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Anvil

Anduril's autonomous counter-drone interceptor; $1.98bn Kuwait sale approved 6 June 2026.

Last refreshed: 6 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Can the Anvil interceptor keep pace with the IRGC's one-way drone salvos in the Gulf?

Timeline for Anvil

#1196 Jun
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Common Questions
What is Anduril's Anvil drone interceptor?
Anvil is an autonomous, AI-guided kinetic counter-drone system manufactured by Anduril Industries. Unlike expendable interceptors, it is designed to be recoverable and reusable, lowering cost-per-kill.
Why did the US sell the Anvil system to Kuwait?
The DSCA approved the $1.98bn sale on 6 June 2026, three days after an IRGC drone struck Kuwait International Airport on 3 June. The sale is aimed at counter-drone defence against IRGC one-way attack drones.Source: US State Department
How does the Anvil interceptor work?
Anvil autonomously detects and tracks incoming drones using onboard AI, then intercepts them kinetically. Its recoverable design means it can be reused, unlike single-shot missile interceptors.
Who makes the Anvil counter-drone system?
Anduril Industries, the US defence-technology firm founded by Palmer Luckey in 2017, manufactures the Anvil interceptor.

Background

On 6 June 2026 the US Defense Security Cooperation Agency notified Congress of a $1.98 billion foreign military sale to Kuwait in which Anduril's Anvil is the primary deliverable. The sale was approved three days after an IRGC drone strike hit Kuwait International Airport on 3 June, underscoring the system's direct relevance to the Gulf conflict.

Anvil is an autonomous, AI-guided kinetic interceptor designed to detect, track and destroy hostile unmanned aerial systems. Unlike conventional missile-based Counter-UAS systems, it is designed to be recoverable and reusable, significantly reducing cost-per-intercept compared to expendable interceptors. It is manufactured by Anduril Industries, the US defence-technology company founded by Palmer Luckey in 2017.

The Kuwait package represents the largest single Anvil deployment contract made public to date. The IRGC's sustained use of one-way attack drones against Gulf targets has created urgent demand for affordable, high-volume intercept capacity across the region. As CENTCOM stocks of conventional interceptors come under pressure from the volume of IRGC salvos, the Anvil's reusability proposition has gained strategic significance.

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