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Drones: Industry & Defence
10MAY

Mountain Horse wins first Lethality Prize

2 min read
14:35UTC

Mountain Horse Solutions, a Global Ordnance subsidiary, on 29 April won the Pentagon's inaugural Drone Dominance Lethality Prize Challenge, eight days after the stated 21 April announcement target.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

First Lethality Prize winner pulls a munitions house into autonomous-systems integration, validating Gauntlet II's prize architecture.

Mountain Horse Solutions, a Global Ordnance subsidiary, won the Pentagon's first Drone Dominance Lethality Prize Challenge on Wednesday 29 April, eight days after the stated 21 April announcement target. Partners included Gale Force Marine, Argus Industrial, and one further defence-technologies firm. The Lethality Prize sits inside Gauntlet II, the 50,000 to 60,000 drone procurement programme established earlier this year , and winners join its preferred munitions list with an associated R&D follow-on contract.

The prize structure rewards integrated kits rather than single platforms: a winning entry typically pairs an airframe with a munition, a ground-control element, and a sustainment package that meets a stated cost-per-effect ceiling. Mountain Horse's industrial base is concentrated in small-arms munitions and ordnance integration; the win positions Global Ordnance as a credible integrator on autonomous-systems munitions, a category dominated until now by AeroVironment, Anduril and Shield AI. The four-firm partnership signals the prize is functioning as intended: pulling traditional munitions houses into the autonomous-systems supplier base rather than awarding only to venture-backed entrants.

Lethality Prize cadence is meant to function as a forcing mechanism for the Pentagon's broader autonomous-munitions Phase II procurement, which had underperformed across service acquisition offices through 2025. A week of slip on a single prize is small in absolute terms; routine on the procurement-cycle clock the DAWG $54.6 billion request is now sized to fund. Whether the slip recurs across subsequent prize rounds will signal whether the new contracting rhythm holds at scale or reverts to the standard programme-of-record cadence the Lethality Prize was built to bypass.

A sceptical view: Mountain Horse's win is one data point in a programme that needs to award dozens before its production rate is testable. Global Ordnance's role as a credible integrator is asserted by the prize, not yet demonstrated at volume. The Q3 2026 production milestone will be the first chance to read whether the four-firm partnership converts into delivered units, or whether the prize architecture awards faster than the supplier base can scale.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The Pentagon announced the first winner of its Drone Dominance Lethality Prize on 29 April. The prize goes to companies that develop effective ways to destroy enemy drones and is part of a wider US programme called Gauntlet II, which aims to procure 50,000 armed drones. The winner, Mountain Horse Solutions, is a subsidiary of Global Ordnance and led a partnership of four companies. Winning this prize means Mountain Horse joins the preferred list of suppliers for the Pentagon's drone procurement programme. The announcement came eight days later than the Pentagon's stated target of 21 April, which is being watched as a signal of whether this new faster procurement approach actually moves faster than the old one.

First Reported In

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