US's Surprise Flying Killer Confused with a Completely Different Aircraft
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 Published On May 23, 2024

In 2011, as Libya's skies filled with the chaos of civil war, a different kind of observer hovered above. It was not a manned aircraft, nor a regular UAV, but an unmanned state-of-the-art Vertical Takeoff Unmanned Aerial Vehicle.

Deployed by the US Navy, this autonomous helicopter engineered by Northrop Grumman was on a reconnaissance mission, far from the front lines and unknown to those below. That is, until chaos caught up with it.
Mistaken for a lethal Apache gunship, a rocket-propelled grenade struck down the Fire Scout, its remnants landing 85 miles east of Tripoli. Libyan State TV immediately broadcast images of the wreckage, claiming a rebel Apache was destroyed.

However, analysis of the debris soon told a different story. The distinct markings and unique shape revealed its true identity: an MQ-8 Fire Scout drone helicopter. Rumors swiftly spread about its mission, potential armament, and, more importantly, the power it would wield from Africa to the far reaches of Afghanistan as the US’s new rotary wing UAV.

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