Loitering munitions firm UVision looking to expand in US: CEO
UVision's CEO Ran Gozali said his vision of the company also includes transitioning from “single loitering munitions towards autonomous, multi-launch arrays.”
UVision's CEO Ran Gozali said his vision of the company also includes transitioning from “single loitering munitions towards autonomous, multi-launch arrays.”
The war in “Ukraine and what happened in Israel has put in the spotlight the use of unmanned systems," UVision exec Izthik Huber told Breaking Defense.
Loitering munitions were used extensively in the recent conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh.
Uvision’s Hero line of loitering munitions – aka kamikaze drones – carry precision-guided warheads ranging from just over a pound to 17-plus lbs.
UVision has opened a US subsidiary, CEO Avi Mizrahi says, and hopes to open a plant in the US within the next year.
As the US tightens its terms for financing the Israeli military, one of America's closest allies is beginning to sell its weapons to the US, instead of the other way around.
Michigan’s defense ecosystem and expertise makes it a special asset for production.