-
'No pilgrims': regional war hushes Iraq's holy cities
-
Israel court extends detention of two Gaza flotilla activists
-
Massive search continues for two missing US soldiers in Morocco
-
Players keep up battle with tennis majors as they decry Roland Garros prize money
-
Pistons rout Magic to complete comeback, advance in NBA playoffs
-
Trump says US and Iran in 'positive' talks, unveils plan to escort Hormuz ships
-
Talisman Endrick fires resurgent Lyon into third in France
-
Verstappen laments spin and struggle for pace in Miami
-
Teen Antonelli wins again in Miami to extend title race lead
-
Ferrari's Leclerc admits he threw away Miami podium finish
-
Cristian Chivu, a winner with Inter on the pitch and in the dugout
-
Key players from Inter Milan's Serie A title triumph
-
No.4 Young cruises to PGA title at Doral
-
Vinicius double delays Barca title as Real Madrid down Espanyol
-
Inter Milan win Italian title for third time in six seasons
-
Spurs solved mental frailty to boost survival bid: De Zerbi
-
Miami champ Antonelli shrugs off success, vows 'back to work'
-
Man Utd beat Liverpool, Spurs climb out of relegation zone
-
Spurs out of relegation zone after vital win at Villa
-
No.1 Korda cruises to LPGA Mexico crown
-
Thompson-Herah shines at world relays, Tebogo helps Botswana to win
-
Three die on Atlantic cruise ship from suspected hantavirus: WHO
-
Germany's Merz says not 'giving up on working with Donald Trump'
-
Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli wins Miami Grand Prix
-
Man Utd job feels 'natural' to Carrick
-
Ferguson taken to hospital before Man Utd win against Liverpool
-
'Devil Wears Prada 2' takes top spot in N. America box office
-
Iran weighs US response to peace plan after warning against military action
-
Gladbach sink Dortmund, St Pauli edge closer to drop
-
Rubio to visit Rome, meet Pope Leo after Trump row
-
Kyiv hits Russian oil sites as eight killed in both countries
-
Iran says US military operation 'impossible' as Trump mulls peace proposal
-
Man Utd beat Liverpool to secure Champions League place
-
Two die in 'respiratory illness' outbreak on Atlantic cruise ship
-
Barcelona sink Bayern to reach women's Champions League final
-
True Love lands eighth English 1000 Guineas for O'Brien
-
Sinner dismantles Zverev to win Madrid Open, set record
-
Brilliant Bordeaux clean out Bath to reach Champions Cup final
-
Second unexploded shell found at illegal French rave: minister
-
Bournemouth eye European place after crushing Palace
-
Pogacar ends dominant Tour of Romandie with fourth win
-
Chakravarthy, Narine help Kolkata stay alive in IPL
-
Daughter says Maradona died after carers' plan 'went out of control'
-
Two women suffocate on migrant boat seeking to reach UK
-
How Schalke returned to the Bundesliga after their 'worst season ever'
-
Two women die on migrant boat seeking to reach UK
-
Mumbai coach Jayawardene backs Suryakumar to find his 'rhythm'
-
Under full moon, Shakira thrills 2 million fans on Rio's Copacabana beach
-
Bangkok food vendor curbs push city staple from the streets
-
More Nepalis drive electric, evading global fuel shocks
At secluded German airport, researchers tackle tricky drone defence
Once holidaymakers took off from here, but today an ex-Soviet airfield is a testing ground for ways to take down the drones increasingly buzzing through German skies.
Germany has been rattled by a spate of mysterious sightings of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), believed to be from Russia, over military bases, industrial sites and an airport.
Last week the government said it would give federal police the powers to blast them out of the sky.
But at the airstrip near the eastern city of Magdeburg, researchers of the German Aerospace Center (DLR) have been testing more subtle options to deal with potentially hostile drones.
"The countermeasures used to defend against drones vary greatly -- they have to be tailored very precisely to the situation at hand," said Johann Dauer, who leads drone research at DLR's Institute of Flight Systems.
"If I want to protect a crowd -- for example at a concert or a political event -- then of course I don't want to cause a drone to crash," Dauer said, given the risk of injuries on the ground.
"I would rather use nets or hunter drones with gripping mechanisms to actually remove the drone."
The challenge facing Germany is not just fending off suspected Russian UAVs conducting surveillance or testing NATO responses.
Naive, blundering hobbyists and reckless pranksters can also veer into restricted airspace, setting off alarms and potentially shutting down airport traffic.
Signal jamming and GPS interference with "spoofed" coordinates are other methods Dauer cited for dealing with drones without shooting them mid-air.
- 'Jamming and spoofing' -
Dauer said an infamous 2018 incident at London's Gatwick airport, in which reported drone sightings cancelled hundreds of flights, helped make drone defences a civilian issue as well.
"And since then, reports have been piling up," Dauer said. "Today, we see new reports almost daily, and we need to take a closer look at drone defence."
Germany has been scrambling to deal with the drone incursions, and Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt has suggested that spending on civil drone defences could run to hundreds of millions of euros.
Helping decide what systems police agencies should spend money on is part of the drone research and evaluation mission at Cochstedt, Dauer said.
The secluded hangars and runways add a degree of secrecy for the sensitive development work there.
But more importantly, the airport's focus on unmanned aerospace research means it is relatively free from safety regulations that would normally tightly restrict testing with drone intruders and interceptors.
Cochstedt is a fully functional airport where occasional Ryanair flights once shuttled passengers to Mediterranean holiday destinations, although those connections have long since been cancelled.
This means drones and various defences can now be tested and integrated into airport operations, said Daniel Suelberg, who runs DLR's testing centre at Cochstedt.
"Permission for jamming and spoofing, permission to shoot lasers at an airport -- everything that you don't really want at airports because it would paralyse operations -- we have here," Suelberg said.
- 'Pressure to innovate' -
Suelberg and Dauer showed off a range of drone detection gear -- high-end optics and cameras, radar arrays and other equipment -- that researchers have been testing at the facility.
Some of it is bought from defence contractors and commercial producers, other gear is specially assembled by the dozen research groups working at Cochstedt.
The goal is to figure out comprehensive systems for detecting drones, identifying whether they pose a threat, and deploying appropriate countermeasures.
But a key challenge is figuring out the best bang for the buck that can be widely deployed without exploding civil defence budgets.
Some high-end systems come with hefty price tags -- limiting their appeal for mass deployment.
Adding to the challenge is just how quickly drone technology is changing, something very clearly on display in the battlefields of Ukraine, where both sides are locked in a deadly race to develop new weapons and come up with countermeasures.
"We are seeing a great deal of innovation and development on the threat side," said Dauer. "And, of course, drone defence must counter this and offer appropriate solutions.
"This means that, on the one hand, we are under a certain amount of pressure to innovate and must make rapid progress.
"At the same time, we have to remain cost-effective, and the drones we are combating are often not particularly expensive -- so the protection must not be too costly."
A.Rodriguezv--AMWN