The U.S. Marine Corps is preparing to deploy Airbus U.S. Space & Defense’s MQ-72C Lakota Connector, an optionally piloted logistics helicopter, with a Pacific Marine Littoral Regiment for operational testing, shifting the platform from controlled trials into a contested Indo-Pacific environment where it could sustain dispersed frontline units. Announced during Modern Day Marine in Washington, D.C., on April 28, the move signals a push to validate autonomous resupply under real-world conditions where traditional logistics are vulnerable to enemy targeting. The MQ-72C is designed to operate with or without a pilot, enabling flexible resupply of missiles, sensors, communications gear, and small-unit forces across island chains without exposing crews to risk. This capability directly supports the Marine Corps’ shift toward distributed operations, where low-signature units must remain supplied inside adversary engagement zones, reinforcing a broader trend toward autonomy and survivable logistics in future warfare. Read more...
U.S. Marines Prepare MQ-72C Lakota Autonomous Helicopter for Pacific Combat Resupply
U.S. Marines will test Airbus’ MQ-72C Lakota Connector in the Pacific in 2027, evaluating how the optionally piloted logistics helicopter can deliver ammunition, ordnance, and critical supplies to dispersed forces operating inside contested island chains (Picture source: Airbus).
