The U.S. Navy’s push to put an armed, carrier-capable unmanned combat aircraft on the flight deck is sharpening into a real contest, as General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc. and Anduril Industries used the Singapore Air Show to preview early thinking for the service’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft. Their message was consistent: the Navy’s version will not be a simple derivative of the Air Force effort, but a purpose-built design shaped by catapult launches, arrested recoveries, deck-spotting constraints, and the unforgiving math of wartime attrition, all while operating as a combat multiplier alongside the F-35C and F/A-18E/F. Read more...
A carrier-capable unmanned combat jet designed to launch and recover from carriers, then team with F-35C and Super Hornets to extend range, add sensors and jamming, and carry extra weapons for air defense or strike using task-based autonomy with human control and lethal actions (Picture source: U.S. DoW).
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