Pentagon’s New Drone Defense Marketplace Sees $13 Million In Purchases

The Pentagon’s online marketplace offering anti-drone technology to all military branches and federal agencies saw initial purchases totaling $13 million, the Defense Department announced. Initial sales following the marketplace’s February launch have included sensors, radar systems, electronic warfare systems, and kinetic drone interceptors. The purchases sent anti-drone tech to U.S. Central Command, Joint Task Force Southern Border, plus units tasked with defending sites around the United States.

The marketplace is spearheaded by the U.S. Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401, charged with coordinating national defense against Unmanned Aircraft Systems. The hub’s aim is to simplify the process of procuring counter-drone defense by enabling government customers to order technology from approved vendors from a centralized digital location instantly.

“Through the platform, customers can review performance data, compare systems and make informed decisions based on real-world test results and verified capabilities,” U.S. Army Maj. Matt Mellor, the task force’s lead acquisitions specialist, said in a statement.

Investing In Drone Killing Tech

The new interface bridges capability gaps between the military and federal law enforcement agencies by allowing them to buy the same technology to build defenses against and take down rogue drones.

The need for shared drone-killing technology across military branches and law enforcement agencies reflects the rise in military challenges and public safety concerns posed by the proliferation of Unmanned Aircraft Systems.

The task force has so far invested over $600 million in counter-drone defenses, including $100 million in mobile anti-drone systems to deploy in 11 cities across the United States during the 2026 FIFA World Cup plus $158 million to protect critical infrastructure, according to a Defense Department statement.

It also invested an additional $350 million to support counter-drone warfare in combat operations against Iran during Operation Epic Fury, specifically to meet pressing demands from U.S. Central Command, Air Force Global Strike Command, Air Combat Command, and U.S. Army Transportation Command.

Growing Military and Law Enforcement Demands

The task force’s pivot to e-commerce reflects sweeping modernization initiatives taking place within the Army with an eye to reforming complex business practices and speeding up the process of getting technology out into the field – in this case, not only to military sites and combat zones, but to civilian law enforcement agencies and first responders across the United States.

The current offerings on the marketplace will likely expand exponentially in response to growing demand from all U.S. military branches and federal law enforcement agencies seeking the ability to protect members of the public and fortify sensitive locations from drone intrusions.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/zitaballingerfletcher/2026/04/22/pentagons-new-drone-defense-marketplace-sees-13-million-in-purchases/