Army experiments with integrating attack drones into artillery formations
New division formation design includes HIMARS, howitzers, and one-way UAVs.
Meghann Myers | July 2, 2025
Army Drones
The Army has a gap to close between long-range precision weapons and indirect fires at closer ranges, so they’re looking to attack drones to fill in the mid-range capabilities, the service’s vice chief of staff said Wednesday.
The 25th Infantry Division’s artillery command is testing out a new structure that pairs first-person view attack drones with traditional systems, Gen. James Mingus told an audience during an event at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“There's a belief out there that the singular way in which we approach fires, going back to the validity and use of cannon artillery, you know, is still valid,” he said. “We're imagining a future where instead of it just being all tube,” there will be a High Mobility Artillery Rocket System battalion, an M777 howitzer battalion, “and then in that third battalion, it'll be a combination of mortars, 105 mm, launched defects, loitering munitions, first-person drones, that makes up the delta for the longer range and the cannon artillery.”
The Army has been simulating different battlefield scenarios using versions of this configuration, maneuvering as a division or corps, he added.
They’re also simulating how they’ll integrate their forthcoming long-raise precision weapon, Precision Strike Missile, or PrSM.
https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2025/07/army-experiments-integrating-attack-drones-artillery-formations/406494/