The inaugural deployment of the LUCAS drone, a near-clone of the Iranian Shahed-136, signals a big Pentagon step into the era of affordable mass.
For years, Western military doctrine relied on the assumption that superior technology could defeat superior numbers. But the opening salvos of the U.S.-Israel war on Iran have shown that even the world’s most advanced air defense network can be bankrupted by a sufficiently cheap enemy.
The mostly U.S.-provided equipment mustered by U.S. security partners in the Gulf have downed the vast majority of drones and missiles launched by Iran. On Monday, the Gulf Times cited official figures in reporting that UAE had a “93% success rate” and Qatar a “97% interception rate.”
But these success rates still constitute strategic failure. Every $30,000 Shahed that forces the U.S. or a partner to fire a $4 million PAC-3 missile is a massive win for Iran—because of the relative cost, and because Iran has far more cheap drones than the U.S. and its partners have expensive interceptors.
Successive waves of cheap Iranian drones will find defenses increasingly depleted. Already, the 10 percent of unintercepted drones are doing damage entirely disproportional to their price tag. On March 1, a single Shahed reportedly destroyed a $300 million AN/TPS-59 radar site in Bahrain.
Even if the U.S. and its partners manage to end the war before Iranian drones overwhelm depleted defensive magazines, it will take a long time to replenish stocks. For instance, while PAC-3 production is projected to reach 2,000 units annually by 2032, current monthly output is estimated at around 50 to 60. This poses a risk to readiness in other operational theaters.
Air defenses aside, the Pentagon’s cloning of the Shahed shows how the U.S. military is forging its own approach to the era of affordable mass. While the Iranian drone flies to pre-programmed GPS coordinates, LUCAS has a vision-based object recognition system that enables it to find and hit specific military hardware—a nod to the strategic imperative to limit collateral damage. LUCAS is also designed to be modular, able to serve as a sensor, jammer, or communication relay.
And LUCAS’ combat debut may prove far more than a regional tactical experiment. If successful in the coming weeks, it could be a live-fire proof of concept for the Hellscape strategy being developed for the Pacific. By demonstrating that mass-produced, expendable platforms can contest denied airspace, the Pentagon is validating a model for deterring larger state actors in more complex maritime theaters.
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