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But Northrop Grumman's sales effort is a delicate one
-- the Global Hawk is the most sophisticated spy drone in the Air Force, and not all want to share the eye-in-the sky edge the U.S. now enjoys. The political stakes are also high
-- North Korea, China, Russia and other countries are not likely to welcome spy planes loitering off their coast. "I think there is a concern, not just in Asia but wherever the spy planes might be sold, of increased tensions if exports are given the go-ahead," said Takehiko Yamamoto, a professor of international relations at Tokyo's Waseda University. "China, Russia and others would perceive it as a potentially offensive capability. For Japan, I think it is a bad idea." Drone technology is tightly regulated, as is also the case with stealth fighters such as the F-22, which also has brought interest from Japan and other potential buyers around the world but has been red-lighted for export by Congress.
Sales of the drones are controlled under the Missile Technology Control Regime, a pact among 34 countries that is meant to limit the spread of missile technology and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told the Senate Appropriations Committee in March that he shared the fears that drone technology could get into the wrong hands, citing in particular terrorist groups. But he also noted that potential adversaries
-- particularly Iran -- are already developing their own drone fleets, and said sharing technology with allies would be in Washington's best interest. Orchard acknowledged that the international restrictions remain a major hurdle in building an international market for drones. "It is a significant issue," Orchard said. "But the Global Hawk is not armed, so that makes it a little easier." Analyst Lance Gatling, of the Tokyo-based Nexil Research, said exports to close U.S. allies are almost inevitable. "Someone is always going to complain when someone else buys a system like the Global Hawk," he said. "There certainly are sensitive technologies. It definitely has an impact on any country's ability to observe someone else." But, he added, "it's a capability the U.S. wants them to have."
[Associated
Press;
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