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Drones: Industry & Defence
5JUL

German AI drone passes US Army test

4 min read
10:21UTC

US soldiers from V Corps scored 15 kills across 17 engagements with Helsing's HX-2 at Pabrade, Lithuania, the first confirmed US Army operational test of a European autonomous strike drone.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

A European AI drone cleared the US Army's own GPS-denied test, a scenario the US incumbent had not priced.

Soldiers from V Corps, the US Army's forward command in Europe, put Germany's Helsing and its HX-2 artificial-intelligence strike drone through a live trial at Pabrade, Lithuania on 9 June, scoring 15 kills and 2 near-misses across 17 engagements under Project Flytrap 5.0 1. Project Flytrap is V Corps's own fielding accelerator on NATO's eastern flank, not a vendor demonstration. The run jammed satellite navigation and disrupted communications, the exact conditions that defeat most off-the-shelf drones, which makes an 88% effective hit rate the figure that matters 2.

Helsing's HX-2 had hit Russian targets in Ukraine before this trial , so the airframe arrived combat-tested. At Pabrade the watchers changed: an Army-run evaluation on an Army range, scored by US soldiers, marked the first confirmed US operational test of a European autonomous strike drone. GPS-denied autonomy, the ability to keep flying and striking when navigation signals are spoofed or blocked, is the capability boundary that separates drones usable in contested airspace from those limited to permissive skies. The HX-2 cleared it in front of the people who write requirements.

The competitive weight follows the money. Helsing raised at an $18bn valuation last month , so a European AI drone now carries both capital and US Army validation. The American autonomous-strike incumbent has built its case on being the default Western supplier; a foreign drone performing this well in front of US evaluators is the scenario that case did not obviously have to address. Caveats hold. One exercise is not a programme of record, the funded procurement line that turns a trial into orders, and a single contested run proves capability rather than scale. The result still puts a non-US strike drone on a US Army scoreboard for the first time.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Helsing is a German company that makes a type of drone called a loitering munition: it flies to an area, waits for a target, and then strikes it. This kind of drone has been used extensively in the Ukraine war. The US Army tested Helsing's HX-2 drone at a training ground in Lithuania. They jammed GPS signals and communication systems to make conditions as difficult as possible, then scored how many targets the drone hit. It hit 15 out of 17. That result matters because it happened under official US Army conditions scored by US soldiers, rather than in a vendor-run demonstration. Clearing a US military test is a documented prerequisite for entry into the world's largest defence procurement pipeline.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Two structural gaps explain why the US Army evaluated a German drone rather than relying on domestic alternatives.

First, the US autonomous-strike sector has concentrated its investment above the loitering-munition tier. Anduril's Roadrunner interceptor and Fury combat aircraft both operate in the $100,000-$500,000 unit-cost band. The HX-2 sits below that at a price point designed to enable mass attrition tactics drawn from the Ukrainian theatre. No US programme of record has filled that band with an AI-autonomous system; Helsing entered a gap that the US industrial base had not yet addressed.

Second, V Corps' Project Flytrap exercise structure was specifically designed to accelerate adoption of non-US systems that have combat validation from Ukraine.

The exercise mandate to test in GPS-denied and electronic-warfare-contested conditions was written after the Lithuanian government lobbied SACEUR for NATO-eastern-flank trials to reflect the actual threat environment rather than the permissive conditions of exercises held inside the continental US. Helsing's combat record in Ukraine made it a natural candidate for the first non-US entry.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    V Corps' Project Flytrap result gives Helsing a credible US evaluation credential that Nordic, Baltic, and Central European defence ministries will use as a procurement reference point, accelerating non-German NATO adoption without requiring a US programme of record.

    Short term · Reported
  • Risk

    US procurement would require Helsing to either navigate the Foreign Military Sales process or enter a co-production agreement with a US prime, both of which compress margins and dilute the revenue assumptions inside the $18bn valuation.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    If Anduril's loitering-munition gap persists through 2027, Helsing could enter the US market as a sub-tier supplier to a US prime integrator rather than as a direct competitor, preserving its European revenue base while adding US volume.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #12 · Pentagon's drone buy lands a third short

Army Recognition· 15 Jun 2026
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