The Department of Defense filed a memo on 3 April opposing DJI's petition to the Ninth Circuit (Case 26-1029) for removal from the FCC Covered List . The filing includes a classified intelligence annex submitted to Congress the same day. DJI's reply is due 11 May.
Classified annexes create an asymmetric legal environment where the plaintiff cannot examine the evidence against it. US courts have historically deferred to executive branch national security claims under these conditions. DJI retained a former Solicitor General, but the procedural disadvantage is structural: no amount of legal talent compensates for the inability to see or contest the opposing brief.
This classified opposition completes a three-layer regulatory lock. FAR clause 52.240-1 bars Chinese drones from all federal contracts. The FCC Covered List blocks new product certifications. The DoD annex now effectively neutralises the one judicial mechanism DJI had to contest both. Each layer requires a separate legal or political victory to overturn; together, they foreclose DJI's path to the US market regardless of the Section 232 tariff outcome , which itself remains unresolved 16 days past its statutory deadline.
For the broader US drone market, DJI's exclusion is now functionally permanent. Hundreds of thousands of existing DJI aircraft continue to fly under prior authorisations, but no new models can enter. Domestic manufacturers like Skydio inherit a protected market, though the capability gap with DJI hardware remains real and will take years to close.
