- United States Army Chief Scientist Dr. David Gorsich visited MSI Defense Solutions to review ground vehicle integration capabilities and the EAGLS counter-UAS system during a facility tour in North Carolina.
- The visit reflects ongoing Army efforts to evaluate modular air defense and counter-drone technologies that can be integrated rapidly into operational forces.
The United States Army’s Chief Scientist for Ground Vehicle Systems visited MSI Defense Solutions’ headquarters and production facility in Mooresville, North Carolina, last week to review the company’s vehicle integration and counter-unmanned aerial system capabilities, the company confirmed Monday.
The visit by Dr. David Gorsich, who serves at the United States Army Combat Capabilities Development Command Ground Vehicle Systems Center (DEVCOM GVSC), included demonstrations of MSI’s EAGLS counter-UAS platform and discussions focused on future ground force modernization.
According to a statement released by MSI Defense Solutions, Dr. Gorsich toured the company’s headquarters and manufacturing operations, where company engineers presented “full-spectrum integration capabilities” covering tactical ground vehicle platforms, modular air defense systems, and counter-UAS technologies. The visit included a live demonstration of the EAGLS system and an overview of its underlying system architecture.
The company said the tour also provided insight into MSI’s electrical integration processes, fabrication facilities, and rapid prototyping operations. Discussions between Army officials and industry representatives focused on digital engineering environments and layered defense architectures designed to improve how new capabilities are developed and fielded.
As noted by MSI Defense Solutions, the meeting emphasized how smaller defense integrators can deliver “speed, precision, and cost-effectiveness where it matters most, getting capability to the warfighter faster.” The company framed the visit as part of broader collaboration between government organizations, private industry, and academic institutions supporting defense innovation.
Dr. Gorsich was joined during portions of the visit by Dr. Mesbah Uddin, Executive Director of the Division of Research at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, and David Jerome, Executive Director of the Institute of Digital Engineering USA (IDEUSA). MSI said the participation of academic and research leaders highlighted cross-sector cooperation within the Mooresville–Charlotte technology corridor.
DEVCOM GVSC serves as the United States Army’s primary research organization for ground vehicle modernization, supporting efforts ranging from armored vehicle survivability to autonomy, power systems, and digital engineering frameworks. Engagements with industry partners allow Army scientists to assess emerging technologies outside traditional large defense prime contractors and identify integration pathways for operational use.
MSI Defense Solutions’ EAGLS system, which was demonstrated during the visit, is designed as a modular counter-UAS platform capable of detecting, tracking, and engaging small unmanned aerial systems. Counter-drone systems have become a growing priority for the U.S. military as commercially derived drones increasingly appear in reconnaissance, targeting, and strike roles across multiple conflict zones.
Counter-UAS platforms like EAGLS combine sensors, command-and-control software, and effectors — which may include kinetic or electronic defeat mechanisms — into a layered defensive architecture. Such systems are intended to protect maneuver forces, forward operating bases, and mobile formations against low-cost aerial threats that traditional air defense systems were not originally designed to counter.
The Army has expanded experimentation with modular air defense solutions in response to lessons learned from recent conflicts, where small drones have demonstrated the ability to disrupt logistics, expose troop positions, and conduct precision attacks at relatively low cost. Integrating counter-UAS capabilities onto ground vehicle platforms has become one approach aimed at restoring mobility and survivability for frontline units.
According to the company statement, discussions during the visit also addressed digital engineering environments — an area the Army increasingly views as central to reducing development timelines. Digital engineering allows system designs to be modeled, tested, and refined virtually before physical production, enabling faster iteration cycles and potentially lowering program costs.

