Army Expanding Range, Role for Aerial ISR Tech.

AuthorRoaten, Meredith
PositionDISPATCHES

ABERDEEN PROVING GROUND, Maryland -- The Army is in a "campaign of learning" phase for its newest intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft that will increase the speed, range and altitude of the service's intelligence gathering, officials said.

The multi-domain sensing solution program is one of the Army's 28 "key-enablers" that support the service's modernization effort. One of the major capabilities coming out of the program is the high-altitude detection and exploitation system, or HADES, spy plane.

The development for its sensors is currently ramping up thanks to data from soldier touchpoints and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance aircraft, said Ronald Rizzo, deputy project director for Sensors Aerial Intelligence. The program office awarded an other transaction authority agreement for the second part of the sensor development for HADES in September to L3Harris and Raytheon Technologies.

The Army expects to field the uncrewed vehicle by 2028 and could purchase as many as 16 systems, Rizzo said during a recent Army event at Aberdeen Proving Ground.

The Army has not decided what platform will carry the sensors, but one system that the service is learning from is the ARTEMIS jet, or airborne reconnaissance and target exploitation multi-mission intelligence system.

The aircraft flies in the European Command and is a "high-demand asset," Rizzo said. It's meant to prove the Army can put its latest intelligence tech on a more...

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