Share The MQ-1C, pictured carrying the defensive Networked Electronic Warfare Remotely Operated payload, is the linchpin of the Army’s new offensive airborne electronic warfare strategy. Credit: U.S. Army Blasphemy showed up for the first time on a U.S. Army unmanned aircraft system last summer. Besides the provocative name of the Army’s mission pod, almost nothing else is known about Blasphemy. When the pod appeared on a briefing slide about a demonstration of advanced electronic warfare capabilities added to the General Atomics Aeronautical Systems MQ-1C Gray Eagle, an Army program manager declined to elaborate on what Blasphemy does.