Here's a link to the Barksdale dilemma...
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/drone-...r-AA1ZJ8sG
Legal Authority That Creates a Reactive Bind
The statute that governs military counter-drone action on domestic soil is 10 U.S. Code Section 130i, which defines “covered facilities and assets” and spells out what actions commanders may take against unmanned aircraft. On paper, the law permits detection, tracking, and in some cases neutralization of drones that threaten protected sites. In practice, the statute imposes coordination requirements with civilian law enforcement and federal agencies that slow response times considerably.
Section 130i also carries reporting requirements and, critically, sunset provisions that place its authorities on a timer. That expiration risk means military planners cannot build long-term counter-drone programs with confidence that the legal backing will persist. The result is a system biased toward passive monitoring: bases can watch drones overhead, catalog them, and file reports, but taking active measures to disable or capture an intruder requires clearing procedural hurdles that commercial drones can outpace. Analysis from legal scholars at Cornell underscores the statute’s narrow scope, noting how the defined categories of permissible action and the jurisdictional boundaries between military and civilian agencies create friction at the exact moment speed matters most.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/drone-...r-AA1ZJ8sG
Legal Authority That Creates a Reactive Bind
The statute that governs military counter-drone action on domestic soil is 10 U.S. Code Section 130i, which defines “covered facilities and assets” and spells out what actions commanders may take against unmanned aircraft. On paper, the law permits detection, tracking, and in some cases neutralization of drones that threaten protected sites. In practice, the statute imposes coordination requirements with civilian law enforcement and federal agencies that slow response times considerably.
Section 130i also carries reporting requirements and, critically, sunset provisions that place its authorities on a timer. That expiration risk means military planners cannot build long-term counter-drone programs with confidence that the legal backing will persist. The result is a system biased toward passive monitoring: bases can watch drones overhead, catalog them, and file reports, but taking active measures to disable or capture an intruder requires clearing procedural hurdles that commercial drones can outpace. Analysis from legal scholars at Cornell underscores the statute’s narrow scope, noting how the defined categories of permissible action and the jurisdictional boundaries between military and civilian agencies create friction at the exact moment speed matters most.

