- Redwire has delivered more than 200 Penguin UAS systems to the Ukrainian Armed Forces for combat operations in Ukraine since 2022, per the company's statement.
- The Penguin C UAS was included by name in U.S. security assistance packages for Ukraine in July 2023 and December 2024, per Edge Autonomy documentation.
Redwire has delivered more than 200 Penguin uncrewed aerial systems to the Ukrainian Armed Forces since 2022, the company announced in its latest social media post.
The disclosure, posted by Redwire on its official social media account, marks one of the more concrete public tallies of a Western UAS platform’s operational footprint in Ukraine. More than 200 systems delivered to a single customer in an active conflict zone over roughly three years of sustained combat operations is a figure that speaks to both the platform’s operational durability and the Ukrainian military’s confidence in it as a persistent tactical asset.
Redwire described the Penguin as “a fixture in Ukraine’s defense against Russia since 2022” and characterized the delivery count as combat-proven, a designation the company is now using explicitly in its marketing and capability communications.
The Penguin UAS is developed and manufactured by Edge Autonomy, a wholly owned subsidiary of Redwire that specializes in uncrewed aerial systems, advanced optics, and resilient energy solutions for the Department of War, U.S. federal civilian agencies, and allied governments. Edge Autonomy brings nearly three decades of technology heritage and manufacturing expertise to its UAS product line, and the Penguin represents the company’s core fixed-wing tactical platform — designed around extended endurance, rapid deployment, and ease of operation for units that need persistent overhead awareness without the logistics burden of larger, more complex systems.
The platform’s combat record in Ukraine was sufficient to earn it an explicit name-check in U.S. government security assistance packages — twice. The Penguin C UAS was included by name in United States security assistance packages for Ukraine in July 2023 and again in December 2024, according to Edge Autonomy’s product documentation. Inclusion by name in a U.S. security assistance package is not a routine occurrence; it requires the system to have demonstrated operational value that justifies specific procurement rather than generic capability categories, and appearing in two separate packages separated by 17 months indicates sustained confidence in the platform’s battlefield performance rather than a one-time evaluation result.
The combat footage released by Redwire was filmed in the Donetsk region, Ukraine’s most heavily contested oblast and the site of some of the most intense and sustained ground combat of the entire war. Operating a fixed-wing UAS effectively in Donetsk requires navigating a dense and contested electromagnetic environment where Russian electronic warfare systems are actively attempting to disrupt GPS guidance, datalinks, and control signals across the entire spectrum of Ukrainian drone operations.
Fixed-wing UAS platforms like the Penguin offer a fundamentally different operational profile than the rotary-wing and multicopter systems that have dominated public imagery of drone warfare in Ukraine. Where multicopters excel at close-range, low-altitude reconnaissance and first-person-view strike missions, fixed-wing platforms trade hovering capability for endurance and range — the ability to stay aloft for hours rather than minutes, cover larger geographic areas on a single battery or fuel load, and operate at altitudes and distances that keep the aircraft beyond the effective range of small arms and short-range jamming systems. For intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance missions that require persistent coverage of troop movements, logistics routes, or artillery positions over extended periods, that endurance advantage is operationally decisive.
Redwire’s description of Edge Autonomy as having a “well-established and growing presence in Europe” points toward a commercial and governmental relationship that extends beyond Ukraine-specific deliveries. NATO members across Eastern Europe have been accelerating UAS procurement since 2022, with the war providing both the operational evidence and the political urgency to justify defense budget allocations toward systems that many alliance members had historically underinvested in. A company with more than 200 systems operating in the most demanding UAS environment on the planet has a sales argument that no specification sheet or controlled demonstration can replicate.

