德国加速囤积自杀式无人机,与莱茵金属达成协议。
Germany Accelerates Kamikaze Drone Stockpiling With Rheinmetall Deal

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/military/germany-accelerates-kamikaze-drone-stockpiling-rheinmetall-deal

德国议会最近批准了一项与莱茵金属公司签订的价值3.45亿美元(可能高达12亿美元)的合同,用于采购巡飞弹药——通常被称为“自杀式无人机”,这标志着欧洲军队向无人机战争的快速转变。 这项采购最初计划用于德国驻立陶宛旅,紧随其后的是对其他公司攻击无人机的6.37亿美元投资,凸显了因乌克兰和中东地区的冲突而加剧的囤积这些武器的紧迫性。 此举反映了全球范围内争相获取低成本攻击无人机的“竞赛”,并因此产生对有效反无人机技术的需求。 虽然美国军方正在部署基于激光的反无人机系统,但人们对关键基础设施(如数据中心和电网)遭受无人机攻击的脆弱性日益担忧,正如近期海湾地区发生的事件所表明。 威胁的增加强调了对经济且易于获得的防御措施的需求。

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原文

Germany's parliament has approved a sizeable contract for defense giant Rheinmetall to supply loitering munitions, or kamikaze drones, to the Bundeswehr, underscoring just how quickly European militaries are internalizing drone warfare lessons from both the Russia-Ukraine war and, more recently, the U.S.-Iran conflict. Berlin's latest procurement push makes it clear that one-way attack drones are becoming a serious threat, and the race to stockpile them has begun.

Bloomberg reports that the budget committee of the Bundestag approved the Defense Ministry's proposal for an initial tranche of Rheinmetall's suicide drones worth $345 million.

The deal is capped at around $1.2 billion for Rheinmetall loitering munitions and depends on the firm meeting development and delivery milestones. The drones are initially intended for Germany's brigade in Lithuania, but there is a possibility that they will be deployed elsewhere.

The approval follows Germany's February decision to purchase $637 million worth of strike drones from startups Helsing and STARK. Rheinmetall missed out on those deals because it lacked a working prototype at the time.

The Defense Ministry confirmed the latest contract without identifying Rheinmetall: "As with the other two contracts, there are clearly defined qualification requirements, termination milestones, and innovation clauses."

Lessons learned from the current conflicts across Eurasia have served as a wake-up call for countries around the world, unleashing a frantic race among the world's militaries to procure low-cost attack drones.

What follows will be counter-drone systems to combat this emerging threat, as the war in the Middle East showed that the US and its Gulf allies lacked low-cost solutions.

On the U.S. homeland front, the Federal Aviation Administration has given the U.S. military the green light to deploy high-energy counter-drone laser weapons in U.S. airspace. Alarmingly, there are very few, if not any, low-cost counter-drone systems guarding America's data centers, transmission substations, stadiums, and other critical infrastructure.

One month before the US-Iran conflict broke out, we informed readers of the urgent need for data centers to consider counter-drone systems. What followed were multiple data centers struck by Iranian drones in the Gulf region. Civilian infrastructure will not be spared as the world becomes increasingly dangerous and chaotic.

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