-
Mired in economic trouble, Bangladesh pins hopes on election boost
-
Chinese cash in jewellery at automated gold recyclers as prices soar
-
Israel to partially reopen Gaza's Rafah crossing
-
'Quiet assassin' Rybakina targets world number one after Melbourne win
-
Deportation raids drive Minneapolis immigrant family into hiding
-
Nvidia boss insists 'huge' investment in OpenAI on track
-
'Immortal' Indian comics keep up with changing times
-
With Trump mum, last US-Russia nuclear pact set to end
-
In Sudan's old port of Suakin, dreams of a tourism revival
-
Narco violence dominates as Costa Rica votes for president
-
Snowstorm barrels into southern US as blast of icy weather widens
-
LA Olympic chief 'deeply regrets' flirty Maxwell emails in Epstein files
-
Rose powers to commanding six-shot lead at Torrey Pines
-
Barca wasteful but beat Elche to extend Liga lead
-
Konate cut short compassionate leave to ease Liverpool injury crisis
-
Separatist attacks in Pakistan kill 33, dozens of militants dead
-
Dodgers manager Roberts says Ohtani won't pitch in Classic
-
Arsenal stretch Premier League lead as Chelsea, Liverpool stage comebacks
-
Korda defies cold and wind to lead LPGA opener
-
New head of US mission in Venezuela arrives as ties warm
-
Barca triumph at Elche to extend Liga lead
-
Ekitike, Wirtz give Liverpool sight of bright future in Newcastle win
-
West Indies 'tick boxes' in shortened T20 against South Africa
-
Chelsea have something 'special' says Rosenior
-
De Zerbi 'ready to go to war' to solve Marseille troubles
-
Hornets hold off Wemby's Spurs for sixth NBA win in a row
-
Moyes blasts killjoy booking after Everton's late leveller
-
Ex-prince Andrew again caught up in Epstein scandal
-
Bayern held at Hamburg to open door for Dortmund
-
Atletico stumble to draw at Levante, Villarreal held
-
Chelsea stage impressive fightback to beat West Ham
-
Arsenal stretch Premier League lead, Chelsea fightback breaks Hammers' hearts
-
Napoli edge Fiorentina as injury crisis deepens
-
How Lego got swept up in US-Mexico trade frictions
-
UK rights campaigner Tatchell arrested at pro-Palestinian protest
-
Iran says progress made towards US talks despite attack jitters
-
'Empowering': Ireland's first female sumo wrestler blazes a trail
-
US judge denies Minnesota bid to suspend immigration sweeps
-
Ukraine hit by mass power outages after 'technical malfunction'
-
AC Milan prolong France 'keeper Maignan deal by five years
-
Arteta hails Arsenal's statement rout of Leeds
-
Marseille buckle as Paris FC battle back for draw
-
Protesters demand 'justice' one month after Swiss bar fire
-
Philadelphia's Paul George gets 25-game NBA drugs ban
-
La Rochelle suffer defeat after shock Atonio retirement
-
'It wasn't working': Canada province ends drug decriminalization
-
Kishan, Arshdeep star as India down New Zealand in T20 finale
-
Moreno bags brace but Villarreal held at Osasuna
-
Kramaric keeps in-form Hoffenheim rolling in Bundesliga
-
'Skimo': Adrenalin-packed sprint to make Olympic debut
Latest GA Autonomous Jet Demo Features Live Air-to-Air Engagement Capability
Autonomous Tasking With TacACE and Optix.C2 Showcase Maturity and Operational Readiness
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA / ACCESS Newswire / July 17, 2025 / General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. (GA-ASI) and General Atomics Integrated Intelligence, Inc. (GA-Intelligence) successfully completed a groundbreaking demonstration on July 8, integrating technologies across multiple affiliates to showcase long-range kill chain effects, including an autonomous air-to-air engagement. The flight integrated local and global sensor fusion to deliver real-time situational awareness and autonomous tasking to an airborne MQ-20 Avenger® through the Tactical Autonomy Core Ecosystem (TacACE) to close the kill chain and showcase the system's maturity and operational readiness for the warfighter.
The event featured the integration of a Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA), a fully compliant government-owned autonomy implementation, and beyond-line-of-sight (BLOS) Command and Control (C2). The MQ-20 unmanned jet, furnished by GA-ASI, acted as a CCA surrogate in a sensor Emission Control (EMCON) environment. It was operated autonomously and controlled using distributed-edge C2 nodes powered by Optix.C2 and Omniview software. Optix.C2, a product from General Atomics-Intelligence, provided low-latency, localized C2 functionality while remaining networked to the broader operational picture, enabling real-time coordination across multiple domains.
Dr. Brian Ralston, President of GA-Intelligence, applauded the joint effort. "This demonstration illustrates the value of integrating cutting-edge and proven technologies across the GA enterprise. The Optix data platform and C2 capability enable rapid integration and experimentation to address critical DoD and IC needs."
General Atomics successfully fused space-based sensing and tactical sensing with the C2 node during the flight, giving the aircraft access to a complete real-time threat picture for enhanced onboard autonomous decision-making. The demonstration also included live coordination of Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) and kinetic tasking through a unified operator interface capable of deployment in virtually any cloud environment.
During the exercise, the live MQ-20 aircraft autonomously patrolled a designated Combat Air Patrol (CAP) zone, leveraging off-board sensors to demonstrate how passive collection techniques can inform autonomous platforms in real time. Four CCA surrogates - one live and three virtual - were directed by an operator to investigate multiple targets of interest. Upon identifying them as threats, the operator issued a command to initiate the BLOS engagement. The autonomous systems maneuvered into position, simulated missile launches, assessed battle damage, and returned to CAP without additional operator input.
"This demonstration represents a substantial leap in autonomy and human-machine interfaces that are critical to the warfighter in the near-peer fight," said Michael Atwood, Vice President of Advanced Programs at GA-ASI. "By integrating Optix.C2 with TacACE, we're delivering a system that not only operates at the tactical edge but also enables rapid decision-making and execution across the battlespace. This is the future of warfare - scalable, autonomous systems that empower the warfighter to dominate at range."
GA-ASI continues to develop and validate autonomy products that deliver scalable, collaborative aircraft behavior with minimal operator input. GA-Intelligence provided multi-sensor global fusion and engagement orchestration algorithms and interfaces. This latest milestone expands the company's autonomy portfolio with access to a complete threat picture while advancing critical-edge C2 capabilities and intuitive operator interfaces.
About GA-ASI
General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. is the world's foremost builder of Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS). Logging more than 8 million flight hours, the Predator® line of UAS has flown for over 30 years and includes MQ-9A Reaper®, MQ-1C Gray Eagle®, MQ-20 Avenger®, and MQ-9B SkyGuardian®/SeaGuardian®. The company is dedicated to providing long-endurance, multi-mission solutions that deliver persistent situational awareness and rapid strike.
For more information, visit www.ga-asi.com.
Avenger, EagleEye, Gray Eagle, Lynx, Predator, Reaper, SeaGuardian, and SkyGuardian are trademarks of General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc., registered in the United States and/or other countries.
About GA-Intelligence
General Atomics Integrated Intelligence, Inc. is a data science, software development, and systems engineering firm focused on developing advanced analytic capabilities to customers in both public and private sectors, with a strong emphasis on tools in support of spatio-temporal (space and time) data management, multi-source/multi-INT correlation and data fusion, tracking, entity resolution, location forecasting, and multi-domain global situational awareness (MDGSA) leveraging extremely high volume/velocity data sources. For more information, visit www.ga-intelligence.com.
Contact Information
GA-ASI Media Relations
[email protected]
(858) 524-8101
SOURCE: General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc.
View the original press release on ACCESS Newswire
C.Kovalenko--BTB