Drone Detection System Deployed to New York After Mystery Sightings
US officials are sending a drone detection system to New York, Governor Kathy Hochul says, after questions over mysterious objects in the skies over the East Coast and beyond grew in recent days.
A drone sighted over New York in recent days
"In response to my calls for additional
resources, our federal partners are sending a drone detection system to New
York," Hochul wrote on X on Sunday.
She said state governments needed more power to
deal on their own with the small, uncrewed aircraft that have also been
reported in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Connecticut and Massachusetts.
And further west, in Ohio, drone sightings also
led to the closure of Wright-Patterson Air Force Base for about an hour on
Friday night, according to local media.
"Congress must pass a law that will give us the power to deal directly with the drones," Hochul said in her post, after last week promising to "do whatever it takes to ensure New Yorkers remain safe".
Senator Chuck Schumer said on Sunday he hoped to
pass a bill that would give local enforcement more power to investigate
unidentified flying objects, saying: "I'm pushing for answers amid these
drone sightings".
He also asked that a drone detection system
similar to the one headed for New York also be sent to New Jersey, where most
of the aerial encounters have so far been recorded.
New Jersey Senator Andy Kim said he went out
with local residents over the weekend to observe the night sky, and that he
believed - based on conversations with civilian pilots and flight tracking data
- that most of the aircraft he saw "were almost certainly planes".
Despite their demands for more help in dealing
with the issue, Hochul and other officials have sought to reassure the public
that the suspected drones do not pose a national security threat.
On Sunday, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro
Mayorkas confirmed the sightings included drones, as well as manned aircraft
commonly mistaken for drones. He told ABC News that he knew of "no foreign
involvement" related to the sightings.
The Pentagon has denied the suggestion of one
New Jersey representative that the possible drones were coming from an Iranian
"mothership" lurking off the east coast, while an FBI official has
said there may have been "a slight overreaction" on the topic.
According to Mayorkas, the uptick in drone
reports may be due to a change in federal regulations allowing drones to be
flown at night.
He added that the federal government was working
in "close co-ordination" with state and local authorities on the
issue, saying it was "critical" they be given the ability to counter
drone activity under federal supervision.
With just over a month to go until Donald
Trump's inauguration, the president-elect's pick for national security adviser,
Republican Representative Mike Waltz, hit out against the Biden
administration's response to the sightings.
"I think Americans are finding it hard to
believe we can't figure out where these are coming from," he told the
BBC's US news partner CBS.
"We need to get to the bottom of it,"
he said, accusing government agencies of "pointing at each other"
rather than offering answers.
Kim, a Democrat, also called on federal
authorities to do more to assuage Americans' concerns.
"People have a lot anxiety right now about
the economy, health, security etc," he wrote on X.
"And too often we find that those charged
with working on these issues don't engage the public with the respect and depth
needed."
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