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Pentagon's counter-drone budget nears $1B as lasers and microwaves push toward fielding

Pentagon's counter-drone budget nears $1B as lasers and microwaves push toward fielding

Reusable interceptors and EW lead near-term buys; directed energy stays a 2030 story told as a 2026 one

Defence· active Dinheiro de quem·O jogo longo·O que não estão dizendo ·6 takes ·atualizado 24 de jun. de 2026

Summary

The US Department of Defense is pushing its Counter Uas budget toward ~$1B, with the US Army detailing a near-$1B small-drone-defeat plan and an FY27 request in the same range. Near-term money goes to reusable kinetic interceptors (e.g. Anduril Roadrunner) and non-kinetic Electronic Warfare (e.g. Rtx Coyote, Epirus microwave), not lasers: directed energy gets a comparatively modest $66M line for two Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) systems, and analysts warn the laser story is "a 2030 story being told as a 2026 story". Drivers are the Middle East and southern-border drone threats and the Ukraine/Lebanon proof that mass cheap drones overwhelm point defences. The unsolved problem is cost-per-kill: defeating a $400 drone with a $1M+ interceptor does not scale.

By the numbers

  • ~$1B — Army small counter-UAS procurement plan; FY27 DoD request in the same range.
  • $66M — directed-energy line for two Enduring High Energy Laser (E-HEL) systems.
  • 2030 — realistic horizon for laser counter-drone at scale, per analysts.
  • 3 — near-term defeat layers: reusable interceptors, EW, high-power microwave.

Why it matters

The split between near-term EW/interceptors and a deferred laser future exposes the core counter-drone economics problem: defenders must win on cost-per-kill against $300–400 weapons. It shapes which firms — defence-tech (Anduril, Epirus) vs primes (Rtx) — capture a fast-growing budget.

What to watch

  • FY27 appropriations and whether the ~$1B holds through markup.
  • E-HEL fielding milestones vs the "2030" caveat.
  • Cost-per-kill data from Middle East and border deployments.