Drones and Unmanned Systems - Air, Sea, Land, Micro & Robot Systems

FlyEye UAV

FlyEye UAV

Source: WB Group


OTTAWA TO PURCHASE POLISH DRONES UNDER NEW MILITARY COOPERATION AGREEMENT

Wednesday, May 27, 2026
FlyEye UAV

FlyEye UAV

Source: WB Group


OTTAWA - Canada and Poland have signed a Letter of Intent to deepen their military-industrial ties, establishing a framework to fund joint projects through the European Union’s Security Action for Europe (SAFE) initiative. Canada is currently the only non-European country admitted into the 150 billion euro ($174.5 billion) SAFE defense borrowing and procurement scheme.

A primary milestone of the new agreement outlines Canada’s planned procurement of Polish-made military drones manufactured by the WB Group. According to Polish state media, the acquisition is set to include FlyEye mini-drones, Warmate loitering munitions, and Gladius strike and reconnaissance drones. In Marhc, Ottawa announced a CAD900 million investment plan to boost defense innovation, including a new drone innovation hub.

The bilateral agreement also includes preliminary discussions regarding the establishment of ammunition production capacity in Canada, though specific details on whether this will involve a joint venture or licensing with Polish firms have not been disclosed. The initiative follows a separate $1.4 billion domestic plan announced by Canada over the winter to expand its ammunition manufacturing, which includes a $300 million partnership with Ontario-based IMT Precision to build facilities for 155mm artillery shells.

 
FI Insight: Draft HASC Defense Bill Aligns with FY27 Base Budget while Bypassing Reconciliation

Source: U.S. Army


FI INSIGHT: DRAFT HASC DEFENSE BILL ALIGNS WITH FY27 BASE BUDGET WHILE BYPASSING RECONCILIATION

Friday, May 29, 2026
FI Insight: Draft HASC Defense Bill Aligns with FY27 Base Budget while Bypassing Reconciliation

Source: U.S. Army


SANDY HOOK, Conn. - The House Armed Services Committee released the Chairman's Mark of the FY27 defense authorization bill Tuesday. The proposal, which the full HASC committee will review and adjust on Thursday, June 4, would authorize $1.142 trillion in discretionary national security spending, exactly matching the administration's request. The Pentagon's portion of the national security budget totals $1.071 trillion. Similarly, the committee left the defense topline largely in place in its markup of last year's budget. Notably, the committee does not address $350 billion in mandatory funding requested by the administration to support FY27 initiatives through reconciliation. That block of funding will be addressed through a separate legislative process.

Despite the lack of a topline adjustment, the Chairman's Mark proposes some modest changes to programs within the budget. For military acquisition, the bill recommends adding $1.2 billion for procurement and $567.7 million for Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation (RDT&E).

For procurement programs, the biggest increase is $573.3 million for Defense-Wide agencies, followed by an extra $440.6 million for the Air Force and $202.6 million for the Navy. The Army would receive a net increase of only $17.8 million. The bill adds a net $887.5 million for aircraft across the services, supporting an additional six UH-60s, seven CH-47s, two C-130Js, and four MH-139s. The Chairman's Mark also recommends adding $207 million for Navy shipbuilding and $186 million for Army vehicles. Meanwhile, the legislation proposes a $134 million reduction across the Pentagon's various missile accounts.

The RDT&E increase includes $323.5 million for the Army and $191.9 million for the Navy. However, the legislation recommends cutting $329.4 million for the Air Force and $211.4 million for the Space Force. Notable program increases include an extra $175 million for the Nuclear Sea-Launched Cruise Missile (SLCM-N) and $127.2 million for Future Long Range Assault Aircraft (FLRAA) development. Several programs are subject to cuts, including a $705.9 million reduction for Automated Satellite Command and Control (Sat C2) - a Space Force effort to improve command and control capabilities that received $1.5 billion in the FY27 request - $137.4 million for Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) for the Air Force, $51.4 million for Next Generation Adaptive Propulsion, and $52.5 million for the Family of Affordable Mass Missiles (FAMM).

The reconciliation gap has the most significant implications for the administration's broader modernization agenda. The $350 billion left unaddressed includes $155.5 billion for procurement and $124.9 billion for RDT&E. Most of the administration's industrial base investment plans are funded through reconciliation, as is $53.6 billion in research funding sought for the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group, though the Chairman's Mark does support the $1 billion in base funding requested for DAWG. The Pentagon's expanded munitions investment plans are heavily reliant on reconciliation as well, with requested amounts of $24.5 billion for the Army, $10.9 billion for the Navy, and $4.6 billion for the Air Force. Several other programs also used reconciliation to bolster procurement rates in FY27, including the F-35 (which also carries $2.4 billion in reconciliation research funding), the Marine Corps' Medium Landing Ship, and the KC-130J tanker. Nearly the entire Golden Dome research budget relies on reconciliation as well, reflecting $17.1 billion.

Passage of a new reconciliation bill isn't guaranteed, and it's possible that congressional appropriators will address some of these requirements in their markups of the discretionary budget depending on how that process moves forward. Reconciliation aside, the Chairman's Mark supports the sizeable $1.1 trillion base budget, and next week's full HASC review will establish the committee's stance on the investment priorities contained therein.

 
F-35 and General Atomics MQ-20 Conduct Autonomy Teaming Testing

Source: Genera Atomics Aeronautical Systems


F-35 AND GENERAL ATOMICS MQ-20 CONDUCT AUTONOMY TEAMING TESTING

Wednesday, May 27, 2026
F-35 and General Atomics MQ-20 Conduct Autonomy Teaming Testing

Source: Genera Atomics Aeronautical Systems


SAN DIEGO, Calif. -- A recent demonstration involving a Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II and General Atomics MQ-20 Avenger drone marked another milestone in the US Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) program. During the test, an F-35 pilot on the ground successfully controlled the airborne MQ-20 using beyond-line-of-sight satellite communications and a tablet interface, issuing tactical commands such as maneuvering and repositioning. The drone, equipped with General Atomics’ Tactical Autonomy Ecosystem software, transmitted real-time flight data back to the pilot, demonstrating advanced manned-unmanned teaming capabilities central to the CCA concept.

The event builds on previous F-22/MQ-20 demonstrations and highlights the Air Force’s push to field semi-autonomous "loyal wingman" drones in FY27. Lawmakers have strongly backed the initiative, viewing CCAs as a cost-effective way to expand combat airpower for missions including strike, reconnaissance, and electronic warfare, particularly in a potential Indo-Pacific conflict with China. Congress is also pressing the services to keep lifecycle and acquisition costs manageable while accelerating deployment timelines.

Source: Air & Space Forces
Associated URL: https://www.airandspaceforces.com/f-35-controls-general-atomics-avenger-cca-autonomy-test/
Author: Stephen Losey 
 

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