If nothing else, DIU’s Artemis project, which will now test one-way
drone designs from Ukrainian firms, underscores the significant impact
that conflict continues to have on military trends globally.
The Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) announced today that it had awarded four contracts
under Artemis for the production of prototype drone designs that will
then be evaluated under operationally relevant conditions, hopefully
well before the end of the year.
Without knowing the identities of the
Ukrainian companies involved, it is impossible to say what their designs
might look like, but firms in that country have already demonstrated a wide array of longer-range one-way drones in the ongoing conflict with Russia.
The war in Ukraine has also underscored the threats posed by GPS jamming/spoofing and electronic warfare on modern battlefields, especially against drones.
Though DIU’s announcement today does
not explicitly mention the conflict in Ukraine, it does say that the
“Project Artemis goals are directly tied to observations of current real
world combat conditions as well as feedback from end users across the
DoD on what capabilities may be needed in this space to face near peer
threat capabilities around the world.”
“We are excited about the
non-traditional companies who are providing low-cost, adaptable,
long-range, UAS platforms with the potential to maximize operational
flexibility for the Joint force,” Trent Emeneker, the program manager
for Artemis at DIU, said in a statement today.
“This was the intent of
Congress’ direction to rethink how to get capabilities to the warfighter
at speed and scale that can deliver much faster than traditional
Programs of Record.”
DIU has a separate effort underway in cooperation with the U.S. Air Force called the Enterprise Test Vehicle (ETV), which is similar in some respects to Artemis, but is focused on demonstrating designs that could evolve into low-cost cruise missiles.
The Anduril Barracuda-500M, one of the designs now being developed under the Enterprise Test Vehicle program. Anduril
U.S. military officials have also
highlighted the potential value of long-range one-way attack drones for
smaller allies and partners.. .