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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
11APR

UK launches Apache drone wingman trial

3 min read
16:48UTC

The UK MoD selected Anduril UK, BAE Systems, Tekever, and Thales UK to compete for GBP 10 million in Project NYX assessment funding, developing autonomous drone wingmen for Apache helicopters with a down-select to two companies in autumn 2026.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Britain has no domestic favourite for Apache drone wingmen and is testing four archetypes.

The UK Ministry of Defence launched Project NYX, selecting four companies for an assessment phase funded at GBP 10 million to develop autonomous drone loyal wingmen for Apache attack helicopters. The selected companies are Anduril Industries (UK) Ltd, BAE Systems Operations Ltd, Tekever Ltd, and Thales UK Ltd. Up to two will advance to the prototype phase in autumn 2026, with an operational variant targeted for 2030.

The field spans a US defence-AI firm operating through a UK subsidiary, Britain's largest prime, a Portuguese-origin ISR specialist with over 50,000 operational hours in Ukraine , and a Franco-British electronics group. Thales UK manufactured the original Watchkeeper, which is now being replaced under Project Corvus. The autumn 2026 down-select will reveal whether the MoD favours US defence-AI integration, UK prime scale, combat-proven ISR depth, or Franco-British electronics for the loyal-wingman architecture. That preference will set a precedent beyond Apache: the same architecture question applies to every allied air force exploring crewed-uncrewed teaming, and the broader autonomous-systems programme makes it a reference buyer for mid-sized NATO members.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The British Army is working on drone wingmen: autonomous aircraft that fly alongside Apache attack helicopters. The idea is that drones can go first into dangerous areas to gather intelligence or absorb enemy fire, protecting the helicopter and its crew. Four companies are competing for the contract: a US tech firm (Anduril), Britain's largest defence company (BAE Systems), a Portuguese specialist (Tekever), and a Franco-British electronics group (Thales UK). The winner gets chosen in autumn 2026, and the system should be operational by 2030.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Project NYX reflects three forces: the British Army's recognition that Apache helicopter survivability in contested airspace requires drone wingmen to extend sensor reach and absorb threats.

The absence of a NATO-standard loyal-wingman architecture, making domestic development unavoidable; and the MoD's GBP 4 billion autonomous-systems commitment (April 2026) creating political pressure to show identifiable projects against that headline spending.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The autumn 2026 down-select will reveal the MoD's architectural preference: US defence-AI (Anduril), UK prime integration (BAE Systems), combat-proven ISR specialist (Tekever), or established electronics group (Thales UK). Each choice signals a different theory of how AI autonomy software should be governed in British weapons programmes. The decision will be studied by other NATO members facing the same loyal-wingman architecture question.

First Reported In

Update #10 · NATO shoots down drone over Estonia

UK Ministry of Defence· 29 May 2026
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