The Stalker UAS is designed for long-range reconnaissance and intelligence gathering, providing imagery and data to support real-time mission-critical decisions. Proven across six continents with hundreds of thousands of operational flight hours, it has demonstrated long endurance performance under harsh conditions.
This order increases the number of allied forces deploying the Stalker UAS, which is already in extensive use within the U.S. Department of Defense. Redwire highlighted that the system’s adoption supports interoperability between U.S. and allied assets in joint operations.
“As the modern battlefield continues to demand greater capabilities in more agile form, our Stalker UAS can quickly adapt to multiple mission covert operations,” said Steve Adlich, President of Edge Autonomy. “Traditionally, more complex missions have called for larger Group 3 aircraft, but Stalker enables greater capability in a more agile form factor while still allowing for custom configurations.”
Edge Autonomy provides autonomous systems, advanced optics and energy solutions to the U.S. Department of Defense, federal civilian agencies and allied governments. With nearly three decades of experience and deployments in almost 80 countries, the company delivers technologies based on operational mission requirements.
Redwire, listed on the New York Stock Exchange under RDW, is an integrated space and defence technology business. It employs around 1,300 staff across the United States and Europe, developing aerospace infrastructure, autonomous systems and AI-driven operations.