为何美国政府正在美墨边境附近探索使用高能激光?


更新于:2026年2月13日 / 美国东部时间下午7:27 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

据多名消息人士向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻透露,本周埃尔帕索附近意外且最终短暂实施的飞行禁令,源于联邦政府内部就使用高能激光武器系统击落无人机存在分歧。

消息人士称,在美军训练后,美国海关与边境保护局(CBP)本周早些时候使用了一套模块化高能激光系统,尽管美国联邦航空管理局(FAA)仍存在安全顾虑。由于这些消息人士未获授权公开讨论此事,因此要求匿名。

两名消息人士表示,CBP使用的该系统此前已在海外部署,但直到最近才被考虑用于常规国内用途。该系统通过探测空中威胁,发射激光束快速锁定目标(如无人机),利用光束热量损坏或摧毁目标。

高能激光是政府可用于应对无人机的多种系统之一。

国际与战略研究中心(CSIS)导弹防御项目主任、高级研究员汤姆·卡拉科表示:”激光本质上是瞬时的,以光速传播的物体相对容易精准命中目标。”

周三飞行限制解除后,交通部长肖恩·达菲表示,FAA已”消除威胁”,并赞扬五角大楼”迅速采取行动应对贩毒集团入侵”。但五角大楼在被问及威胁何时及如何消除时未作补充。

多名消息人士称,尽管CBP原计划用高能激光打击外国无人机,但结果至少击落了一个”派对气球”(注:此处原文”party balloon”可能指民用或特殊用途气球,结合上下文应为误报或误击情况)。

多年来,边境无人机问题持续存在,尤其是贩毒集团使用的无人机。

内布拉斯加大学奥马哈分校副教授、国家反恐创新、技术和教育中心战略举措主任奥斯汀·多克表示:”贩毒集团无人机问题在美国南部边境普遍存在。”

多克向哥伦比亚广播公司新闻透露,贩毒集团及其关联组织主要用无人机进行监视,”以支持其其他非法犯罪活动,包括毒品走私、人口走私、枪支走私和其他非法货物运输”。

他指出,贩毒集团尚未在美国境内使用武装无人机,但在墨西哥境内用于打击敌对贩毒集团,这引发了其最终可能威胁美国人员或基础设施的担忧。

边境活动,加上2023年弗吉尼亚州兰利-尤斯蒂斯联合基地、2024年新泽西州麦圭尔-迪克斯-莱克赫斯特联合基地等军事设施附近的神秘目击事件,促使五角大楼成立了联合特遣部队应对无人机威胁。

该特遣部队协调联邦机构在特定场景下的应对权限及无人机威胁的缓解措施。

美国北方司令部和北美防空司令部(NORAD)2020-2024年指挥官、退役空军上将格伦·范赫克表示:”特遣部队正在出色工作。”

但他在电话采访中补充:”仍有大量工作要做。需要授权制定明确政策,确定谁用何种能力防御哪些特定关键基础设施。挑战在于确保在使用特定能力应对威胁时,既能有效防御,又能保障普通航空飞行器和公众的飞行安全。”

范赫克强调,应对无人机的能力体系”没有万能方案”,但需要建立多层防御体系,以射频网络技术为基础,通过干扰和接管无人机安全使其坠落。他表示,全球实战经验显示,80%以上的遭遇无人机为商用,可通过此类技术击落。

其他防御层将依赖不同系统,可能包括高能激光。

卡拉科表示,从美墨边境防御无人机,是特朗普”黄金穹顶倡议”(Golden Dome initiative)的一部分——该倡议旨在捍卫美国本土免受所有空中和导弹威胁。

“这一重大努力和即将推出的’黄金穹顶’计划,将迫使我们加强联邦航空管理局(FAA)的空中交通管制和管理功能,与国防部国家安全功能之间的沟通与协调,”卡拉科称。

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/details-anti-drone-laser-tech-brief-closure-el-paso-airspace/

Why is the U.S. government exploring using high-energy lasers near the southern border?

Updated on: February 13, 2026 / 7:27 PM EST / CBS News

The unexpected and ultimately short-lived flight ban near El Paso this week stemmed from disagreements within the federal government over the use of a high-energy laser weapon system to take down drones, multiple sources told CBS News.

After training by the U.S. military, Customs and Border Protection used a palletized high-energy laser system earlier this week, even though the Federal Aviation Administration still has safety concerns, according to sources who were granted anonymity because they are not authorized to speak on the matter.

The system CBP used has been deployed overseas, according to two of the sources, but had not been considered for regular domestic use until recently. The system works by detecting an aerial threat, emitting a laser beam that can quickly zero in on the target, like a drone, and the beam’s heat damages or disables the object.

High-energy lasers are one of several systems the government could use to counter drones.

“The laser, of course, is essentially instantaneous, and so it’s relatively easy for something that’s doing the speed of light to hit exactly the point on the object that it wants to do,” said Tom Karako, a senior fellow and the director of the Missile Defense Project at the Center for International and Strategic Studies.

After Wednesday’s flight restriction was lifted, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said “the threat has been neutralized” by the FAA and praised the Pentagon, which he said “acted swiftly to address a cartel incursion.” But the Pentagon said it had nothing to add when asked when or how the threat was eliminated.

While CBP thought it was targeting foreign drones with the high-energy laser, it turned out to have taken down at least one party balloon, multiple sources told CBS News.

Drones near the border are not new and have been a steady problem over several years, particularly those used by cartels.

“The cartel drone problem is pervasive across the U.S. southern border,” according to Austin Doctor, who is an associate professor at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and the director of strategic initiatives at the National Counterterrorism Innovation, Technology, and Education Center.

The cartels and affiliates are primarily using drones for surveillance purposes “to support their other illegal criminal activities, including smuggling of narcotics, smuggling of persons, firearms, and other illicit goods,” Doctor told CBS News.

They have not used weaponized drones inside the U.S., he said, but are using them inside of Mexico to target rival cartels, prompting fears they could eventually start to use the drones to threaten U.S. personnel or infrastructure.

The activity near the border, combined with the mysterious sightings near military installations, like Joint Base Langley-Eustis in Virginia in 2023 and Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst in New Jersey in 2024, contributed to the Pentagon’s establishment of a joint task force to counter drones.

The task force coordinates between federal agencies on what authorities to use in specific scenarios and how to mitigate any threat from drones.

The task force is “doing great things,” said retired Air Force Gen. Glen VanHerck, who served as the commander of U.S. Northern Command and NORAD from 2020 to 2024.

“But there’s so much more to be done,” VanHerck said in a phone interview. “They need to be empowered to get the right policy in place for who defends what specific critical infrastructure with what specific capability,” he said. “And the challenges become ensuring you’re able to defend while also maintaining safety of flight for general and aviation aircraft and the public in general, depending on what capability you utilize to engage the threat.”

There are a variety of capabilities “but no silver bullet for countering drones,” VanHerck added.

He favors a layered system of defense with a foundation of radio frequency cyber techniques that can disrupt and take over the drone to bring it down safely. According to VanHerck, field experience from around the world shows that over 80% of drones encountered are commercial and can be brought down with this type of technology.

Other layers would rely on different systems that could include high-energy lasers.

Karako of CSIS said defending the southern border from drones is one piece of the larger puzzle that President Trump’s Golden Dome initiative is about — to defend the homeland from all air and missile threats.

“Maybe the lesson here ought to be that this big effort, this big initiative coming down the pipe that is called Golden Dome will require and force us out of necessity to have better communication and better coordination between the very necessary FAA function for air traffic control and air traffic management, the coordination between the FAA function and the DOD national security function,” Karako said.

https://www.cbsnews.com/video/details-anti-drone-laser-tech-brief-closure-el-paso-airspace/

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