The U.S. Air Force is moving closer to operational deployment of its Dragon Cart palletized strike system, a capability that would allow cargo aircraft to launch cruise missiles directly from their rear cargo bays and turn transport fleets into long-range strike assets. As highlighted in recent U.S. defense reporting, the concept could significantly expand American stand-off attack capacity by enabling aircraft such as the C-17A Globemaster III and MC-130J Commando II to deliver precision weapons from outside heavily defended airspace without relying solely on traditional bomber forces. The system is designed to release palletized cruise missiles from standard airlift platforms, giving commanders a flexible way to rapidly increase missile-launch capacity during high-intensity conflict. Beyond adding firepower, Dragon Cart reflects a broader shift toward distributed strike operations and survivable force projection, where non-traditional aircraft can support long-range precision attacks while complicating enemy targeting and air defense planning. Read more.
Home » Army »
Defence »
Military »
News »
World
» U.S. Air Force Targets 2027 Deployment for Cargo-Launched Cruise Missiles