The US military is overhauling its approach to unmanned aerial combat, shifting its primary focus away from highly customized, niche platforms toward rapidly mass-producible and endlessly adaptive technologies, European Pravda reported.
The defense pipeline update was delivered by US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth during press briefings at the Shangri-La Dialogue security summit in Singapore. Hegseth detailed how the fast-moving technical innovations observed daily on the battlefields of Ukraine are directly dictating future US procurement and manufacturing methodologies.
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Scaling over sophistication
According to Hegseth, the true revelation gleaned from observing high-intensity European combat operations is that standalone technical sophistication is easily neutralized without the industrial capacity to mass-produce and continuously re-engineer systems on short notice.
Unmanned tech has become an absolute priority for the Pentagon, which is trying to strike a balance between high-end autonomous systems and the cheap, mass-scale attrition assets that have defined the current war.
“The budget of President Trump for 2027 provides 56 billion dollars of investment in ensuring superiority in the field of drones and further study of Ukraine’s experience on the battlefield,” Hegseth announced to reporters. “It is not a matter of having the most advanced systems, but of the ability to scale them, scale them quickly, adapting week by week – that is exactly how quickly drone technology adapts.”
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