AeroVironment routed a $30 million Puma Systems Stack order into Germany's LARUS counter-drone programme through the NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA) on Tuesday 7 July. Six days later, on Monday 13 July, the Italian Ministry of Defence granted the company an MQ-31A type designation. Both count as European market access, not US federal revenue, and that distinction is the point.
NSPA is the multi-vendor cross-border rail that lets a US maker sell into an individual NATO member without negotiating a bilateral foreign military sale, the slower government-to-government route. It is the same channel Red Cat used for its Black Widow order , so AeroVironment is following a path already worn by a smaller rival rather than cutting a new one.
The Italian designation goes further than the German order. A type designation is the regulatory approval that lets an air arm field and sustain a platform under its own programme of record, the gate a sale alone does not clear. Italy has not bought from AeroVironment on this beat before, so the MQ-31A stamp turns a prospective customer into one that can now operate and support the aircraft for years. NSPA delivered the order, the Italian ministry delivered the licence to fly it, both inside a single week.
