U.S. Army expands eBee VISION fleet with new European purchase

Key Points
  • EagleNXT sold three eBee VISION UAS kits to the U.S. Army's 7th Army Training Command, facilitated by German integrator Dronivo, announced May 5, 2026.
  • The U.S. Army has now ordered 34 eBee VISION systems across six organizations, including 15 for a European unit and nine for the National Training Center at Fort Irwin.

EagleNXT has sold three eBee VISION unmanned aerial system kits to the U.S. Army’s 7th Army Training Command, the company announced on May 5, 2026, adding to a growing Army-wide adoption of the fixed-wing ISR platform that now totals 34 systems across six distinct organizations.

The sale was facilitated by Dronivo, a German UAS integrator specializing in defense and government solutions, which provided local support for the transaction. The partnership with Dronivo is designed to ensure integration and training support for U.S. forces operating in the European theater, leveraging the German company’s expertise in European military markets, according to EagleNXT’s announcement.

The 7th Army Training Command purchase follows a pattern of accelerating Army acquisition of the eBee VISION. Recent orders have included 15 units for a U.S. Army unit stationed in Europe and nine systems for the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, California, according to the company’s announcement. The three new systems will support training at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center, where U.S. and allied forces conduct rotational exercises that form the backbone of NATO’s eastern flank readiness program.

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The eBee VISION is a backpack-portable, hand-launched fixed-wing drone designed for a single operator to deploy in under three minutes. It carries HD video with 32x zoom and thermal imaging options, operates at up to 90 minutes of flight time, and maintains a wireless range of 12 miles, equivalent to 20 kilometers. Critically, it can function in GNSS-denied environments, meaning GPS jamming does not ground it, a capability that has become a baseline requirement for any ISR platform expected to operate in a contested electronic warfare environment. The platform is NDAA-compliant and carries Blue UAS clearance, which means it has passed the Department of War’s vetting process for drone systems that can be procured and operated by U.S. military and government customers without the national security concerns associated with certain foreign-manufactured alternatives.

“We are proud to support the U.S. Army in Europe with advanced, mission-ready ISR technology,” said Bill Irby, CEO of EagleNXT. “The eBee VISION’s portability, unique fixed-wing performance envelope, and secure real-time video capabilities make it an ideal tool for dynamic training environments,” Irby said. The fixed-wing performance envelope he referenced is a meaningful differentiator from the multirotor drones that dominate the small UAS market. A fixed-wing platform like the eBee VISION trades vertical takeoff and landing capability for substantially greater range, endurance, and efficiency at altitude, making it better suited to the wide-area surveillance and reconnaissance missions that training exercises require than a multirotor that can hover but runs out of battery far sooner.

The training use case for ISR drones has evolved considerably as the Army has absorbed lessons from Ukraine, where persistent aerial surveillance has changed how units move, communicate, and conceal themselves. Training opposing force, or OPFOR, units with capable ISR platforms that can realistically simulate what a near-peer adversary would field gives rotational units exposure to the kind of persistent overhead observation they would face in a real conflict, forcing changes in tactics, techniques, and procedures that would be far more expensive to learn under fire. The eBee VISION’s combination of portability, endurance, and thermal imaging makes it a credible training tool for that purpose.

The 7th Army Training Command oversees the Army’s training enterprise in Europe, providing the institutional structure behind exercises like those at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center in Hohenfels, Germany, where U.S. and allied units rotate through realistic combat training scenarios. Equipping the training command’s cadre with ISR platforms that can generate realistic surveillance pressure on rotational units connects directly to the Army’s broader effort to ensure that soldiers arriving in Europe are prepared for the electronic and aerial surveillance environment they would encounter if deterrence failed.

The cumulative picture of Army eBee VISION procurement is worth noting alongside the individual orders. Thirty-four systems across six distinct organizations, spread across both stateside training centers and European forward-deployed units, suggests that the platform has cleared the initial evaluation threshold and is being adopted at a pace driven by operational demand rather than a single procurement decision. A 15-unit order for a European unit, combined with nine for the National Training Center and now three for 7th Army Training Command, describes a platform working its way through the Army’s training architecture from both ends simultaneously. EagleNXT, which rebranded from AgEagle Aerial Systems to better reflect its defense and government focus, is building a customer base in the Army that extends well beyond the initial adopters.

Thirty-four systems is not a large number measured against the scale of U.S. Army aviation or ISR programs. But for a backpack-portable hand-launched fixed-wing drone making its way into training centers and forward-deployed units across Europe and the continental United States, it is a number that describes a platform finding its operational niche and filling it consistently.

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