Vous consultez actuellement le contenu en tant qu'invité. Devenez membre pour bénéficier d'un accès supplémentaire et de fonctions réservées aux membres !

DOD

Pentagon’s FY2026 budget emphasizes unmanned systems and C-UAS investments

The Pentagon’s fiscal year 2026 budget request places strong emphasis on near-term investments in unmanned systems and C-UAS technologies, according to senior defense and military officials.

“This historic defense budget prioritizes strengthening homeland security, deterring Chinese aggression in the Indo-Pacific [region], revitalizing the defense industrial base, and maintaining our commitment to being good stewards of taxpayer dollars,” a senior defense official said.

While detailed budget documents are still being released, officials offered early insights during an off-camera press briefing on Thursday. A senior defense official highlighted a notable structural change in the budget: “This is the first year we’ve designated a dedicated section for autonomy. The request totals $13.4 billion for autonomy and autonomous systems.”

Specifically, the Army is proposing a total of $1.7 billion in flexible funding across three key domains: UAS, C-UAS, and electronic warfare (EW). This includes $79 million to rapidly acquire ready-to-deploy EW capabilities, $693 million for counter-drone systems, and $959 million to support a range of drone platforms.

Furthermore, it is requesting $729 million to accelerate the procurement of Maneuver Short Range Air Defense (M-SHORAD) vehicles and is also planning to intensify the work in enhancing the integration of counter-UAS capabilities within maneuver platoons.

These funding increases come as the U.S. military faces mounting challenges in integrating and defending against rapidly evolving drone threats – systems that are often far cheaper to produce than the high-cost missiles used to intercept them.

The overall budget also includes a $3.1 billion allocation across military branches specifically for counter-UAS capabilities.

The request marks a 13.4% increase over the fiscal year 2025 budget and includes $848.3 billion in discretionary spending, along with $113.3 billion in mandatory funding allocated through congressional reconciliation.

Crédit photographique : Department of Defense.

Suivre C-UAS Hub sur LinkedIn pour des mises à jour régulières du contenu sur les contre-ASM.

Partager l'article :
Facebook
LinkedIn
X

Auteur

Groupe SAE Media

Articles connexes

The UK is moving to procure a new interceptor missile system designed to counter drone threats, with supplies set to support both

During the recent surge of U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran and retaliatory attacks in the Gulf, the value of Ukraine’s battlefield experience came

France’s Direction Générale de l’Armement (DGA) has issued a $21.8 million tender for the supply of 1,000 counter-UAS interceptor drones as part

Ondas Inc. has secured multiple contracts to provide counter-UAS capabilities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, with deployments planned across venues in

sidebar-icon

Soumettre un contenu

Vous souhaitez soumettre un contenu original à C-UAS Hub ?

En matière de sensibilisation et de protection de l'espace aérien, nous pouvons tous tirer profit des connaissances, de l'expérience et des perspectives des autres acteurs de ce domaine émergent. Si vous disposez d'un contenu original, jamais publié, d'un leadership éclairé, d'une recherche, de rapports, de ressources multimédias ou de tout autre contenu intéressant sur la sensibilisation à l'espace aérien ou les contre-ASM, nous serions ravis d'en prendre connaissance.

Pour que votre travail soit pris en considération en vue d'une publication sur C-UAS Hub, veuillez envoyer un courriel contenant toutes les informations pertinentes à l'adresse suivante pr@cuashub.com. Nous répondrons à votre courriel dès que possible.

Nous vous remercions,
Personnel du C-UAS Hub