The U.S. Army is moving to expand the depth and affordability of its air and missile defense network with a new effort to field low-cost interceptors capable of defeating drones, cruise missiles, and short-range ballistic threats without exhausting high-value Patriot PAC-3 MSE stocks. The requirement, published on May 15, 2026, through RCCTO Redstone under MOSAIC-26-03, signals a push to sustain layered air defense operations in high-intensity conflicts where mass attacks could quickly deplete premium interceptors. The Army is seeking mature interceptor technologies and critical subsystems priced well below existing missile defense weapons, with complete rounds capped under $1 million to enable larger inventories and faster replenishment. The initiative also emphasizes modular open-system integration with Patriot and the Integrated Battle Command System, reflecting a broader shift toward scalable, networked air defense architectures designed to counter saturation attacks and reduce the cost imbalance between incoming threats and defensive firepower. Read more...
U.S. Army Seeks Sub-$1M Patriot-Compatible Interceptor to Counter Drone and Cruise Missile Swarms
U.S. Army Patriot air defense launcher firing an interceptor, as the service studies a new sub-$1 million missile to counter drones, cruise missiles, and short-range ballistic threats while preserving costly PAC-3 MSE stocks (Picture source: U.S. DoW).
