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Drones: Industry & Defence
5JUL

Pentagon orders 120 drones in five weeks

2 min read
10:21UTC

The Pentagon advanced 19 of 49 firms in its Drone Dominance programme on 2 July, ordering each survivor to build 120 armed drones within roughly five weeks.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Pentagon cut Gauntlet II to 19 firms and set a five-week test of who can actually build.

The Pentagon advanced 19 of 49 companies to the final stage of its Drone Dominance programme on 2 July and ordered each survivor to build and deliver 120 armed drones within roughly five weeks 1. Drone Dominance is the US Department of Defense effort to mass-produce cheap attack drones; the 49 firms had tested at Camp Grayling, Michigan, through 20 June , and this cut drops 30 of them .

Delivering 120 armed drones in five weeks tests a factory, not a prototype. Stage one ranked prototypes on performance; this stage ranks production lines. A company can fly the best drone at Fort Carson, Colorado, in August and still be dropped for lacking a line that turns out 120 airframes on a war footing. That is the filter the programme, worth $1.1 billion for up to 60,000 one-way attack (OWA) drones, now applies.

The survivors include Teal Drones, the Red Cat subsidiary ; Neros, which cleared 43% acceptance in the earlier FPV round ; and Skycutter, tested alongside Ukrainian entrants in June , plus Auterion, ModalAI, XTEND and the Ukrainian firm General Cherry. No production awards follow until the August live-fire, so the field may thin again before the money moves.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Pentagon has been running a competition called Drone Dominance to find companies that can build cheap attack drones, the kind that fly into a target and explode, at massive scale. In the first round, 49 companies had their drones tested at Camp Grayling, a US Army base in Michigan. On 2 July, the Pentagon picked 19 winners and cut the other 30. But instead of just ordering drones from the 19, it told each one to build and deliver 120 armed drones within about five weeks, before an August test-firing at Fort Carson, an Army base in Colorado. This checks whether a company can actually manufacture drones at speed, rather than only design one good prototype.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

RUSI's finding that only around 10% of drones in a 100-150 UAV salvo against a well-defended target typically get through is the operational logic behind demanding proof of manufacturing volume rather than flight performance alone: a mass-attrition doctrine only works if a production line can replace losses continuously, which a one-off prototype cannot demonstrate.

Phase 1's own shortfall matters more directly. Neros's 43% acceptance rate on contracted Archer units left the programme roughly 10,000 units short of its 30,000 target, and that specific gap, not a general doctrine shift, is why Gauntlet II tests delivery volume before committing further money.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    A further culling of finalists is likely before the Pentagon commits full production money, since Gauntlet II adds a manufacturing test on top of the performance filter Stage 1 already applied.

  • Opportunity

    Firms that clear the 120-drone build test gain a strong reference case for allied procurement offices assessing production readiness beyond flight performance, similar to how Skycutter's Phase 1 score opened UK and European conversations.

First Reported In

Update #14 · UK's £5bn drone bet follows Healey's exit

The Defense Post· 5 Jul 2026
Read original
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United Kingdom
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JIATF-401
JIATF-401
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