Pentagon on the hunt for cheap, one-way drones
Taiwan
A small unmanned aircraft system (sUAS) is shown in flight at Dugway Proving Ground. (US Army Dugway Proving Ground photo.) WASHINGTON — The Department of Defense is turning to industry for low-cost, one-way long-range unmanned aerial systems that can operate in “disrupted, disconnected, intermittent, low-bandwidth” (DDIL) environments, according to a recent Defense Innovation Unit solicitation. The solicitation stated that such inexpensive drones have had an “asymmetric impact” in modern
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