Drones. The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 has awarded Perennial Autonomy a contract to support counter-UAS operations.

Perennial Autonomy Secures $500M JIATF 401 Counter-UAS Contract

  • Perennial Autonomy has secured a $500M counter-drone contract from JIATF 401
  • Contract will expand deployment of low-cost drone interceptors for warfighters
  • AI-enabled drone interceptors will support layered battlefield air defense

Perennial Autonomy has received a potential $500 million contract from Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to provide support for enterprisewide counter-unmanned aerial system, or C-UAS, operations.

Perennial Autonomy Secures $500M JIATF 401 Counter-UAS Contract

JIATF 401’s counter-UAS initiative demonstrates how the Army is strengthening defenses against evolving aerial threats and advancing mission readiness. Stay informed on the technologies and priorities supporting the service’s 2030 objectives at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Army Summit on June 18, featuring panel discussions and networking with senior government and GovCon leaders. Register now!

What Does the JIATF 401 C-UAS Contract Cover?

The Department of War said Monday the three-year indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract is intended to advance the deployment of low-cost drone interceptors designed to protect warfighters and force projection platforms from adversary unmanned systems. 

Which Drone Technologies Are Included in the Award?

Systems under the contract include Merops interceptors, Bumblebee quadcopters and Hornet midrange strike drones, which are already being used by forces operating within U.S. Central Command. JIATF 401 previously selected Perennial Autonomy’s Bumblebee V2 system under a separate $5.2 million agreement awarded in February to support operational counter-drone evaluations for rapidly deployable forces.

These platforms feature detection, tracking and targeting technologies such as computer vision, radio frequency sensing and secure communications while keeping operators in control of lethal-force decisions. They are meant to reinforce a layered defense against enemy drones, enabling commanders to respond rapidly to evolving threats.

The award aligns with broader JIATF 401 efforts to integrate interoperable sensors, effectors and mission command systems across the joint force while accelerating counter-drone procurement through the JIATF 401 C-UAS marketplace.

Sponsor

Related Articles

Executive Interviews