The Army's Joint Interagency Task Force 401 awarded Anduril an $87 million task order — the first under the $20 billion enterprise contract announced on 14 March 1. The order designates Lattice, Anduril's command-and-control software, as the counter-UAS operations platform across the entire Department of Defense 2. The enterprise vehicle consolidates 120 separate Army contracts into a single procurement instrument with pre-negotiated terms. Any federal buyer can now purchase Anduril products through it without separate contracting actions. Anduril president Matthew Steckman described the structure as removing "friction in things that shouldn't have it" 3.
The structural consequence matters more than the dollar figure. Lattice as the DoD-wide counter-drone C2 layer positions Anduril as the integration platform through which other companies' sensors and effectors must operate. In procurement terms, this is platform entrenchment: once Lattice is the backbone, hardware that integrates with it has an acquisition advantage over hardware that does not. The pattern resembles how Palantir's Gotham became embedded in intelligence community workflows during the 2010s — the software layer, not the hardware, becomes the switching cost. Competitors can build better sensors or effectors, but if those products require a separate C2 integration effort, procurement officers facing schedule pressure will default to what already works with the installed base.
The $87 million first order against a $20 billion ceiling is a fraction — 0.4% — but it tests whether consolidated procurement actually accelerates acquisition across service branches. The further Gauntlet competitions will generate tens of thousands of attack drones that need a command layer. Anduril has positioned Lattice as that layer before the hardware production decisions are finalised. For competing C2 providers — L3Harris, Northrop Grumman's IBCS, and others — the window to contest that designation narrows with every task order that flows through the enterprise vehicle.
The broader market signal is that the Pentagon is consolidating drone defence procurement around fewer, larger vendors rather than distributing it across specialists. Anduril now holds both the C2 designation and the manufacturing capacity at Arsenal-1 to produce its own hardware. That vertical integration — software platform plus factory — is the competitive position that traditional primes have struggled to replicate at the speed the counter-drone mission demands.
