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Title: The Case for Treating Drones as Ammunition

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

army Special Forces ‌Officers Advocate for Drone Integration as Ammunition Supply

WASHINGTON D.C. – Two U.S. Army Special‍ Forces ‌commanders are calling⁢ for‍ a fundamental shift in ‍how the Army acquires and distributes small drones, arguing ⁢they should be treated‍ as ammunition rather than customary military equipment. In a ⁤recent article published by War on the Rocks, Zachary Griffiths and Jeff Ivas contend⁤ this approach would ⁤streamline logistics, reduce ⁤costs, and accelerate​ drone proliferation to frontline units.

the officers,‍ who command units within the 10th Special Forces Group (Airborne), propose integrating drone allocations into existing unit budgets and⁢ leveraging the ‍established ⁤”ammunition enterprise” for ⁤procurement ⁢and distribution. This system, they argue, offers transparency through the ammunition ⁤forecasting system, predictable⁣ demand for suppliers, and a simplified accountability process – replacing property loss investigations with a standard “forecast, draw, fly, turn in” loop.

Griffiths and Ivas suggest a phased implementation, beginning with⁢ adding drones to squad and platoon-level tasks and establishing “role-based drone families” focused initially on reconnaissance and first-person view capabilities as they become available from the Army’s SkyFoundry. ‌They ⁤recommend piloting ​the program at Army posts housing “transforming-in-contact” brigades,units already⁢ gaining experience with small drone integration.

The authors emphasize the adaptability of this approach, noting it remains beneficial even if the Army expands drone-related occupational specialties ‌and could⁣ readily accommodate emerging drone technologies like ground and maritime drones. They also point to the existing ammunition system’s capacity ‌to handle complex and expensive systems – citing the $4 million Patriot missile – as precedent for incorporating more elegant ⁢one-way attack drones.

“Small drones are ammunition. The Army should treat them as such,” they conclude.

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