IDEX 2025: GA-ASI to unveil new exportable small UAS platform in June 2025
Details
More Products & Services
Products & Services
Military Unmanned Systems Handbook
Shephard Media
The Military Unmanned Systems Handbook (Digital Download) is an international guide to the military UV industry and provides detailed information on air, ground and sea (surface & sub-sea) vehicles as well as subsystems. What's included: Unencrypted 390+ page PDF of equipment and supplier information Market summary
Defence Insight
Shephard Media
Some of the things people like you use Defence Insight for:
- Total addressable market sizing ($)
- Competitor analysis
- Cost analysis
- Market forecasting
- Growth identification
- Increasing closing ratio
- Increasing closing order value
- Estimating product potential
- Calculating sales forecasting
- Supply and demand analysis
- Total addressable market sizing ($)
- Competitor analysis
- Cost analysis
- Market forecasting
- Growth identification
- Increasing closing ratio
- Increasing closing order value
- Estimating product potential
- Calculating sales forecasting
- Supply and demand analysis
Shephard Plus Update
Shephard Media
Shephard Plus is updating in June 2018 with rich new capabilities, and is now one of the most cost-effective and valuable aerospace and defence market intell...
Description
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems (GA-ASI) has confirmed an upcoming unveiling of a new exportable small uncrewed aerial system (UAS) product at IDEX inAbu Dhabi.
Speaking to Shephard, following a post on X, C.Mark Brinkley, strategic communications and marketing lead atGeneral Atomics Aeronautical Systems, confirmed that the company was working on an “exportable small UAS” as its latest product, with further details to be unveiled in full at the Paris Air Show in June.
“This is something we've been working on for a while,” he confirmed. “It's real.” GA-ASI has worked on a number of air-launched effect platforms in the past, notably and most recently its Eaglet which launched in 2023. It also demonstrated an inflight release of its Advanced Air-Launched Effects ( A2LE) platform an MQ-20 Avenger in November 2023.
Related Articles
Anduril and GA-ASI propel forward in US Air Force CCA programme's next phase
GA-ASI produces first EagleEye radar
This platform could be similar, such asanother ALE, although Brinkley did not specify whether the new UAS would be air-launched or ground-based.
While finer details on what the small exportable UAS would look like, such as height, weight class, payload and range, were not disclosed, Brinkley said that the UAS would likely be fixed around one size class that has the “right amount of SWAP” and marketed specifically as an exportable product.
“Exportability, being able to integrate purchasing nation tech, it's always been a challenge,” he remarked. “I think this current administration is looking for ways to break some of those stove pipes, and this is absolutely one.
“The novel part of it is opening the door for purchasing nations to be able to bring some of their own systems and subsystems, radars, sensors [to the product],” Brinkley explained.
The new UAS product is being designed, in some part, to tackle the perennial issue of affordable combat mass in air forces' fleets.
“A lot of nations could see the value in a fleet of small UAS, that they could have some amount of measure of indigenous control and effort. Something that's purpose built to give flexibility to the international market,”Brinkley concluded.
Shephard's IDEX 2025 coverage is sponsored by Shephard News Subscriptions:
Speaking to Shephard, following a post on X, C.Mark Brinkley, strategic communications and marketing lead atGeneral Atomics Aeronautical Systems, confirmed that the company was working on an “exportable small UAS” as its latest product, with further details to be unveiled in full at the Paris Air Show in June.
“This is something we've been working on for a while,” he confirmed. “It's real.” GA-ASI has worked on a number of air-launched effect platforms in the past, notably and most recently its Eaglet which launched in 2023. It also demonstrated an inflight release of its Advanced Air-Launched Effects ( A2LE) platform an MQ-20 Avenger in November 2023.
Related Articles
Anduril and GA-ASI propel forward in US Air Force CCA programme's next phase
GA-ASI produces first EagleEye radar
This platform could be similar, such asanother ALE, although Brinkley did not specify whether the new UAS would be air-launched or ground-based.
While finer details on what the small exportable UAS would look like, such as height, weight class, payload and range, were not disclosed, Brinkley said that the UAS would likely be fixed around one size class that has the “right amount of SWAP” and marketed specifically as an exportable product.
“Exportability, being able to integrate purchasing nation tech, it's always been a challenge,” he remarked. “I think this current administration is looking for ways to break some of those stove pipes, and this is absolutely one.
“The novel part of it is opening the door for purchasing nations to be able to bring some of their own systems and subsystems, radars, sensors [to the product],” Brinkley explained.
The new UAS product is being designed, in some part, to tackle the perennial issue of affordable combat mass in air forces' fleets.
“A lot of nations could see the value in a fleet of small UAS, that they could have some amount of measure of indigenous control and effort. Something that's purpose built to give flexibility to the international market,”Brinkley concluded.
Shephard's IDEX 2025 coverage is sponsored by Shephard News Subscriptions:

Share
Recent Chats
Share via email
Future: handle WhatsApp here
Future: handle LinkedIn here
Future: handle Twitter here
SUBMENU HERE
Share via Chat
Copy Link