International agreements with key allies are expanding access to counter-unmanned aerial system capabilities. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll and key leaders from Australia, Poland and South Korea recently signed agreements enabling each country to procure counter-small UAS technologies through the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 drone defense marketplace.
As the War Department's premier organization to synchronize counter-small UAS efforts across the joint force and interagency, JIATF 401 is helping allies and partners rapidly acquire state-of-the-art counter-small UAS capability to respond to the evolving threat of drones. The drone defense marketplace connects diverse solutions with an expanding network of users who need scalable, effective and interoperable technologies. The initiative aligns with the Army secretary's goal of providing partner nations with timely access to essential capabilities and highlights JIATF 401's central role in advancing that mission.
"We are continuing to expand the market for [counter-small UAS]," said Army Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, director of JIATF 401. "We understand that our allies and partners want to purchase American-made counter-drone technologies. The JIATF 401 marketplace helps aggregate that demand, ensuring our defense industrial base is ready to scale production and meet the growing needs of our coalition."
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