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Drones: Industry & Defence
15JUN

Gauntlet II confirmed for August 2026

1 min read
11:15UTC

The next competitive drone trial will test 50,000 to 60,000 drones against live electronic warfare. Vendors that fail the red team get eliminated.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Gauntlet II will eliminate drone vendors whose systems cannot survive electronic warfare.

The Pentagon confirmed Gauntlet II for August 2026 at an undisclosed location described as "brutally hot."1 The exercise will target procurement of 50,000 to 60,000 additional drones, with JIATF-401 running a live Counter-UAS red team using GPS jamming, communications denial, and electronic warfare.

Phase I delivered 30,000 one-way attack drones from 11 vendors at roughly $5,000 per unit . Phase II raises the stakes: drones that cannot survive contested electromagnetic environments will be eliminated from the programme. The total target remains 300,000 or more drones by 2027 under a $1.1 billion budget . Two additional Gauntlets are planned beyond Phase II. Skycutter's 99.3/100 Gauntlet I score will mean nothing if its design cannot withstand active jamming.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In August the Pentagon will hold a competition where it attacks participating drones with GPS jamming and communications disruption while trying to shoot them down with counter-drone systems. Drones that survive this electronic warfare gauntlet will be selected for bulk orders of 50,000 to 60,000 units. Drones that fail simply leave the programme. This is a significant escalation from Phase I, which tested basic performance. Phase II tests whether drones can actually operate in war conditions. Skycutter won Phase I with a near-perfect score, but that test did not include active electronic warfare.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Gauntlet II's EW survivability requirement will eliminate a significant proportion of Phase I qualifiers, concentrating procurement among a smaller number of technically advanced vendors.

    Short term · High
  • Opportunity

    Vendors that pass Gauntlet II gain preferred supplier status for up to 300,000 drones, representing a multi-year contract pipeline worth hundreds of millions.

    Medium term · High
  • Precedent

    The Gauntlet model, using live adversarial testing to down-select vendors, will become the standard for all US military drone procurement and will be adopted by allied nations.

    Long term · Medium
First Reported In

Update #3 · Anduril wins $20 billion counter-drone deal

TechTimes· 30 Mar 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
DroneShield / Australian C-UAS sector
DroneShield / Australian C-UAS sector
DroneShield is simultaneously embedded in a US prime's fielded kill chain, selected for the world's largest civil C-UAS deployment, and navigating an open ASIC probe with a first-strike AGM vote on record. Strengthening commercial fundamentals and an unsettled boardroom are running in parallel at exactly the moment US buyers weigh supplier stability.
Ukraine / combat-data exporters
Ukraine / combat-data exporters
Ukrainian firms entered Pentagon Drone Dominance Phase 2 alongside Skycutter (ID:3988), and Red Cat's formal Spetstechnoexport partnership (ID:3987) carries Black Widow to Japan. Combat-proven data is the export Ukraine can monetise while its domestic export ban blocks hardware sales to Gulf states spending millions per salvo on less-proven alternatives.
Anduril investors
Anduril investors
Bernstein Research's Douglas Harned placed the 27-times-revenue multiple in the context of enterprise-software platform primes: the buyer prices a future monopoly on the Lattice software layer, not 2026 earnings. The Helsing Flytrap result and Phase 1 shortfall are the first live tests of those assumptions since the $61 billion valuation closed.
Helsing / European defence-AI sector
Helsing / European defence-AI sector
Helsing's 88% GPS-denied hit rate at Pabrade is its first US Army validation credential, arriving alongside an $18 billion valuation and a Bundestag €1.46 billion framework. Nordic, Baltic, and Central European defence ministries now have a US-scored European alternative to reference in procurement without waiting for a US programme of record.
Pentagon / Defense Innovation Unit
Pentagon / Defense Innovation Unit
The DIU's own programme managers characterised the 43% acceptance rate as within the expected curve for a first-generation industrial ramp. Phase 2's tighter price caps and Chinese-component deadline signal the programme is accelerating supplier-quality selection, not retreating from the 300,000-drone target.
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark accepted Fire Point's Skrydstrup plant after committing to bilateral defence co-production at the B9 Nordic summit in May; the facility sits beside a Danish F-35 base, sharing security perimeters. NATO has published no legal guidance on whether hosting Ukrainian weapons production converts Denmark into a co-belligerent, leaving the host-state obligation unresolved.