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Drones: Industry & Defence
13APR

UK admits fibre drones beat its defences

3 min read
13:26UTC

UK Defence Innovation published a formal industry call on 8 April seeking technologies to detect fibre-optic controlled drones, acknowledging that no existing RF or electronic warfare system can find them.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Fibre-optic drones defeat every RF-based counter-drone system in NATO's current inventory.

UK Defence Innovation published a formal industry call on 8 April, closing 21 April, seeking technologies to detect and defeat fibre-optic controlled drones. The call is an explicit government admission that conventional radio frequency and electronic warfare counter-drone systems cannot detect this class of platform. No fielded NATO counter-UAS system is optimised for the threat.

Fibre-optic FPV drones are unjammable. The control link runs through a physical cable that unspools behind the drone; there is no RF signal to intercept or disrupt. Detection requires visual, acoustic, or infrared sensing rather than the RF scanning on which every deployed NATO system relies. Skycutter's Shrike 10 Fiber, the system that scored 99.3 out of 100 in the Pentagon's first Drone Dominance Gauntlet , uses a 20km micro-spool of exactly this technology.

Britain funded Skycutter's development through UKDI, then discovered that the technology defeats its own defences. The drone that won America's top competition is invisible to British counter-drone doctrine. This is not a capability gap that procurement can close by buying more of the same; it requires entirely new detection technology that may not yet exist at prototype stage, let alone fielded scale.

The 21 April deadline suggests urgency, but urgency without a solution merely compresses the timeline for acknowledging there is no answer. Whether any responding company can demonstrate proof-of-concept within twelve months is the open question.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Most military drones are controlled by radio signals, like a TV remote. Counter-drone systems detect those radio signals and use them to find and jam the drone. Fibre-optic drones are different. The control signal runs through a thin cable that unspools behind the drone as it flies, like a kite string. There is no radio signal to detect. Britain's current defence systems look for radio signals; they literally cannot see this type of drone. Britain published an urgent call for ideas from industry to solve this, closing in just two weeks. That tight deadline tells you how worried they are.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The fibre-optic capability gap in NATO defences is a direct consequence of procurement timelines. RF-based counter-drone systems typically take five to seven years from specification to fielding.

Fibre-optic FPV technology was weaponised in Ukraine in 2023-24 and is now operational in the Gulf conflict. The gap between when a threat becomes real and when a counter arrives is structural, not accidental.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    NATO's entire fielded counter-drone inventory is blind to fibre-optic controlled platforms; closing the gap requires new detection technology that does not yet exist at operational scale, creating a minimum two-year fielding lag.

  • Opportunity

    The first company to demonstrate a scalable acoustic, thermal, or optical detection solution for fibre-optic FPV drones will access a procurement market spanning all 32 NATO members simultaneously.

First Reported In

Update #5 · Gulf drone war rewrites procurement

Critical Supply Group· 13 Apr 2026
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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.