The U.S. State Department has approved a possible $1.98 billion sale of Anduril counter-drone systems to Kuwait, giving a key Gulf partner a layered defense against small UAVs and low-altitude threats, according to a June 5, 2026 notification. The package matters because it strengthens protection for air bases, ports, command sites, energy infrastructure, and coalition facilities without relying only on costly conventional air-defense missiles. Built around Roadrunner-Munition and Anvil-Kinetic interceptors, the system combines electronic warfare, kinetic defeat, sensors, and Lattice command-and-control software into a single counter-UAS network. For Kuwait, this adds a more flexible shield against one-way attack drones and swarm-style threats, reflecting the growing shift toward integrated, lower-cost air defense across modern battlefields. Read more...
U.S. Approves $1.98B Anduril Counter-Drone System for Kuwait to Defend Against Drone Swarm Attacks
Kuwait’s proposed $1.98 billion purchase of Anduril Roadrunner-Munition, Anvil-Kinetic, Sentry, Pulsar, and Lattice systems would create a layered counter-drone defense network to protect air bases, ports, energy sites, and coalition infrastructure from small UAVs and one-way attack drones (Picture source: Anduril).
