US Drones bombing Africa operated from RAF bases in the heart of the Lincolnshire countryside

truther March 11, 2013 2

An RAF base in Britain is being used by America in its controversial drone warfare campaign, it was claimed last night.

Documents seen by The Mail on Sunday reveal that the United States has established a drone ‘operations centre’ in the heart of the Lincolnshire countryside which could be used to co-ordinate attacks in the Middle East and Africa.

Last night, the revelation sparked claims of British complicity in the US Airforce (USAF) assassination programme which is being investigated by the United Nations.

 Artist impression of Predator Drone firing a missile.
Deadly: An RAF base in Britain is being used by America in its drone warfare campaign. One document requests US security-cleared staff to work at RAF Waddington on this drone, the Predator, which has killed scores of militant suspects (Artists impression)

One document requests US security-cleared staff to work at RAF Waddington on a USAF drone called the Predator. The weapon has killed hundreds of people in Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen.

A second document describes a role for a communications technician at the same base ‘supporting 24/7 operations of critical real-time USAF/ANG [Air National Guard] mission operations’.

 

Bosh Global Services, the US company recruiting personnel, designs and maintains key drone equipment for the American military and has established a base in Lincolnshire, believed to be at RAF Waddington.

The site has been designated Britain’s first drone centre and will have five fully armed Reapers from next year.

Data War: How the super-fast telecommunications link between Britain and the Pentagon drone base Djibouti in East Africa worksData War: How the super-fast telecommunications link between Britain and the Pentagon drone base Djibouti in East Africa works

Politicians and human rights groups have demanded to know the extent of America’s use of British bases to  support its operations.

Clive Stafford Smith, the head of legal charity Reprieve, said: ‘The US drones programme operates from secret bases without regard to law.

‘The evidence that UK bases, subject to RAF oversight, are supporting US drones appears to implicate the UK in terrorisation and destruction.’

Professor Noel Sharkey, of the University of Sheffield and Britain’s foremost expert on drones, said the documents demanded an explanation from the UK and US military.

Control: A United States Airman operates a sensor control station for an unmanned weapon (file picture)Control: A United States Airman operates a sensor control station for an unmanned Reaper weapon (file picture)

He said: ‘It is very important the British public know what foreign strikes are being delivered from UK soil.

‘Current operation of the US Predator drones in Iraq, Afghanistan and Africa is conducted from the US, which requires a communications link between the US base station and Europe and can cause control delays.

‘These delays could be minimised by controlling the Predators from the UK, which has excellent satellite coverage of all of the conflict zones.’

Complicit: Royal Air Force Waddington in Lincolnshire could be helping in the control of the unmanned dronesComplicit: Royal Air Force Waddington in Lincolnshire could be helping in the control of the unmanned drones

Baroness Sarah Ludford, the Liberal  Democrat MEP for London, said: ‘Assassinations even of suspected terrorists outside a recognised framework of war breach long-established norms of international law.

‘Not only must Britain refuse to co-operate with illegal targeted killings, it must publicly  challenge American attempts to move the legal goalposts.’

The wider claim of UK complicity in US drone missions is supported by evidence of a deal between the US military and British Telecom.

It has been paid by Washington to link a second RAF base to the Pentagon’s drone headquarters in Djibouti, East Africa.

Redacted documents seen by The Mail on Sunday show that the US-run former bomber station at RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire has been fitted with equipment capable of supplying secret data to the drone centre in Africa where American unmanned aircraft have killed scores of civilians and extremist militant suspects.

The BT document, obtained under America’s Freedom of Information laws, is a contract with the US military for a link which can  provide a secure route for passing intelligence between the two bases.

Catherine Gilfedder, a lawyer for Reprieve, which obtained the contract, said: ‘In facilitating communications between US forces in  the UK and Djibouti, BT is profiting from  this campaign of death.’

The contract, which names Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti and RAF Croughton, specifies that the communications link must avoid any connections to Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia.

In a letter, Mr Stafford Smith asked the telecoms giant to explain why it was supporting the drone programme.

Contract: The US-run former bomber station at RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire has a communications link to a drone centre in AfricaContract: The US-run former bomber station at RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire has a communications link to a drone centre in Africa

Last night, the company said: ‘BT provides telephony and communications which link up governments and organisations all over the world.

‘Whether it’s a government organisation, bank or manufacturing firm their work is confidential.’

A US Embassy spokeswoman said that it did not discuss communications infrastructure linked to its military bases.

The Ministry of Defence added: ‘There are no circumstances under which UK military assets, including bases made available to the US, could be used by the US without the agreement of the Government.’

Link: Documents have shown that RAF Croughton has been fitted with equipment capable of supplying data to the Pentagon drone base Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, East AfricaLink: Documents have shown that RAF Croughton has been fitted with equipment capable of supplying data to the Pentagon drone base Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, East Africa

#Daily Mail

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2 Comments »

  1. Stan Sikorski March 12, 2013 at 6:06 am - Reply

    The ‘terrorists’ don’t hate us for our freedom. They hate us for our governments.

  2. Rich Buckley March 11, 2013 at 11:32 pm - Reply

    http://tinyurl.com/ac9rjga

    So it’s off to court once more to nuance our Constitutional liberty with some appointed judge no doubt. Can you imagine how threatened government is going to act when we turn the tables on them and start reporting crime scenes with our own fleet of humming-bird size airborne private spy-drones?

    The Associated Press 3/11/2013 Tri-Valley Times asks us, are 800 pound, immobile, bed-bound bloggers in fuzzy slippers considered journalists entitled to press credentials? Or, what about James “JC” Playford, a lean looking, long haired, former house painter who’s usually the first person to show up on every crime scene within reach of his home carrying a press card. Well known to his local San Diego police and sheriff, they apparently don’t like JC and go out of their way to prevent his access.

    This has nothing whatsoever to do with a hippie-looking guy with attitude in a politically conservative county. It’s just his attitude; for some reason JC seems to act like his citizenship entitles him to report what he wants. The nerve!

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