USAF looks beyond the MQ-9 Reaper after costly drone losses expose a harsh reality about modern air warfare economics | Daily Reports Online
- Pentagon seeks an affordable drone capable of replacing many MQ-9 Reaper missions
- Reaper drones hit hard in Iran, and losses force demand for lower-cost unmanned combat aircraft
- New aircraft must combine long range with substantial payload capacity
The United States Air Force is examining a lower-cost unmanned aircraft concept after losing “dozens” of MQ-9 Reaper drones during the recent conflict involving Iran.
Those losses have intensified concerns about relying upon expensive aircraft in environments where increasingly affordable air defenses can destroy them.
With roughly 135 Reapers in service and each drone costing about $30 million, officials increasingly question whether existing loss rates remain sustainable.
Pentagon seeks a lower-cost drone with long range and heavy payload
Rather than pursuing a more advanced version of the MQ-9, defense planners are exploring a drone intended for larger-scale deployment.
The Defense Innovation Unit is seeking proposals for a Massed Modular Aircraft, or MMA, capable of performing many missions currently assigned to the Reaper.
According to the solicitation, the Pentagon believes dependence upon “exquisite” aircraft costing more than $30 million is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain.
The concept favours quantity alongside capability, allowing forces to continue operating even after suffering substantial battlefield attrition.
Unlike many smaller drones commonly associated with swarm operations, the proposed aircraft would retain significant reach and carrying capacity.
The solicitation calls for a payload of at least 2,800 pounds, compared with roughly 3,800 pounds carried by the MQ-9.
Requirements also include an unrefueled combat radius of at least 2,300 nautical miles and a one-way transfer distance exceeding 8,000 nautical miles.
The drone must travel at speeds above 200 miles per hour while remaining capable of operating from 6,000-foot runways and improvised airstrips.
Defense planners also want enough onboard power and cooling capacity to support diverse internal and external mission equipment.
The specifications mention 25kW of available electrical power and 5kW of cooling capacity for future mission systems.
Ambitious timeline aims for operational capability by 2031
The proposal places considerable emphasis upon autonomy, allowing a single operator to supervise several aircraft simultaneously during complex missions.
While no specific dimensions were included, the performance requirements indicate an aircraft broadly comparable in size to the MQ-9.
Officials have also not disclosed a preferred procurement price, though expectations suggest a figure substantially below the Reaper’s estimated $30 million cost.
The timeline remains aggressive, with full-scale prototype flight testing expected within 21 months following contract award.
Initial Operating Capability is planned for fiscal year 2031, with 20 mission-ready aircraft delivered to an operational unit.
Recent combat experiences appear to have influenced the concept’s development, particularly situations where defenders exhausted interceptors before attackers exhausted drones.
The solicitation argues that maintaining continuous MMA operations could pressure opponents into consuming costly defensive missiles at unsustainable rates.
“Keeping a constant airborne MMA presence to launch weapons, gather intelligence, perform electronic warfare missions, or relay communications will force an adversary to stay on the defensive,” the Defense Innovation Unit stated.
Via Defense News
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