
BLAZE
Latvian-British kinetic interceptor defeating fibre-optic FPV drones; four European operators.
Last refreshed: 25 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
As fibre-optic FPV drones proliferate, can kinetic intercept systems like BLAZE fill the gap that jamming cannot?
Timeline for BLAZE
Mentioned in: Hegseth watches five laser weapons fire
Drones: Industry & DefenceSelected by France's DGA after competitive evaluation for counter-drone interceptor role
Drones: Industry & Defence: France buys a Baltic interceptor droneMentioned in: Latvia puts drone hunters on the road
Drones: Industry & DefenceDroneShield Adds Kinetic Kill to Its Platform
Drones: Industry & DefenceWhat is BLAZE drone interceptor?
How to defeat fibre optic FPV drones?
What is the BLAZE drone interceptor and how does it work?
Background
BLAZE is a kinetic drone-on-drone interceptor developed by Origin Robotics (UK/Latvia), designed to physically destroy hostile unmanned aircraft at close range. Unlike electronic jamming systems, BLAZE works against fibre-optic guided drones that carry no radio signal to disrupt, a category that has proliferated in the Russo-Ukrainian war as both sides evolved to defeat adversary jamming.
On 31 March 2026, DroneShield signed a memorandum of understanding with Origin Robotics to integrate BLAZE into its DroneSentry-C2 command platform, adding a kinetic kill layer to DroneShield's existing detection and electronic defeat capabilities. France became the fourth European operator on 17 June 2026, ordering BLAZE after a competitive evaluation by the French defence procurement agency DGA at Eurosatory; previous operators are Latvia, Belgium, and Estonia. French integrator DSV will co-assemble BLAZE in France, with first deliveries expected within weeks.
BLAZE sits within a narrow category of counter-drone systems designed specifically for the fibre-optic threat. Latvia's own border deployments in May-June 2026, four-soldier mobile intercept teams facing Russian-origin UAV incursions, demonstrated BLAZE in operational field conditions. France's DGA order, following a competitive evaluation, signals that BLAZE is meeting formal procurement standards; co-assembly with DSV deepens it into France's sovereign defence industrial base.