Tomahawk missiles planned aboard sea drones in latest Lockheed deal

Lockheed Martin is investing $50 million in sea drone maker Saildrone to help equip its biggest surveillance drones with missiles, marking the first time the long-distance autonomous ships will carry high-powered missiles aboard. (AFP/File)
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Updated 29 October 2025
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Tomahawk missiles planned aboard sea drones in latest Lockheed deal

  • Lockheed’s investment will also establish collaborative systems integration teams
  • The companies plan to conduct live-fire demonstrations on the water in 2026

WASHINGTON: Lockheed Martin is investing $50 million in sea drone maker Saildrone to help equip its biggest surveillance drones with missiles, marking the first time the long-distance autonomous ships will carry high-powered missiles aboard.
The weaponization plan announced on Wednesday comes as the Pentagon seeks to counter China’s growing naval power in the Pacific and applies lessons learned from Ukraine’s effective use of explosive-laden sea drones against Russian warships in the Black Sea.
Under the deal, Saildrone’s 72-foot-long (22 m) “Surveyor” ship — a scientific data and intelligence-gathering autonomous vessel powered by wind, diesel, and solar — will be modified to carry Lockheed’s JAGM Quad Launcher missile system and anti-ship missiles, according to a joint statement.
Lockheed’s investment will also establish collaborative systems integration teams to accelerate design and manufacturing of larger Saildrone platforms capable of carrying longer-range Tomahawk missiles and submarine-detecting towed sonar arrays.
The companies plan to conduct live-fire demonstrations on the water in 2026.
Saildrone vessels have been deployed by the US Navy since 2021 on surveillance missions and are currently operational “24/7/365 alongside American Sailors in combat theaters around the world,” according to the statement. The company has logged over 2 million nautical miles on customer missions.
With $5 billion in funds appropriated for uncrewed ships and maritime robots in the “Big Beautiful Bill,” many firms are vying for a piece of the action.
Saildrone will maintain shipbuilding responsibilities while Lockheed serves as lead mission integrator. Development work will create jobs at Austal USA on the Gulf of Mexico coast, where Saildrone’s larger systems are produced, though the companies said the work could eventually scale to other US shipyards.


Trump says it is ‘too late’ for talks as US presses on with Iran campaign

Updated 19 sec ago
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Trump says it is ‘too late’ for talks as US presses on with Iran campaign

  • Trump also said US had sufficient weapons stockpiled to sustain prolonged conflicts, describing a “virtually unlimited supply” of munitions

LONDON: President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that Tehran had sought talks with Washington but claimed it was “too late,” as the US pressed ahead with its military campaign against Iran.

“Their air defense, Air Force, Navy, and leadership is gone. They want to talk. I said ‘Too Late!’” Trump wrote on his Truth Social profile, responding to an opinion piece.

In a separate overnight post, Trump said the US had sufficient weapons stockpiled to sustain prolonged conflicts, describing a “virtually unlimited supply” of munitions.

“Wars can be fought ‘forever,’ and very successfully, using just these supplies,” he wrote, adding: “The United States is stocked, and ready to WIN, BIG!!!”

His remarks late Monday came as the conflict entered its fourth day following US and Israeli airstrikes on Iran on Saturday.

Earlier on Monday, speaking briefly ahead of a Medal of Honor ceremony at the White House, Trump declined to specify how long operations against Tehran would continue, but said they had initially been projected to last four to five weeks.

“We’re already substantially ahead of our time projections. But whatever the time is, it’s OK. Whatever it takes,” he said.