The Army will field AEVEX Aerospace's Atlas Precision Strike System as part of its initial fielding of short-range Launched Effects, the company announced today.
Atlas is described as a “lightweight, Group II precision-strike platform” that has “extended loiter time,” modular payloads, and uses autonomy for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance. The system can be rapidly deployed and operated by a “small team with minimal setup,” according to the company.
Sensors, electronic warfare and strike payloads can be integrated into the system using open architecture, and it has navigation capabilities that allow it to operate in contested environments, the company announcements states.
Brig. Gen. David Phillips, the Army’s program executive officer for aviation, told AEVEX during the Association of the United States Army conference this month that the service chose Atlas because it was “production-ready” and the system could be rapidly fielded.
In his April 30 memo laying out the Army Transformation Initiative, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth included a stipulation that the service field a mix of air and ground Launched Effects in every division by the end of 2026.
The Army is working to develop short, medium and long-range variants within its Launched Effects portfolio. Short-range Launched Effects are roughly defined as having a range of between 40 and 125 kilometers.
AEVEX was one of three companies that provided 20 Launched Effects systems each during a three-week user demonstration with the Army in August at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, WA. Anduril and Raytheon also provided systems during that demonstration, which focused on testing short-range Launched Effects capabilities.