The United States Army—yes, that Army—managed to buy 13,000 Merops interceptor drones in about eight days, according to Army Secretary Dan Driscoll, who told Congress last week that the whole thing happened right after operations against Iran got underway.
Eight days.
Buddy, there are people in Washington who can’t decide what to have for lunch in eight days.
When the Math Finally Makes Sense
Now here’s the part that will really tickle you.
These Merops gadgets are not big, shiny, ribbon-cutting weapons systems. They’re little interceptor drones whose sole purpose in life is to go up there and knock another drone right out of the sky. And they fit nicely in the bed of a pick-up truck.
That’s it. No brass band required.
And the numbers?
Bad guy drone: $30,000 to $50,000
Merops interceptor: about $15,000
Even a high school dropout can see that math works out just fine.
Because it turns out—brace yourself—you can’t keep shooting million-dollar missiles at something that costs less than a used pickup truck. Eventually, even Washington notices.
Ukraine: Where Reality Lives
Before the Army got its act together, these systems were already being tested in Ukraine, which has become the world’s least forgiving laboratory.
That war has no patience for theory. It does not care what your briefing slides looked like.
It cares about whether you can:
Spot a drone
Launch something cheaper
Stop it before it ruins your day
And wouldn’t you know it—this worked.
So instead of holding another symposium about it, somebody finally said, “Well, let’s buy a bunch.”
Off to the Middle East
And now these things are showing up at U.S. bases in the Middle East, where American troops have been dealing with a steady nuisance of cheap drones launched by people who would very much like to ruin their afternoon.
Not a full-blown war. Just enough trouble to keep everyone on edge.
Which is exactly the kind of problem Merops is built for—small, fast, and plenty of it.
Because when the sky starts filling up with flying lawnmowers full of explosives, you don’t need elegance.
You need something that works.
Silicon Valley Joins the Party
Now here’s where it gets modern.
This whole effort has ties to projects backed by Eric Schmidt, which means the folks who used to help you find cat videos are now helping the Army shoot things out of the sky.
And they brought with them a novel concept:
BUILD IT FAST. BUILD A LOT OF IT. FIX IT LATER.
Washington usually prefers to build it slow, build it expensive, and then hold hearings about why it doesn’t work.
So this is a refreshing change.
Let’s not get carried away and declare a new golden age of common sense just yet.
But for one brief, shining moment, the Army looked at the problem—cheap drones, lots of them—and answered with something equally simple.
They didn’t overthink it. They didn’t gild it. They didn’t spend 10 years arguing about it.
They just bought 13,000 of the things and sent them where they’re needed.
And if that doesn’t make you sit up and take notice, you haven’t been paying attention to Washington very long.

