Pentagon plans to mass produce attack drone used in Iran war
The Straits Times
The LUCAS attack drones were created by reverse-engineering Iran’s cheap and deadly Shahed system. Read more at straitstimes.com.
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon is planning to mass produce one-way LUCAS attack drones, which have been deployed by US forces in the current war in the Middle East after they were created by reverse-engineering Iran’s cheap and deadly Shahed system.
The LUCAS drone – or Low-Cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System – is a US version of Iran’s kamikaze drone, and is manufactured by the US company SpektreWorks. The Defense Department sent a unit operating the drones to the Middle East ahead of the start of Operation Epic Fury against Iran.
Pentagon leadership have described the system as indispensable in the conflict.
“The idea is to mass produce them in this country and have surge capacity,” Mr Emil Michael, the Defense Department’s under secretary of defense for research and engineering, said at a defense industry conference in Washington on March 17.
“They work very well so far,” Mr Michael added, calling the drones “a useful tool in the arsenal”.
The one-way attack drones are estimated to cost roughly US$55,000 (S$70,200) a piece and have a range that could exceed 400 nautical miles. The aim is to replace more expensive US cruise missiles that can cost millions of dollars each.

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