SpektreWorks' LUCAS (Low-cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System) became the first US-manufactured loitering munition to see combat on 28 February 2026, deployed during Operation Epic Fury. Pentagon chief technology officer Emil Michael confirmed the inventory stood at "dozens." 1
The drone carries an 18 kg payload over 500 miles with six hours of endurance, at a unit cost of $35,000 to $55,000. That is roughly one hundredth of a Patriot interceptor's price. 2 Built in Phoenix, Arizona, LUCAS was designed as a reverse-engineered answer to Iran's Shahed-136. Michael described the situation bluntly: "not in full-rate production; we shipped what we had." 3
The $30 million initial contract under the Drone Dominance programme was intended to seed production of hundreds. The programme's stated goal remains 300,000 drones by 2027 under a $1.1 billion budget . Five weeks into a conflict that has consumed thousands of interceptors, the US has produced enough attack drones to equip a single squad. The gap between the Gauntlet's procurement ambition and the factory floor is not a future risk. It is an operational fact.
LUCAS validated the central thesis: cheap, expendable drones can substitute for million-dollar munitions. Production scarcity, not capability, is now the binding constraint on the entire programme.
