German startup unveils AI-driven strike drone

European defense firm STARK unveiled the One Way Effector – Vertical (OWE-V) drone on April 14 following successful testing in Ukraine.

The OWE-V, developed with direct input from the Ukrainian Armed Forces, is a VTOL (Vertical Take-Off and Landing) capable platform with a 100-kilometer range and advanced AI-powered targeting. STARK says the drone was specifically designed to counter electronic warfare threats while allowing operators to recall the system in-flight to minimize collateral damage.

“We cannot win tomorrow’s conflicts with the systems designed for yesterday’s wars,” said Philip Lockwood, Managing Director of STARK and former head of NATO’s Innovation Unit. “The OWE-V reflects our commitment to constant innovation to meet our operators’ needs.”

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

According to STARK, the drone’s modular architecture supports ongoing software and hardware upgrades, giving operators greater adaptability in high-threat environments. The OWE-V has undergone extensive field trials in Ukraine, where its performance in contested electromagnetic environments has helped shape its development.

In a statement, the company emphasized that OWE-V is optimized for rapid deployment without runways, supporting covert operations and enhancing battlefield flexibility. The system is part of STARK’s broader vision to supply NATO and European partners with mass-producible deterrent systems in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The company says the platform also allows for reusable training missions, as units can be recalled mid-flight. This capability, along with VTOL deployment, significantly reduces operating costs and logistics burdens.

Based in Berlin and Munich, STARK was founded in 2024 to reimagine European defense production. It joins the UXS Alliance, a network of companies developing unmanned systems across land, sea, air, and space domains.

The launch of OWE-V coincides with the rapid evolution of drone warfare along NATO’s eastern frontier. As Russia increases its use of unmanned systems in Ukraine, European allies are accelerating development of what has been described as a “drone wall” stretching from the Arctic to the Black Sea.

Lockwood added, “Our new system is one step closer to protecting NATO’s one billion citizens and giving Ukraine a decisive advantage in its fight for freedom.”

The company has signaled plans to begin scaled production at facilities across Europe later this year.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Poland’s drone spending jumped 260-fold

Poland's spending on drones and counter-drone systems has grown 260-fold in under three years, reaching roughly $6.9 billion (26 billion zloty) this year alone,...

Investors bet big on Ukraine-tested threat detector

MITS Capital, an American-Ukrainian investment group, announced on July 9 that it has invested in Dropla Tech, a Danish-Ukrainian defense technology company whose flagship...

Russia says its new tanks can defeat drones, deploys them to front

Russian state-aligned outlet Izvestia has confirmed that Russian military units operating on the front have received T-72B3A tanks equipped with an upgraded version of...

RENK expands Rheinmetall deal as Lynx orders keep growing

German engineering firm RENK just locked in more than $308 million in future business keeping one of Europe's newest tracked infantry vehicles actually moving,...

Germany will pay to build Ukraine’s deep-strike drone fleet

Ukraine just secured a German promise to bankroll production of one of its most closely guarded new weapons, a jet-powered strike drone capable of...