General Atomics Aeronautical Systems announced last week that it has signed a memorandum of understanding with International Golden Group, a leading Middle East weapons supplier, to offer the export version of the Predator remotely piloted aircraft to the United Arab Emirates. The US government last year granted General Atomics a license to sell Predator XP abroad. Though the XP version cannot carry weapons, it embodies the same flight characteristics and intelligence-surveillance-reconnaissance competencies as the original unarmed RQ-1 Predators that the US Air Force operated. Predator XP can carry a variety of export-cleared sensors, such as General Atomics’ Lynx radar and cameras spanning multiple spectra. (See also Flight International report)
When acting Air Force Secretary Gary A. Ashworth rescinded service-wide “Family Days” last week citing the need to build readiness, he left it up to commanders, directors, and supervisors to decide if they would still permit extra days off. Here’s how Air Force major commands are taking that guidance.