Whether you’re a one-room film production house or a propagandist for a massive arm of the US government, you’re never too good to have an extra set of eyes take a look at your final draft.
That’s a lesson some PR spinsters with the Department of Homeland Security evidently have yet to learn, after the agency posted a 40-second clip for its new drone program, hyping up “American Air Superiority.”
As DHS propaganda goes, it’s your typical fare under Trump 2.0. There’s some cloyingly uplifting music, a few shots of drones in the sky, and bold-lettered copy proclaiming things like “innovation in action.” One detail, though, is so out of place that it feels like parody: the inclusion of footage showing DHS agents using a prominent Chinese drone brand.
The discrepancy was first spotted by drone researcher Faine Greenwood, who noticed that officers in the video were using a remote controller made by DJI, a company headquartered in Shenzhen, China. Given that DJI hardware uses closed-source communication protocols — which means they’re not cross-compatible with other drone brands — it follows that the DHS officer was piloting a Chinese-made drone.
SAFEGUARDING AMERICAN AIRSPACE.
DHS has launched a Program Executive Office to rapidly procure and deploy drone and counter drone technology. It is our duty to provide our frontline personnel with every tool they need to protect our nation and return home to their families every… pic.twitter.com/ZigPaNFSbE — Homeland Security (@DHSgov) January 12, 2026
The optics are bizarre for the Trump administration, which is rabidly anti-China.
“Someone needs to ask Kristi Noem why she and DHS are promoting and using Sinister Chinese Communist drones, instead of Square-Jawed Heterosexual American Drones,” Greenwood quipped.
The humiliating self-own comes after Donald Trump moved to ban Chinese-made drones back in December, a move which specifically included DJI. However, following a Pentagon recommendation, the administration temporarily lifted some of the restrictions on certain brands — though DJI remains prohibited.
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