US Army's plans to deal with enemy drones

 Popular Mechanics:

The Army Is Readying Armored Vehicles That Spy, Jam, and Hack Enemy Drones

Few institutions can devise opaque acronyms like the military, and even then, the ‘Terrestrial Layer System’ (TLS) is a doozy.

But don’t let that fool you—it may be one of the U.S. Army’s most important modernization programs, resulting in a new fleet of tracked and wheeled armored vehicles that will help spy on and jam enemy communications, hack into their computers, throw off the aim of incoming missiles, smart bombs and guided artillery projectiles, and bring hostile surveillance and kamikaze drones crashing to the ground without firing a shot.

In other words, TLS is a suite of ground-based electronic warfare systems—including signals intelligence (both for listening in on enemy communications, as well as identifying and geolocating transmitters), electronic attack (jamming and satellite navigation spoofing) and cyberwarfare capabilities—that were formerly on separate platforms. They’re integrated into an open-architecture system using common standards (CMOSS) that should allow easy future updates.
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Warfare has often led to innovation which leads to more innovation in response.  These tools should make it easier for the US to find and destroy enemy communications. 

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