The United States Department of Defense (DoD) is accelerating efforts to field drones built in the U.S. and reduce reliance on systems with Chinese components. In a recent update, the “Blue UAS” program expanded its list of approved drones that meet domestic sourcing standards — yet many approved models still use motors made in China.
These Chinese-made motors highlight a supply-chain gap the Pentagon is now trying to close. The shift comes amid concerns that dependence on adversary-nation components leaves U.S. forces vulnerable in future conflicts.
The program’s focus isn’t just sourcing. It also includes faster acquisitions and prioritizing drones as expendable assets rather than high-cost aircraft. That change aligns with new procurement guidelines that let military units buy and deploy drones quicker.