
JSOC
US military's elite special operations command; primary counter-terrorism and direct action force.
Last refreshed: 29 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Timeline for JSOC
Tekever commits GBP 400M to UK expansion
Drones: Industry & DefenceMentioned in: CIA Deception Enabled Ground Rescue Inside Iran
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: Netanyahu grants blanket kill authority
Iran Conflict 2026What is JSOC and what does it do?
What drones does JSOC use?
How does JSOC influence US drone procurement?
Background
The Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) is a sub-unified command of US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) based at Fort Liberty (formerly Bragg), North Carolina. It serves as the command and control element for the US military's most specialised counter-terrorism and direct-action forces, including Delta Force (1st SFOD-D), SEAL Team Six (DEVGRU), the 75th Ranger Regiment, and the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (Night Stalkers). JSOC was established in 1980 following the failed Iran hostage rescue operation (Eagle Claw) to improve joint special operations planning and execution.
JSOC's connection to the drone and autonomous systems sector is growing rapidly. The command has been an early operator and evaluator of small tactical UAS for reconnaissance and targeting in its counter-terrorism operations, and has driven several of the critical operational requirements that shaped programmes including Anduril's Ghost-X ISR platform. The 75th Rangers — a JSOC component — selected Powerus Matrix-T for the Best Ranger Competition in April 2026, representing the first live FPV integration at that level. JSOC's operational requirements typically lead broader DoD procurement by several years, making its drone adoption patterns a leading indicator of where Pentagon-wide procurement will move.
In the broader drone context, JSOC's classification of drone capabilities means public information on its current UAS holdings is limited. However, the Pentagon's FY2027 budget request lifting the Defence Autonomous Warfare Group line to $54.6 billion and the Army's $20 billion Anduril enterprise contract both reflect force structure requirements that JSOC has helped define through operational experience in Iraq, Syria, Somalia, and the wider Indo-Pacific.