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Why the Army Just Canceled Its Future Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System

The U.S. Army cited rapid technological change and a shift toward quicker, modular solutions—favoring widespread drone deployment over long-term procurement plans.

The United States Army has canceled its Future Tactical Unmanned Aircraft System (FTUAS) program, citing rapid technological advances.

It is the latest high-profile U.S. Army program to face the axe. It comes just a week after the service announced it was cancelling development of the General Dynamics Land Systems (GDLS) M10 Booker “light tank” and the General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc. (GA-ASI) MQ-1 Gray Eagle medium-altitude, long-endurance (MALE) unmanned aerial system (UAS). The cuts are part of the Army Transformation Initiative (ATI), which was announced on May 1, 2025, to reduce waste and re-examine some of the service’s recent acquisition programs.

“Battlefields across the world are changing at a rapid pace. Autonomous systems are becoming more lethal and less expensive. Sensors and decoys are everywhere. Dual-use technologies are continuously evolving and outpacing our processes to defeat them. To maintain our edge on the battlefield, our Army will transform to a leaner, more lethal force by adapting how we fight, train, organize, and buy equipment,” wrote Secretary of the Army Dan Driscoll and Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Randy A. George, in a letter to Army leaders.

The letter mentioned the Gray Eagle, which added, “Yesterday’s weapons will not win tomorrow’s wars.”

According to a report from international military analyst firm Janes, the FTUAS had sought to develop a successor drone for the Textron Systems RQ-7 Shadow, and “to provide brigade-level intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR).”

It would be hard to suggest that the FTUAS was yesterday’s weapon, but the Army doesn’t see it as a platform for the future either. 

Yet, it was just last September that the program achieved two milestones. The UAS was being developed to “provide Brigade Combat Teams (BCT) with an organic capability to conduct reconnaissance and surveillance operations that collect, develop, and report actionable intelligence, allowing the BCT commander to maintain dominance during Multi-Domain Operations,” the Army explained last year.

The service noted that the FTUAS offered “transformational capabilities” that included Vertical Takeoff and Landing (VTOL) “for runway independence,” On-The-Move (OTM) command and control, “and Soldier led, field-level maintenance,” while its “Modular Open Systems Approach allows the system to keep pace with technology through rapid capability insertions.”

That wasn’t enough to keep the program funded and in development.

“We are changing how we move forward with the integration of uncrewed aircraft systems based on the evolving battlefield,” the Army told Janes. “We can’t get locked into long-term programmes of record as technology is rapidly evolving, and we need to bring in technologies that solve today’s problems.”

“We will first field every division with 1,000 drones, [and] after that we will experiment with those systems and see if we scale that larger or not,” the Army added. 

“Based on that, the use case of success is how we will delineate and request additional funding for additional units.”

Two competitors had taken part in the service’s Modular Open System Approach (MOSA) “conformance evaluations and flight demonstrations” at the U.S. Army’s Redstone Test Center, outside Huntsville, Alabama, last year. These included the Textron Systems Aerosonde Mk 4.8 HQ and the Griffon Aerospace Valian.

The service had previously announced it would select a contest winner by the end of the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2025 (FY25), which ends on September 30. According to Janes, the Army announced last month that it had received the first production of Valiant for testing. It is unclear if RQ-7 Shadow will continue to be employed in the ISR role. 

More than 500 are now reported to be in service.

About the Author: Peter Suciu

Peter Suciu has contributed over 3,200 published pieces to more than four dozen magazines and websites over a thirty-year career in journalism. He regularly writes about military hardware, firearms history, cybersecurity, politics, and international affairs. Peter is also a Contributing Writer for Forbes and Clearance Jobs. He is based in Michigan. You can follow him on Twitter: @PeterSuciu. You can email the author: [email protected].

Image Credit: Shutterstock/ Chris Mercer.



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