U.S. military showed its top commanders ship-based drone defense system

Key Points
  • SOUTHCOM commander Marine Gen. Francis L. Donovan and Rear Adm. Carlos Sardiello viewed SNC's BRAWLR air defense system aboard a combat vessel at Exercise FLEX 2026.
  • BRAWLR is a combat-proven, reconfigurable launcher at TRL 9, operable by one person with a 10-minute setup time and 46-rocket capacity in its maximum configuration.

Sierra Nevada Company’s BRAWLR air defense system made a notable public appearance at Exercise FLEX 2026, when senior U.S. military commanders, including the four-star head of U.S. Southern Command, got a close look at the weapon system integrated aboard a Textron Systems’ multi-mission uncrewed surface vessel.

The visit brought together Marine Gen. Francis L. Donovan, commander of U.S. Southern Command, and Rear Adm. Carlos Sardiello, commander of U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command and U.S. 4th Fleet, alongside senior executive service representatives and partner nation officials.

BRAWLR, Battery Revolving Adaptive Weapons Launcher, Reconfigurable, is a combat-proven subsystem within SNC’s Rapidly Deployable Air Defense and Counter-Unmanned Systems Family of Systems. The platform integrates commercially available components with military-grade sensors, communications, and effectors into a hybrid, open-architecture air defense system built for expeditionary use. It can independently track and defeat airborne threats, or bolt onto existing systems to extend their range and kinetic punch.

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The system’s physical footprint is compact — 5 feet by 5 feet by 7 feet, weighing 2,300 pounds empty — but what it can carry is anything but modest. BRAWLR features four adaptable weapons stations with a combined capacity of 2,000 pounds, and in its “BEASTMODE” configuration it can be loaded with 46 Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System rockets. The launcher’s high-capacity positioner rotates ±180 degrees at 40 degrees per second and elevates from 0 to 45 degrees, giving it wide angular coverage against fast-moving aerial threats. A FLIR sensor handles targeting, while a Silvus MANET radio provides the mesh networking backbone for communications. The whole system runs on Windows 10 and outputs data in OMNI and Asterix formats, making it compatible with a broad range of existing command-and-control architectures through SNC’s TRAX open architecture framework.

Photo by U.S. Naval Forces Southern Command & U.S. 4th Fleet

Hardware integrations include LAU-7, LAU-68, and LAU-131 launcher rails alongside a power converter, giving operators flexibility in the types of munitions they hang on those four weapons stations. The system draws 9 kilowatts of power and can be transported on a 463L pallet, trailer, or flatbed — standard military logistics formats that keep it compatible with the widest possible range of lift options, whether that means a C-130, a truck, or a vessel.

The operational numbers are where BRAWLR distinguishes itself from heavier, more complex air defense installations. Setup takes 10 minutes. Breakdown takes 3. A single operator handles each phase — setup, operation, and breakdown — meaning a small crew can get the system combat-ready, run a mission, and be back on the move in the time it takes most fixed air defense batteries to complete their pre-launch checklists. Training the operator takes seven days. The lead time from order to fielding runs roughly six months from materials to production, a relatively short window for a system at Technology Readiness Level 9 — meaning fully mature and proven in its intended operational environment. Manufacturing Readiness Level 8 and Integration Readiness Level 9 round out the picture of a platform that isn’t a prototype or a concept demonstrator. It’s a production-ready system.

The appearance at FLEX 2026 in front of SOUTHCOM’s senior leadership — a command responsible for U.S. military operations across Latin America and the Caribbean, including vast maritime zones — carries strategic weight. The region has seen growing concern over narco-trafficking networks employing increasingly sophisticated aerial assets, as well as broader competition dynamics that have elevated the importance of maritime domain awareness and force protection throughout the Western Hemisphere. A compact, rapidly deployable air defense system capable of being integrated onto a vessel and brought to readiness in under 10 minutes addresses a real operational gap in that environment. The presence of partner nation officials at the demonstration suggests interest that extends beyond the U.S. Navy alone.

SNC, headquartered in Sparks, Nevada, has positioned BRAWLR as the kinetic backbone of a broader counter-unmanned systems architecture rather than a standalone point-defense solution. Its open architecture is designed to absorb new sensors, effectors, and communications links as threats evolve — an explicit acknowledgment that the drone threat in particular is changing faster than traditional procurement cycles can accommodate. A system that can be reconfigured in the field, loaded with 46 rockets, and operational in 10 minutes is not designed for the static base defense problem. It’s designed for the kind of fluid, distributed maritime environment where SOUTHCOM operates — and where the next serious air threat may arrive not from a nation-state air force, but from a swarm of cheap, commercially sourced unmanned aircraft.

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