Northrop Grumman's Plan To Replace The MQ-9 Reaper With Stealthy Autonomous Drones
TYLER ROGOWAYView Tyler Rogoway's Articles
In the 2000s,
semi-autonomous unmanned air combat vehicle (UCAV) technology was proving to be
the greatest revolution in air combat since the jet engine, then it disappeared
totally from the Air Force plans and nomenclature. It was as if the idea of
stealthy, long-range drones simply never existed. Now, as the U.S. faces
growing threats from peer state competitors with highly capable integrated air
defense systems, environments in which the Air Force's current fleet of MQ-9 Reaper drones cannot survive, the UCAV has suddenly
become the next big item on the Air Force's shopping list.
Dubbed the MQ-Next, the
exact requirements for the Air Force's next-generation combat drone initiative
remain undefined, but the service has reached out to its industry partners to
see what they have to offer. Northrop Grumman, a company known for its low-observable (stealth) design capabilities and its bright
history with advanced unmanned systems—namely the X-47 demonstrators and the RQ-4 Global Hawk—has thrown their hat in
the ring for what will be an emerging highly-lucrative tender in the coming
years.
With
that in mind, Richard Sullivan, a Vice President of Program Management at
Northrop Grumman, talked in-depth with The
War Zone not
just about their own potential drone offerings under the MQ-Next initiative,
but also about their shadowy Distributed Autonomy Responsive Control (DARC)
advanced mission management system that aims to control not just the MQ-Next
vehicles, but what will be a family of interconnected unmanned systems that
will rule the skies in the not so distant future.
What Sullivan describes
in our discussion is exactly what the author
posited half a decade ago, down to the platform-agnostic command and control
software that will control future autonomous swarms and the other assets that
will enable them. You can read all about that, as well as a deep examination of
the mysterious disappearance of the UCAV from the Air Force's portfolio around
2010 and the massive implications of that reality in this past War Zone feature. In fact, to understand
the potential UCAVs offer and what MQ-Next truly represents, it really is a
must-read.
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