📍 Event:
The new rapid reaction forces will resist drone incursions into military bases. Soon, teams of anti-drone experts equipped with sensors, electronic warfare systems, and drone interceptors will rush to bases that have been attacked by drones.
The United States Army will soon have groups capable of responding to drone incursions into facilities in the United States within 24 hours. The head of the Northern Command of the US Armed Forces (NORTHCOM), General Gregory Guillot, announced the new efforts during the Falcon Peak 25.2 anti-drone exercises at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida. It was there that the equipment called the "evacuation kit" was demonstrated.
Over the past year, the number of reports of drone sightings has increased significantly over US military installations. From September 2023 to September 2024, about 230 cases of drone incursions were recorded. From September 2024 to March 2025, there were about 420 of them. It is still unclear whether this is a real increase in the number of drone flights or an improvement in detection systems.
🚨 Situation: Drones — New Threat on Home Soil
Over the past year, the number of drone incursions at U.S. military bases has nearly doubled:
- September 2023 — September 2024: ~230 incidents
- September 2024 — March 2025: ~420 incidents
This is not just statistics — it's an alarm signal. Drones are becoming more accessible, smarter, and more dangerous. They can:
- Conduct reconnaissance (photos/videos, thermal imaging, radio intelligence)
- Deliver explosives or biological agents
- Attack infrastructure (radars, aircraft, storage facilities)
- Disrupt security by creating chaos and diverting forces
Question: Is this a real increase in threats — or just better detection?
Pentagon's Answer: It doesn't matter. We need to respond either way.
🛡️ Solution: Drone Rapid Response Teams — "Drone SWAT Teams"
General Gregory Guillot, head of U.S. Northern Command (NORTHCOM), announced the creation of mobile drone countermeasure teams capable of arriving at any military base within 24 hours.
These teams are not just patrols with rifles. They are high-tech units equipped with:
🔍 1. Detection Sensor Systems
- Short-range radars (detection of small targets)
- Radio frequency detectors (intercepting drone control)
- Optoelectronic and infrared systems (visual tracking)
- Acoustic sensors (detection by propeller sound)
📡 2. Electronic Warfare (EW) Systems
- GPS and control jammers (force drones to hover or return)
- Control takeover systems (hijacking)
- Operator communication channel suppression
🕷️ 3. Physical Interceptors
- Net guns (launching nets at drones)
- Intercepting drones (catching "prey" in the air)
- Laser systems (for destruction in the future)
- "Hunters" with rifles (last resort — only if the drone poses a threat to life)
🎒 4. "Evacuation Kit"
Demonstrated at the Falcon Peak 25.2 exercises at Eglin Air Force Base — this is a mobile equipment set that can be quickly deployed at any base:
- Modular tripod sensors
- Portable EW stations
- Tablets with analysis and control software
- Communication systems and coordination with other units
- Kits for collecting debris and analysis (who, where, why?)
🎯 Why Is This Needed?
- Protection of critical infrastructure — air bases, nuclear facilities, weapons depots.
- Preventing espionage — drones can record equipment locations, operating modes, vulnerabilities.
- Deterring hybrid attacks — terrorists, hackers, foreign agents can use drones for provocations.
- Preparing for future threats — mass drone swarm attacks are already a reality on battlefields (Ukraine, Middle East). The U.S. doesn't want to be caught off guard at home.
🧩 Who Is Behind the Drones?
Most cases are currently unidentified. Possible sources:
- Enthusiasts / privacy violators
- Protesters or activists
- Criminal groups (e.g., smuggling contraband into prisons near bases)
- Foreign intelligence (China, Russia, Iran actively test drones near U.S. borders and facilities)
- Terrorist cells
Example: In 2023, drones with thermal imagers were spotted over an Air Force base in Nevada (possibly near "Area 51") — clearly not amateur equipment.
🔄 How Does This Work in Practice?
Scenario:
An unidentified drone is detected circling over an F-35 hangar at a Texas airbase.
→ Detection system is triggered.
→ Command requests NORTHCOM assistance.
→ Mobile team arrives within 24 hours.
→ Deploys sensors, jams control, intercepts drone with a net.
→ Analyzes it: chips, firmware, launch point.
→ Passes data to intelligence.
→ Base returns to normal operation.
📈 Trend: Drones vs. Anti-Drones — New Arms Race
The U.S. is investing billions in C-UAS systems (Counter-Unmanned Aircraft Systems). This includes:
- Artificial intelligence for automatic detection
- Integration with air defense and missile defense systems
- Training thousands of military operators across the country
- Development of unified response protocols
NORTHCOM now coordinates efforts across all branches — Army, Navy, Air Force, Coast Guard — to ensure no "blind spots".
💬 Conclusion: "The Silent War" Has Already Begun
Drones are a new type of threat that doesn't require an army but can cause strategic damage. The U.S. is responding not just by installing fences and cameras — they are creating specialized, highly mobile, technological forces capable of operating both on the front lines and on home territory.
24 hours is the new security standard.
If a drone appears over a base — help is already on the way.
And it won't go unnoticed.