Summary: Counter-drone operations are often perceived as simple, but real-world deployment is far more complex. Mitigation tools carry legal, operational, and safety risks that can create unintended consequences when used without clear authority and coordination. A responsible counter-drone strategy prioritizes detection, assessment, and deliberate escalation to protect both people and airspace.
As counter-drone technology becomes more visible at public events and critical infrastructure sites, there’s a growing perception that mitigating a drone threat is simple: detect it, press a button, and the problem goes away.
In reality, counter-drone operations are far more complex and far more consequential than many realize.
A recent incident near Fort Hancock highlights how deliberate and coordinated counter-drone operations must be.
Earlier this month, a temporary airspace restriction was issued after the U.S. military used a laser-based counter-drone system against what was later reported to be a U.S. government drone operated by U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
Situations like this underscore an important reality: mitigation tools are powerful, but without full operational awareness and coordination, they can create unintended consequences.
Under U.S. federal law, counter-UAS mitigation authority has historically been limited to specific federal entities. The FY2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) - including the Safer Skies Act provisions - updated this framework to allow limited, conditional mitigation authority for certain trained and certified state, local, tribal, and territorial (SLTT) law enforcement and correctional agencies.
Certain state, local, tribal and territorial law enforcement and correctional agencies may now conduct mitigation - but only if they meet federal requirements for:
This expansion does not grant broad or unconditional authority - it creates a legal pathway for SLTT agencies to act when properly equipped and certified.
Even SLTT mitigation authority is limited in scope and subject to ongoing federal oversight.
Unauthorized disruption — such as jamming, spoofing, or seizing a drone without proper authority — can violate Federal Communications Commission (FCC) laws, aviation regulations, and other statutes. Civil fines can reach $112,500 per violation under FCC rules, while criminal penalties can include up to $250,000 in fines and up to 5 years in prison for willful violations. Violating FAA aviation rules can also result in tens of thousands of dollars in fines, cease-and-desist orders, and potential criminal liability, especially if manned aircraft or government drones are affected.
To the public, a mitigation device may seem like a safe and immediate fix. But many counter-drone tools, particularly those that disrupt RF or GPS signals, carry significant operational and legal implications.
These systems can:
The intent was protection. The outcome introduced additional risk.
That’s the reality of counter-drone operations: every action has downstream consequences.
There’s an important distinction between awareness and disruption.
When teams can detect and identify a drone, and in some cases understand where the pilot is located, they gain decision time. Decision time reduces panic. It reduces overreaction. It allows coordination instead of impulse.
In higher-risk scenarios, mitigation may be required quickly. But even then, awareness provides critical context helping teams respond proportionally, document the incident, and act with greater confidence.
In many scenarios, understanding the pilot’s intent or simply making contact can resolve the situation without any electronic disruption at all.
Mitigation should be the last step, not the first.
As major events increase and drone usage becomes more common, pressure to “do something” will continue to grow. But doing something quickly is not the same as doing something responsibly.
Counter-drone technology is powerful. And like any powerful tool, it requires:
The goal is always safety for people on the ground and in the air.
The conversation around counter-drone technology shouldn’t be about how fast we can neutralize a drone. It should be about how intelligently we manage risk, how deliberately we escalate, and how carefully we protect the broader airspace environment.
Airspace security isn’t about reacting faster. It’s about responding smarter.
Because counter-drone operations were never meant to be a push-button solution and treating them as one creates the very risks they are intended to prevent.