Skip to content
Drones: Industry & Defence
13APR

Pentagon files secret brief against DJI

3 min read
13:26UTC

The Department of Defense submitted classified evidence to Congress opposing DJI's petition to be removed from the FCC Covered List, creating a legal barrier DJI cannot see or challenge.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Three independent regulatory layers now foreclose DJI from the US drone market.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

DJI is the world's most popular drone brand, but it has been banned from the US market because the government considers it a Chinese security risk. DJI went to court to try to get that ban overturned. The US military then filed secret evidence with Congress saying DJI is a threat. Because the evidence is secret, DJI's lawyers cannot read it, let alone challenge it. It is like being told you failed a test but not being allowed to see the test paper. US courts have almost always sided with the government when national security secrecy is involved. DJI is likely to lose, which means no new DJI drones in the US market, probably permanently.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

DJI's three-layer exclusion is the product of three separate institutional actors acting independently: the FCC (administrative), the DoD (legislative via classified annex), and the FAR rulemakers (procurement). No single political decision created the lock; removing it would require simultaneously reversing three independent institutional determinations, each with its own legal standard and political constituency.

The classified annex is structurally different from the other two layers. The FCC Covered List and FAR clause 52.240-1 can in principle be reversed by the administrations that created them. A classified intelligence annex, once submitted to Congress, creates a permanent record that future administrations inherit. DJI's challenge is not merely legal; it is permanent in a way the other restrictions are not.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    The DoD's use of a classified annex to neutralise DJI's judicial challenge creates a template for excluding any foreign technology company from US markets without requiring a conviction or an open evidentiary hearing.

    Long term · 0.82
  • Opportunity

    DJI's permanent exclusion creates a protected US market for domestic manufacturers; Skydio and Red Cat are the primary beneficiaries of a gap that will take three to five years to close on capability.

    Medium term · 0.85
  • Risk

    European regulators have not imposed equivalent restrictions on DJI; a divergent transatlantic standard creates compliance complexity for multinational operators and may drive EU customers toward Chinese hardware while US customers shift to domestic alternatives.

    Medium term · 0.74
First Reported In

Update #5 · Gulf drone war rewrites procurement

DroneDJ· 13 Apr 2026
Read original
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.