Thales Builds a Laser-Guided Rocket to Swat Drones

by | Jun 16, 2026 | Military Aviation, News | 0 comments

The cheapest way to kill a cheap drone might be a guided rocket that costs a fraction of a missile.

At Eurosatory 2026, French defence giant Thales unveiled the LGR275 “Proxy,” a 70 mm laser-guided rocket built specifically to shoot down small drones. It is a direct answer to the central problem of modern air defence: how to destroy a $1,000 drone without firing a $1 million missile at it.

Quick Facts

  • Weapon: Thales LGR275 “Proxy” 70 mm laser-guided rocket
  • Role: counter-drone (C-UAS)
  • Unveiled: opening day of Eurosatory 2026
  • The problem it solves: the cost imbalance of shooting cheap drones with expensive missiles
  • Class: precision-guided 70 mm rocket

The Cost Curve of Killing Drones

Ukraine and the Middle East have exposed an uncomfortable truth: defenders have been spending million-dollar interceptors to down drones that cost as much as a used car. That math loses a war of attrition. The fix is cheaper effectors — and the humble 70 mm rocket, guided to within centimetres by a laser, has emerged as one of the most promising.

Laser-guided 70mm rocket
A laser-guided 70 mm rocket of the same class as Thales’ new LGR275 counter-drone rocket. (U.S. military photo)

Europe’s Counter-Drone Scramble

Thales is far from alone — counter-drone systems dominated Eurosatory 2026, reflecting how completely small drones have reshaped the battlefield. A precision rocket like the LGR275 slots between expensive guided missiles and short-ranged guns and jammers, giving forces a mid-tier weapon that is accurate, affordable, and available in quantity. In a war defined by swarms, quantity is its own kind of quality.

Sources: Thales; Eurosatory 2026; The Defense News.

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