Military base drone incursions encourages Republicans to the Chamber to demand an action

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First on Fox: A group of room republicans are asking for details on how government agencies approach the growing threat of unauthorized drone incursions to American military facilities.
In letters sent Thursday, the subcommittee of military and foreign affairs requested a mine of documents and communications from the Defense Departments (DOD), Transport (DOT) and justice (DOJ).
The letters note that in 2024 only, there were 350 incursions of drones in more than 100 American military bases.
Legislators believe that many of the responses to illegal incursions, including an example where a group of drones has gone through the base of Langley Air Force for more than two weeks in December 2023, has been insufficient and fragmented.
The American soldiers would be unleashed on enemy drones on the fatherland if the Bipartisan bill adopts

In 2024 alone, there were 350 incursions of drones in more than 100 American military bases. (Associated Press)
Under current rules, basic commanders must establish “a hostile intention” before taking measures – a threshold that legislators say they are ill -suited to threats of rapid and ambiguous drones.
The coordination between military installations, the DoJ, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the local police is often “improvised and bureaucratically delayed”, indicates the letter, leaving gaps that adversaries could exploit.
To assess the question, the Republicans ask agencies to hand over documents by July 10, in particular: all the policies and agreements for inter -institutions on the detection and attenuation of drones; A list of all protected installations under title 10 of article 130 (i); Communications involving DOD, DOJ, FAA and others on threats of drones and gaps in authority; All incident reports linked to drone incursions since January 2022; Any internal review evaluating current legal frameworks and recommending reforms; Plans for a joint federal-state working group on counter-drone coordination.
Fox News Digital contacted DOD, DOJ and DOT to comment.
The pentagon lacks procedure counter-drone leading to incursions like at Langley, experts say the experts

The drones proved to be fatal in the war between Russia and Ukraine, including in this image of the consequences of a Russian strike on Ukraine (Ukraine / Handou State Emergency Service)
Legislators arouse their requests as part of a broader thrust of legislative reform and operational clarity in the face of climbing national security threats. “This is a rapid evolution threat which requires a unified and proactive response,” said the letter, highlighting the need for better data sharing and the allocation of resources between agencies.
The threat comes at a time when the fatal capacities of modern drone war were proven on the ground in Ukraine and the Middle East.
Read the letter below. Application users: CLICK HERE
From the first days of the invasion of Russia in 2022, the unmanned air systems (UAS) were deployed with a devastating effect by the Russian and Ukrainian forces, transforming the way the battles are waged and how intelligence is gathered. This started as surveillance and artillery platforms has evolved into large-scale integration of munitions of blurring loaded with explosives, or “suicide bomber”, capable of precision strikes deep behind the enemy lines.
One of the most notable platforms is the Shahed-136 of Iran manufacturing, a low-cost drone and guided by GPS that Russia used in swarms to submerge Ukrainian aerial defenses and hit civil infrastructure, including power plants and residential areas. These drones, launched in waves, were used to sow terror and inflict strategic damage while costing a fraction of conventional missiles. Ukraine, for its part, responded with creative adaptations, converting consumer camera drones into improvised bombers and launching strikes on Russian trenches, vehicles and even naval active ingredients in the Black Sea.
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Israel used drones alongside war planes to attack the best generals and the main military and nuclear installations of Operation Rising Lion this month. Iran has drawn its own drone attack to Israel.
Military analysts have said that Ukraine represents the first major war where drones are at the heart of the strategy, and not just support tools. Their widespread deployment has forced a tactical redress, encouraged innovations in electronic war and counter-Uas systems, and has caused a debate on the speed with which drones can exceed inhabited planes in an air fight.