Last August, U.S. Navy operators on the ground lost all contact with a
Fire Scout helicopter flying over Maryland. They had programmed the
unmanned aerial vehicle to return to its launch point if ground
communications failed, but instead the machine took off on a
north-by-northwest route toward the nation’s capital. Over the next 30
minutes, military officials alerted the Federal Aviation Administration
and North American Aerospace Defense Command and readied F-16 fighters
to intercept the pilotless craft. Finally, with the Fire Scout just
miles shy of the White House, the Navy regained control and commanded it
to come home. “Renegade Unmanned Drone Wandered Skies Near Nation’s
Capital,” warned one news headline in the following days. “UAV Resists
Its Human Oppressors, Joyrides over Washington, D.C.,” declared another.