Skip to content
Drones: Industry & Defence
30MAR

LUCAS Enters Combat With Dozens in Stock

2 min read
20:09UTC

The first US-made loitering munition flew its combat mission five weeks ago. The Pentagon still has enough to arm a single platoon.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

LUCAS proved affordable mass works in combat but revealed a production shortfall of three orders of magnitude.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Imagine the US military revealed its most advanced new weapon, and it turned out there were only enough to fill a single soldier's kit bag. That is roughly the situation with LUCAS. The drone worked in combat for the first time in February 2026. But the Pentagon only has "dozens" of them, against a target of 300,000. Think of it like a car factory that built a prototype, sold it successfully, but never built the assembly line. The prototype proved the design works. Now someone needs to build the factory.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

US defense procurement law mandates full competition, environmental review, and multi-year contracting cycles that are structurally incompatible with rapid scale-up. SpektreWorks received a $30 million seed contract, not a production order.

LUCAS was designed under an Other Transaction Authority (OTA) pathway intended to accelerate small-company innovation, but OTA does not include provisions for production surge financing or guaranteed offtake that would justify factory investment.

The affordable mass doctrine assumes high volume to achieve unit cost targets below $2,000. Without volume commitments, suppliers cannot invest in the tooling that enables volume, creating a bootstrapping problem.

What could happen next?
  • Pentagon will likely expand multi-year production commitments beyond OTA seed contracts to unlock factory investment.

    6-18 months · Medium
  • SpektreWorks faces a critical choice between raising private capital to build production capacity or seeking a strategic acquirer with existing facilities.

    12 months · Medium
  • The US military will remain dependent on expensive interceptor missiles for peer-adversary drone defence until domestic production reaches meaningful scale.

    2-3 years · High
First Reported In

Update #4 · Factories Under Fire: America's Drone Gap Meets Reality

AeroVironment / Army Recognition· 4 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
LUCAS Enters Combat With Dozens in Stock
LUCAS proved affordable mass doctrine works in combat but exposed a production gap between dozens of drones and a 300,000 target.
Different Perspectives
Anduril
Anduril
Anduril views consolidated procurement as enabling rapid scaling — the $20 billion enterprise contract replaces 120 separate Army contracts with a single vehicle. Arsenal-1's early opening positions it to argue manufacturing readiness that CCA competitors cannot yet demonstrate.
Ukrainian drone manufacturers
Ukrainian drone manufacturers
Ukrainian firms have battle-tested interceptors priced at $2,100–$2,500 per unit and demand from 11 nations, but the wartime export ban forces partnerships with Western firms rather than direct sales.
IISS
IISS
IISS characterises drone innovation in the Russo-Ukrainian war as adaptation within existing military paradigms rather than a transformation of warfare — a more cautious assessment than the Pentagon's procurement urgency suggests.
US Pentagon, Anduril and Shield AI
US Pentagon, Anduril and Shield AI
The Pentagon awarded Anduril a $20 billion enterprise vehicle and confirmed Gauntlet II's live EW red team, prioritising procurement speed over competition; Anduril began YFQ-44A production four months early. Shield AI countered by raising $2 billion and validating Hivemind on a European airframe, betting multi-platform interoperability hedges against Anduril's platform lock.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Ukraine
Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Ukraine
Zelenskyy publicly disclosed that 10 shadow drone factories have been built abroad to circumvent Ukraine's wartime export ban, signed 10-year defence deals with Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and deployed 228 specialists across five Gulf states. The disclosure is a calculated signal that the ban is fracturing and Kyiv is seeking revenue structures independent of Western aid.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia signed a 10-year defence deal with Ukraine and accepted the deployment of Ukrainian counter-drone specialists the US declined to partner on in August 2025. The Gulf pivot reflects Riyadh's assessment that Ukrainian combat-proven doctrine at $2,500 per interceptor is more cost-effective than Patriot-dependent air defence.