U.S. Department of War

05/19/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/19/2026 11:47

Defeating the Swarm: Project Flytrap Accelerates NATO's Counter-Drone Lethality

Above the pine forest of the Pabradė Training Area, Lithuania, roughly 30 kilometers from the Belarusian border, a small quadcopter rises into a sky shared with dozens of other drones. Friendly and adversary, sensor and strike, American and British. Below it, soldiers are learning, in real time, what it takes to fight as a squadron in three dimensions.

Project Flytrap
An M1265A1 Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense Stryker assigned to 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, fires its XM914 30 mm cannon during counter-unmanned aerial system live-fire testing at Pabradė Training Area, Lithuania, May 14, 2026. U.S. and allied forces are conducting Project Flytrap, April 27-May 31, 2026, as part of a series of linked exercises that includes Sword 26, Saber Strike 26, Immediate Response and Swift Response, which transform experimentation into capability. During Project Flytrap, soldiers integrate counter-unmanned systems, artificial intelligence-enabled command and control and live data networks to move faster, decide faster and fight more effectively across all domains.
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Credit: Army Sgt. Max Elliott
VIRIN: 260514-A-ZT835-5886

"Right now, we are implementing these systems at the troop level, company level and squadron level," said Army Staff Sgt. Mateus Nunes, an infantryman assigned to Echo Troop, 2nd Squadron, 2nd Cavalry Regiment. "We are just seeing how they work."

This is Project Flytrap 5.0, a U.S. Army V Corps counter-unmanned aerial systems initiative that, over the past year, has scaled from the individual soldier to the squadron level against the same low-cost drones reshaping the modern battlefield.

Live-Fire Testing
An M2A3 Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle assigned to the 6th Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, fires its M242 25 mm Bushmaster chain gun during counter-unmanned aerial system live-fire testing at Pabradė Training Area, Lithuania, May 14, 2026. The M242 Bushmaster is capable of engaging both ground and aerial targets at ranges up to 2,500 meters.
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Credit: Army Sgt. Max Elliott
VIRIN: 260513-A-ZT835-9045

The exercise, which began April 30 and ended today, is part of Saber Strike 26. The exercise puts the 2nd Squadron, 2nd Cavalry Regiment, in the lead, with the 52nd Air Defense Artillery Brigade and the United Kingdom's 3rd Parachute Regiment integrating and testing more than 50 industry-provided technologies, including radars, radio frequency defeat systems, kinetic interceptors, launched effects and unmanned ground vehicles. The systems were networked across a combined U.S.-U.K. tactical data architecture and tested against a live opposing force.

The program's arc has been deliberate. Iterations 2.0 through 4.0, carried out in Germany and Poland between May and August 2025, tested which counter-UAS equipment belonged at which echelons and developed and standardized initial small-unit level tactics for fighting drones. Flytrap 4.5 at Putlos, Germany, last November, tested the next generation of industry technology and sharpened individual operator proficiency. Now, Flytrap 5.0 is the first to integrate these systems at a squadron scale.

Cannon Fire
Army air and missile defense crew members assigned to the 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, load an XM914 30 mm cannon aboard an M1265A1 Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense Stryker during counter-unmanned aerial system live-fire testing at Pabradė Training Area, Lithuania, May 14, 2026.
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Credit: Army Sgt. Max Elliott
VIRIN: 260514-A-ZT835-1519

"We are transforming to enable offensive maneuver in a drone and electronic-warfare saturated environment, and Flytrap is essential to making that happen," said Army Gen. Christopher Donahue, commander of U.S. Army Europe and Africa. "This effort is about getting technology into the hands of soldiers, in the field, to figure out what works and what doesn't. Then we share those lessons across the Army, the joint force and with our allies."

Flytrap 5.0 is formally nested inside the Eastern Flank Deterrence Initiative, NATO's warfighting concept in the land domain. EFDI links digital architecture and operating systems across nations to detect and decide faster, leveraging artificial intelligence to process data faster, to connect units and effects to strike faster and at scale. It also means reducing the cost curve in defeating drones and incorporating cheaper attritable systems.

Maintenance Crew
Army Pfc. Hayden Regeon, an air and missile defense crew member assigned to the 5th Battalion, 4th Air Defense Artillery Regiment, performs maintenance on an XM914 30 mm cannon of an M1265A1 Maneuver Short-Range Air Defense Stryker during Project Flytrap at Pabradė Training Area, Lithuania, May 14, 2026.
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Credit: Army Sgt. Max Elliott
VIRIN: 260513-A-ZT835-1843

"Success in Flytrap 5.0 is a little different than other exercises - in some ways failure is still success," said Army Maj. Jared Whitaker, the V Corps technical integration and assessment lead for Project Flytrap. "The industry [that] creates these systems can get immediate feedback, make hardware and technical changes rapidly - so that when those systems are fielded to soldiers, they've already got a look by soldiers and will perform significantly better than in the past."

Flytrap 6.0 will take the program to the brigade level. That is an order of magnitude for more platforms, soldiers and decisions, and at the level at which V Corps intends to fully validate the capability. Until then, the pine forest at Pabradė is the proving ground.

U.S. Department of War published this content on May 19, 2026, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on May 19, 2026 at 17:47 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]