Spies That Fly (2002).
Van Riper, A. Bowdoin
Spies That Fly (2002)
Directed by Larry Klein
Produced and distributed by WGBH/Boston
56 minutes
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Spies in the Sky, a 2002 episode of the PBS television series Nova,
explores the origins and early history of remotely piloted
reconnaissance aircraft. Its main narrative thread begins with Israeli
operations over Lebanon's Bekka Valley in 1982 and ends with
American operations over Afghanistan in 2001. It is, however, less a
story about combat than a story about successive attempts to find a
technological fix for a difficult military problem.
The problem--as the film's opening segments explain in some
detail--was simple to state: how to acquire detailed, timely
photographic intelligence over hostile territory. Piloted aircraft, like
the U-2s whose cameras revealed Soviet missile sites in Cuba, were
flexible but increasingly vulnerable to surface-to-air missiles.
Satellites were immune to missiles, but incapable of lingering over a
promising target and difficult to reroute on short notice. Unmanned
aerial vehicles (UAVs) were conceived in the 1960s as a third solution,
one that provided the flexibility of a piloted aircraft without putting
a pilot's life at risk. Making that "third way" work,
however, proved to be more difficult than it appeared. The first
American UAV, the jet-powered Lightning Bug of the 1960s, cost enormous
amounts of money and delivered mediocre results. It took fifteen years
before Israel fielded the first modern UAV: a small, radically simple,
highly robust machine driven by a propeller and powered by a two-stroke
engine.
American designers expanded on the Israeli approach to UAV design
in two distinct ways, and Spies That Fly chronicles both. The first
thread traces the evolution of "full-size" UAVs from the
ship-launched Pioneer used in the Gulf War through the
turn-of-the-century Predator to the long-range, high-endurance Global
Hawk used tested in Afghanistan. The second explores a series of
attempts to build small UAVs like the Dragonfly (a modular design that
can be disassembled and carried in a suitcase) for use by units in the
field. Both are illustrated with a rich variety of visuals: computer
animation, interviews with military experts, and live-action footage of
training exercises and combat operations, including a UAV-directed
attack on enemy vehicles in Afghanistan.
Keeping with the film's origins as an episode of Nova, the
filmmakers focus on design and operational challenges rather than
military applications. Some of its most interesting moments involve
ongoing attempts to understand the dynamics of insect flight, in order
to design insect-sized, flapping-wing UAVs for use inside buildings. To
its credit, Spies That Fly emphasizes the difficulty of such work and
the high failure rate for experimental UAVs. This warts-and-all
treatment is a welcome departure from the credulous "gee
whiz!" tone that frequently creeps into television documentaries on
military technology. Reissued as part of a four-disc boxed set that
includes Nova episodes on Soviet jet fighters and the U. S. Air
Force's new Joint Strike Fighter, Spies That Fly is being marketed
to viewers interested in exotic airplanes and recent military history.
It is also, however, a finely crafted miniature case study in the
history of a cutting-edge technology.
A. Bowdoin Van Riper
Southern Polytechnic State University