At a hearing on May 1, Doug Beck, Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) Director, briefed members of Congress on the importance of C-UAS and ongoing DIU efforts to enhance warfighter capabilities in the field.

It was also made abundantly clear that more needs to be done, and quickly, to ensure that work reaches the scale required.

Current Partnerships and the Threat

Highlighting the extent to which this is now a whole department effort Mr Beck began by outlining areas of ongoing collaboration across the DoD, with the DIU currently collaborating with the organizations below.

• Combatant Commands
• Service Branches
• The Joint Staff
• Office of the Secretary of Defense
• Joint Counter-Small Unmanned Aerial Systems Office (JCO)
• OUSD Acquisition & Sustainment

Mr Beck then outlined the nature and scale of the challenge, stating that the DIU is laser focused on leveraging commercial derived technology to:

“Defeat sUAS with the speed and efficacy necessary to defend against the most demanding threats, across the full range of conditions – from combat environments overseas to population centers here at home.”

Key Priorities

In order to achieve this goal, Mr Beck highlighted three specific areas of effort that if implemented effectively would significantly increase DoD’s C-sUAS capabilities:

1. Adopting lower cost sensing capabilities to augment existing exquisite point defense systems and leverage the vast quantities of data available via public and commercial sources.

2. Reducing operator burden and enabling mass data exploitation via the introduction of AI-driven decision support systems

3. Ensuring warfighters are equipped with environment and mission suited defeat capabilities derived from both traditional and non-traditional defence companies

Recent Successes

Mr Beck then highlighted recent successes, including the $642 million IDIQ contract awarded to Anduril by the United States Marine Corps & ongoing partnership with United States Central Command to assist the rapid assessment and delivery of a close-in defeat intercept capability.

Takeaways

DIU priorities seem to align directly with those of the Trump administration & Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth who have made clear recently that traditional approaches to acquisition are not compatible with the threats currently facing the US homeland and forward deployed operators.

It is to be hoped that the DIU’s ongoing efforts in this field and growing Congressional support will enable US DoD to match these threats at the pace and scale required to maintain/ recapture assured operational superiority.

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