Anduril Wins Pentagon Contract Worth Up to $99 Million for AI-Powered Counter-Drone System

On July 27, 2021, the Pentagon's Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) awarded Anduril Industries a five-year contract worth up to $99 million, allowing the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps to acquire the Lattice counter-drone system as a service. The AI-powered system is designed to detect, classify and track drone threats, ranging from cheap hobbyist drones to more sophisticated systems that could be operated by state actors.
One contract, four military branches
Instead of having each branch run its own separate procurement track, the Pentagon opted this time for a completely different approach. DIU, the unit created to bridge the gap between the tech startup world and the military's often cumbersome procurement system, is the one that signed the deal with Anduril. The practical effect: each of the four branches, the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps, can purchase the system directly, without waiting for separate approvals or building its own dedicated tender.
The move reflects a broader trend in Washington: an effort to speed up the adoption of commercial technology from relatively new defense-tech companies, rather than relying solely on established, veteran defense contractors like Lockheed Martin or Raytheon. Anduril, founded only a few years ago by Palmer Luckey, has positioned itself precisely at that intersection.
How does the Lattice system work?
Lattice isn't a single sensor but a software layer that connects a network of distributed sensors to an AI-driven command interface. The system is meant to autonomously detect drone threats, classify their type and track them in real time, with capabilities spanning from cheap commercial toy and camera drones to more advanced systems potentially used by hostile state actors.
- Client: Defense Innovation Unit (DIU)
- Supplier: Anduril Industries
- Contract value: up to $99 million
- Contract duration: five years
- Signing date: July 27, 2021
- Branches authorized to purchase: Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps
- Procurement model: counter-drone system as a service
Service model versus traditional procurement
The structure of the contract is just as interesting as the technology itself. Rather than a one-time hardware purchase, this is an ongoing service model, a structure more familiar from the enterprise software world than from traditional defense contracting. This makes it easier for military branches to experiment with the system and to scale usage up or down as needed, without committing upfront to expensive equipment purchases that can't be walked back.
Open questions remain. A price tag of up to $99 million over five years sounds significant in headlines, but in practice it's a ceiling that depends on how much each branch actually chooses to buy and deploy the system in the field. The ability of AI to reliably distinguish between a harmless toy drone and a genuine threat, under real operational field conditions rather than in a lab, is also a question the US military will need to examine carefully before relying on it fully.
Isradrone Editorial Team
The Isradrone team covers drone technology, defense, mapping, agriculture and logistics innovation from around the world. Original, research-based reporting verified for the Israeli market.
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