The Pentagon wants small drones to be the future of networked warfare, but 
buying them hasn’t been easy

Written by Jackson Barnett  DEC 28, 2020 | FEDSCOOP
https://www.fedscoop.com/pentagon-small-drones-networked-warfare


A critical piece of the future of networked warfare is a technology already 
familiar to many consumers and hobbyists: small drones.

The idea is that small unmanned aerial systems (sUAS), or drones, can collect 
data at tactical levels, buzzing around adversaries and in front of 
forward-deployed troops.

With the right networks and software architecture to run the systems, the 
flying data-collectors can send back critical information to troops on the 
ground and cloud servers.

Military leaders say the technology will be crucial in future battlefield 
operations.

But despite all the excitement, the Department of Defense has struggled to 
field drones easily across the enterprise.

The difficulty finding the right technology is part of the problem, and more 
broadly, the existing marketplace has matured in a way that effectively has 
shut out the DOD.

Bringing the services’ vision for drones into reality will depend on the 
software architecture and networks they operate on, according to interviews 
with experts across the Army, Defense Innovation Unit and industry.

In the private sector, companies are springing up to create synchronization in 
software to allow different types of aerial systems, ground controllers and 
payloads to talk with each other in flight. The military is fast on its heels 
following the concept.

Another major challenge so far has been the fragmented U.S. market for drones. 
U.S. firms have struggled to compete with Chinese mega-manufacturer DJI, which 
the Army banned in 2017 over fears of data espionage and weak cybersecurity.

Many other government and military agencies have followed suit in recent years 
with their own bans of DJI and Chinese-made drones. Without a strong U.S. 
competitor that can offer the military a single trusted and cyber-secure 
option, piecing together solutions has been slower than expected.

“Our men and women in uniform were left with no options at all,” Matthew 
Borowski, an sUAS technical project manager at the Defense Innovation Unit, 
told FedScoop in September of where the military was when DJI started to get 
restricted in 2017.

Since then, he and others at DIU have been working for years on a new “trusted” 
drone procurement pipeline.

The military, with its vast budget and procurement resources, faces an uphill 
battle with drones in particular because the market is really targeted for 
consumers.

Most of the DOD’s other tech is purpose-built for security or defense work, but 
the type of cheap drones built for backyard photography lacked the 
cybersecurity and data privacy the department needed for its sensitive 
operations.

And with DJI’s dominance, few U.S. companies had the scale to start selling to 
the government.

The same type of thinking for getting drones to work at scale — open 
architecture software, prioritizing interoperability and data sharing, and 
finding trusted companies to work with — has applications in the military’s 
approach to emerging and commercial technologies it wants to use, acquisition 
reform advocates have said.

For something like artificial intelligence, data sharing and interoperability 
are often-cited buzzwords former officials say are needed for success. For 
flying cars, which the Air Force has its eye on, building a U.S.-based market 
early is a lesson it learned from early drone debacles.

“The sticking point is having somebody drive interoperability,” Borowski said.

How the military found its way

Leaders at the top of the Army have especially stressed the need to reduce the 
“cognitive load” on soldiers with manned/unmanned teaming.

Small drones check many of those boxes with their ability to fly autonomously 
and collect copious amounts of data.

The Army is even more excited by the idea that soon soldiers will be able to 
work efficiently without the need for direct control from a ground operator 
because of improvements in automation and computer vison that could direct an 
aircraft through obstacles.

“You got this constant umbrella of sensors that are around you and working 
together and reconnecting back through this AI cloud,” Col. Samuel Edwards, 
director of the Army’s Robotics Requirements Division, told FedScoop. “That is 
kind of what we talk about and what we mean when we use the words autonomous 
and AI.”

Before it was banned from government use, many civilian and military agencies 
worked with DJI for the low costs, usability and availability of its tech. 
DJI’s global dominance also fragmented the U.S. companies trying to break into 
the market, as almost none could meet DJI’s price point.

“We collectively were slow to see where that would go,” Dave Sharpin, head of 
drone company Auterion’s government team, said of the fast rise of DJI. 
Auterion works with the Army on drone interoperability.

In August the Defense Innovation Unit, where Borowski works, launched its 
solution with a purchasing program called Blue sUAS that gives agencies across 
the government the ability to purchase secure systems for aerial missions. 
Since its launch, the program that operates similarly to a General Services 
Administration Multiple Award Schedule, has expanded to also offer state and 
local governments the ability the purchase drones they can trust.

Borowski and his fellow drone expert and project manager at DIU, Chris 
Bonzagni, said a critical part of getting the drone program off the ground was 
to create a common open-architecture software base to be able to mix-and-match 
different hardware components. The Army plans to take that concept a step 
further in the years to come by building universal remote controls and other 
field tools to maximize interoperability between not only drones but ground 
robots and other autonomous systems.

“Part of the purpose of using an open architecture scenario is we can bring in 
any capacity that we need,” said Carlos Correia, director at the Soldier 
Unmanned Aircraft Systems product office, which aims to leverage the use of 
small commercial drones.

It’s different than the Blue sUAS project launched by DIU, but the two offices 
worked closely together and found similar solutions to their problems.

One controller to rule them all

By 2024, the Army wants to have a single source of commands from a “Universal 
Robotic Controller Application” to control its flying systems and be able to 
ingest the data they send back.

Also connected to the universal controller, or URCA, would be AI-enabled 
analysis located in cloud-at-the-edge servers. The network the drones run on 
will be just as important as the drones themselves, enabling the capabilities 
that cannot be put directly in the processors on the drone, Edwards told 
FedScoop.

“We really approach it from looking at the drone first and small UAS first,” 
Edwards said. “Whatever is left, we rely on that AI [in the] cloud” to do.

The idea is emblematic of the Internet of Things approach the military is 
leaning toward with autonomous technology that can also link to central servers 
to enhance battlefield awareness.

Other technology enhancements will also be critical, such as increased 
bandwidth and moving cloud computing capabilities to the edge.

Autonomy will also be key, like being able to recognize adversaries without 
even needing to connect back to central platforms for image analysis.

“The drone is going to have to be able to do a lot of things on its own,” 
Edwards said.

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