France ordered BLAZE interceptor drones from Latvia's Origin Robotics at Eurosatory on 17 June 2026, after a competitive evaluation by the DGA, France's defence procurement agency 1. BLAZE is a kinetic counter-drone system that defeats a hostile drone by ramming it. The order makes France the fourth European operator after Latvia, Belgium and Estonia, and French integrator DSV will co-assemble the drone in France with first deliveries due within weeks. Eurosatory is the biennial Paris land-defence exhibition, this year held 15-19 June.
Paris normally exports drones rather than importing them, and choosing a Latvian system over indigenous options inverts the usual flow of European defence-industrial trade. Origin's BLAZE was fielded on Latvia's Russian border barely a month earlier , and Lithuania had bought 48 Merops interceptors built on Ukrainian combat data before that . The emerging pattern across these buys is consistent: acquire combat-proven mass now from the front-line states, build the sovereign high end later.
That second track also moved on the same day. France signed the A400M Parallel Mission System with Airbus Defence and Space through OCCAR, the European arms-cooperation agency 2. The system is a roll-on, roll-off fit giving 20 A400M transports an intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance, data-distribution and command-and-control capability, with installation in 2027 and flight test in 2028. The palletised drone-mothership layer that early headlines promised was not in the contract; Airbus and France deferred it to a later block, which marks the sovereign high end as aspiration rather than a signed commitment.
