
The deal accelerates the U.S. special‑operations community’s ability to field adaptable, combat‑tested drones, strengthening tactical readiness and operational flexibility.
The U.S. military’s push toward agile, low‑cost unmanned systems has intensified demand for platforms that can be quickly re‑tasked across diverse missions. Draganfly’s Flex FPV drone answers that call with a plug‑and‑play architecture that accommodates a range of sensors, payloads, and flight envelopes, making it a versatile tool for special‑operations teams that operate in contested environments. By integrating first‑person‑view capabilities, the Flex platform offers operators immersive situational awareness, a critical advantage in urban and close‑quarters scenarios where split‑second decisions can determine mission success.
DelMar Aerospace brings a decade‑plus track record of delivering realistic UAS training to government customers, and its Camp Pendleton facility replicates battlefield conditions for hands‑on learning. The curriculum covers everything from drone assembly and field repairs to advanced mission planning, ensuring that operators not only fly the Flex FPV but also maintain and adapt it under pressure. This joint effort creates a unified training pipeline that aligns hardware capabilities with tactical doctrine, reducing the learning curve and accelerating deployment timelines for Air Force Special Operations Command units.
Beyond the immediate contract, the partnership signals a broader shift toward modular, interoperable drone ecosystems within defense procurement. Competitors are racing to offer comparable flexibility, but Draganfly’s early foothold in the special‑ops arena could translate into additional government contracts and commercial spin‑offs. As the Department of Defense continues to prioritize rapid fielding and sustainment, vendors that combine innovative hardware with vetted training solutions are poised to capture a larger share of the growing tactical UAS market.
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