The drone threat has gotten so big that allies are now pooling their shopping lists.
At Eurosatory 2026, the U.S. Army and partner nations signed a joint statement of intent to expand shared marketplaces for drones and counter-drone systems — a coordinated push to buy, test and field anti-drone gear together rather than each nation reinventing the wheel.
Quick Facts
- What: joint U.S.–allied statement on shared drone / counter-drone marketplaces
- Where: Eurosatory 2026, Paris
- When: June 16, 2026
- Goal: jointly buy, test and field C-UAS systems
- Why: small drones have become the defining battlefield threat
Buying Together Against the Swarm
Counter-drone technology is evolving so fast that procurement — normally measured in years — can’t keep up. A shared marketplace lets allied nations compare systems, pool demand, and field proven gear quickly, instead of each running its own slow competition. With small drones now threatening everything from front-line trenches to rear-area air bases, speed matters more than ever.

The Lesson From Ukraine
The war in Ukraine turned counter-drone defence from a niche into a top priority for every modern army. Cheap drones now account for a large share of battlefield losses, and the side that defends against them most efficiently has a real edge. By coordinating their counter-drone buying, the U.S. and its allies are betting that the answer to mass-produced threats is mass-produced — and shared — defence.
Sources: U.S. Army; Eurosatory 2026; Defence-Industry.eu.




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