial strategy are all too visible since narratives like ‘from the discovery of the sea to the technology of space’ are used not only by industry actors, but also, for example, by the Portuguese Chamber of Commerce in the UK on its website. In this way, social and political #domination of non-European territories and the control of the movement of racialized bodies are reduced to the fact of technological capability – in the colonial period the navigation of the seas with optical instruments, astronomic knowledge and ships, and today the electronic monitoring of movements on the sea with drones and integrated computer systems. The Portuguese aerospace industry is therefore presented as a cultural heritage that continues earlier technological achievements that became instruments to set up a global empire.

    The lack of any mention about the start of the drone surveillance programme does not only demonstrate that border surveillance goes largely unquestioned in Europe, but also that the sums spent for surveillance and defence by EU agencies create incentives to engage more in the defence and surveillance industry. This goes all the more for countries that have been hit hard by austerity and deindustrialisation, such as Portugal. The recent increase of 9.3 billion Euros for the period 2021 to 2027 for border surveillance funding in the EU with the creation of the #Integrated_Border_Management_Fund focused on border protection, is a telling example of the focus of current EU industrial policies. For the same period, the European Commission has earmarked 2.2 billion Euro for Frontex in order to acquire, operate and maintain surveillance assets like drones, cameras, fences, and the like. In this situation, the political consensus among EU governments to restrict migration reinforces the economic interests of the defence industry and vice versa, and the interest of national governments to attract #high-tech investment adds to this. Those lock-in effects could probably only be dismantled through a public debate about the selective nature of the entrepreneurial state whose funding has decisive influence on which industries prosper.

    While the Portuguese government does not currently have a single helicopter operating in order to control and fight forest fires that have caused more than 100 deaths in the past two years, much EU and national public funding goes into technology aimed at the control of racialized bodies and the observation of earth from space. At the same time, there is considerable concern among experts that surveillance technology used for military means and border security will be rolled out over the entire population in the future for general policing purposes. For this reason, it remains important to keep an eye on which technologies are receiving large public funds and what are its possible uses.


    https://www.law.ox.ac.uk/research-subject-groups/centre-criminology/centreborder-criminologies/blog/2019/02/drone
    #drones #contrôles_frontaliers #frontières #technologie #complexe_militaro-industriel #technologie_de_la_surveillance #externalisation #business #algorithme #colonialisme #néo-colonialisme #impérialisme #héritage_culturel #austérité #désindustrialisation

    ping @daphne @marty @albertocampiphoto @fil

    • Des drones en renfort dans l’#opération_Sophia

      Pour renforcer la surveillance aérienne, après le départ des navires, l’opération Sophia déployée en Méditerranée (alias #EUNAVFOR_Med) va bénéficier d’un renfort d’au moins un drone #Predator de l’aeronautica militare.

      L’#Italie a indiqué sa disponibilité à fournir un drone à l’opération Sophia, selon nos informations confirmées à bonne source. Ce pourrait être un #MQ-9A Predator B, la version la plus avancée et la plus récente du drone, d’une longueur de 10,80 m avec une envergure de plus de 20 mètres, qui peut voler à 445 km / heure. De façon alternative, selon les moyens disponibles, un MQ-1C Predator A, plus modeste (longueur de 8,20 m et envergure de 14,80 m), pouvant voler à 160 km/heure, pourrait aussi être déployé.

      http://www.bruxelles2.eu/2019/04/09/des-drones-en-renfort-dans-loperation-sophia
      #operation_Sophia