France training eagles to attack drones
The French Air Force is training eagles from a young age to bring down remote-controlled drones when they enter no-go urban airspace.
Golden eagles at the air force base in Mont-de-Marsan are getting military training for combat against battery-charged drones that just about anybody can buy and fly into security-sensitive zones such as presidential palaces, wittingly or not.
To prepare them, the eagles were placed on top of drones while still inside the eggshell and, after hatching, kept them there during their early feeding period.
The eagles are trained to see drones as prey and are rewarded with a piece of meat after each successful foray.
Drone flights over the French Elysee presidential palace in early 2015 and a sensitive military site in the western region of Brittany raised alarm bells last year, prompting adoption of legislation which restricts usage in urban areas and obliges users to notify their existence to the authorities.
Dutch police have also trained eagles to snatch enemy drones, showing off the technique in a video they released from "Guard from Above", the company working with police to develop the concept.