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Drone Dominance Program

The Pentagon's roughly $1.1 billion, two-year push to mass-produce and field cheap US-made attack drones — and to widen the supplier base far beyond the traditional primes.

The Drone Dominance Program is the US Department of War’s attempt to fix the problem the war in Ukraine exposed: that the American defence base builds exquisite, expensive drones slowly, while the fight increasingly turns on cheap ones built fast and in volume. Launched in 2025 to carry out a presidential executive order on drone dominance, the roughly $1.1 billion, two-year effort is designed to buy low-cost, US-made attack drones at scale and to widen the supplier base far beyond the traditional primes.

The structure is competition-to-procurement. Rather than write a single large contract, the programme runs phased evaluations — the Gauntlet II live-fly trials being the current down-select — and places orders with the companies whose systems perform, many of them young manufacturers rather than household names. Phase II splits demand into mission categories with fixed price caps: long-range strike systems around $4,500 a drone and close-quarters urban-assault platforms around $3,500, with the stated ambition of scaling from tens of thousands of units toward 150,000 per phase while pushing unit costs down from about $5,000 to roughly $3,000.

The programme is as much industrial policy as procurement. Its explicit goals are to rebuild a domestic small-drone manufacturing capacity that had largely migrated to China, to qualify NDAA-compliant supply chains, and to compress the path from prototype to fielded system. It sits alongside the Pentagon’s other mass-autonomy push, the Replicator Initiative , as part of a broader bet that quantity, low cost and a deep manufacturing base are themselves a form of deterrence.

low-cost fpv mass-production attritable diu procurement executive-order government
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accelerator

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