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Pentagon's 'Crucible' tests drone swarms as Swarm Forge chases full autonomy

Pentagon's 'Crucible' tests drone swarms as Swarm Forge chases full autonomy

Hegseth's AI memo names swarms a pace-setter; allied AWE26 links US, UK and Australian swarms live

Summary

The US Department of Defense is moving Drone Swarms from demo to programme. In June 2026 it runs "Crucible", a demonstration to put industry swarm systems through their paces, while the Chief Digital and AI Office's "Swarm Forge" solicitation — a pace-setter from Defense Secretary Hegseth's January AI memo — seeks AI agents that autonomously coordinate robotic roles for the "Find, Fix, Finish" cycle, including end-to-end autonomous ISR and targeting ("inter-agent collaboration"). Allied work parallels it: at AWE26 British, American and Australian swarms shared data live, and Swiss-American Auterion earlier demonstrated a single operator engaging three targets with mixed-vendor drones on one software platform. The throughline is software autonomy over hardware — and a quiet shift toward machine-speed targeting that outruns the policy on human control.

By the numbers

  • June 2026 — "Crucible" swarm demonstration window.
  • $100M — Pentagon swarm challenge backing the effort.
  • 3 — allied nations (US, UK, Australia) whose swarms shared data at AWE26.
  • 1 → 3 — Auterion demo: one operator, three simultaneous targets, mixed-vendor drones.

Why it matters

Swarms shift the military edge from platforms to coordination software and AI agents — favouring firms like Auterion and Anduril and the side that fields autonomy first. "End-to-end autonomous" targeting also pushes against human-in-the-loop norms, raising control and escalation questions the doctrine has not settled.

What to watch

  • Crucible results and which vendors advance to Swarm Forge awards.
  • How far "end-to-end autonomous" targeting goes vs human-control policy.
  • Allied interoperability moving from AWE26 demo to deployable capability.