Colombia launches major counter-drone program after U.S. hits Venezuela

Key Points
  • Colombia announced a National Anti-Drone Shield on January 10, citing the recent U.S. strike on Venezuela as the trigger for an urgent overhaul of national airspace security.
  • The Defense Ministry invited foreign governments and companies to a January 16 briefing as it begins evaluating counter-drone proposals under strict technical, legal, and financial criteria.

Colombia announced on January 10 that it is launching a COP 6.2 trillion (approximately $1.6 billion) National Anti-Drone Shield, a move taken directly in response to the recent U.S. military strike on Venezuela, the Colombian government said in an official statement.

According to the Ministry of Defense, the program creates a nationwide detection and interdiction architecture designed to counter unmanned aerial threats across Colombia’s territory, including border zones, critical infrastructure, and major population centers. The ministry said the decision was accelerated after the U.S. attack on Venezuelan air-defense assets earlier this month, which heightened regional security concerns and prompted Bogotá to reassess its vulnerability to long-range and cross-border drone incursions.

The ministry said the National Anti-Drone Shield will be built as an integrated, multi-layered system combining early-warning sensors, electronic warfare tools, physical interceptors, and command-and-control nodes. Colombia described the effort as the country’s largest investment to date in airspace security.

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In an official release, the Ministry of Defense said, “This plan seeks nationwide integration between the Armed Forces, civil aviation authorities, and emergency systems to protect national territory from hostile unmanned systems.” The announcement specifies that the program’s objective is to “strengthen Colombia’s ability to detect, identify, track, and neutralize advanced aerial threats.”

The ministry also said the first step begins next week, when Colombia will host a classified briefing for international companies and government delegations on January 16 to outline operational requirements. Authorities will evaluate proposals on technical performance, interoperability, cost, delivery speed, and legal compliance.

According to the ministry, the COP 6.2 trillion ($1.6 billion) budget allocation covers procurement, integration work, training, life-cycle support, and initial operational deployment. The Defense Ministry stated that funds were secured as part of Colombia’s 2026 national budget planning cycle.

Officials added that the shield will include fixed and mobile components to support border patrol units, air-defense forces, police, and infrastructure-protection missions. Colombia said the system will be deployed in phases once vendors are selected and integration timelines are finalized.

While Colombia has previously invested in counter-UAS equipment for local protection tasks, the government said the scale of this plan is unprecedented and was driven in part by the rapid expansion of advanced unmanned systems in regional conflicts. That assessment was sharpened after the U.S. strike inside Venezuela — an operation that exposed gaps in South America’s ability to track or counter high-speed drones and precision weapons transiting contested airspace.

The ministry added that a key part of the program is building a secure data-sharing network that links military and civil authorities to ensure real-time situational awareness during high-risk incidents.

Colombia also plans to create a specialized command element responsible for technical oversight, training standards, and operational procedures for anti-drone missions. This new unit will coordinate directly with the Air Force and National Police.

The government’s statement emphasized that protecting airports, energy infrastructure, and military facilities will be the first priority areas under the new shield.

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