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Thursday, September 11, 2025

Senator Hoeven reviews new Valkyrie drone capabilities at GrandSky

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Senator John Hoeven, U.S. Senator of North Dakota | Senator John Hoeven Official website

Senator John Hoeven, U.S. Senator of North Dakota | Senator John Hoeven Official website

GRAND FORKS, N.D. – At GrandSky today, Senator John Hoeven reviewed the Valkyrie unmanned aerial system (UAS), an Autonomous Collaborative Platform (ACP) / Collaborative Combat Aircraft (CCA) developed and manufactured by Kratos Defense & Security Solutions. Today’s meeting follows a Sunday test flight of the Valkyrie’s new capabilities, which Kratos has been developing in partnership with GrandSky. This was the first such test in North Dakota for the XQ-58A Valkyrie.

Hoeven worked to bring Kratos to GrandSky, having made the case to President and CEO Eric DeMarco, along with other Kratos officials, in recent years. The senator stressed that GrandSky gives the company the opportunity to fly at lower cost and with greater schedule flexibility than what is available through a standard Defense Department range. This comes as part of Hoeven’s broader efforts as a member of the Senate Defense Appropriations Committee to advance the CCA initiative at the U.S. Air Force (USAF), having secured $392 million for the effort in Fiscal Year (FY) 2024.

In April, the USAF announced contract awards to Anduril and General Atomics for the first iteration of CCA, with companies like Kratos expected to provide the next iteration of CCA airframes.

“We built GrandSky precisely for the kind of work that Kratos is now undertaking with the Valkyrie. This one-of-a-kind facility provides the tools, infrastructure and expertise needed for UAS operations, training, research, development and testing across the board, including the Air Force’s highest priority for unmanned aircraft ––the development of CCA capabilities,” said Hoeven. “The Valkyrie and similar CCA aircraft can undertake an incredible range of missions, with multiple options for takeoff, customizable equipment sets and the ability to operate solo, alongside manned aircraft or in UAS swarms. Such capabilities will provide unparalleled operational flexibility, ensuring we can overcome our adversaries in any number of scenarios. That’s what funding we provided this year will help provide, and we will continue to support this initiative in coming years.”

Advancing CCA Capabilities

CCA is a multi-pronged Air Force initiative to develop large quantities of lower-cost, highly autonomous UAS to fly interoperably with fighter planes and a range of next-generation aircraft. The CCA concept is part of USAF’s wider Next-Generation Air Dominance (NGAD) program that envisions a system-of-systems approach with fighter aircraft, weapons, sensors and battle management systems.

Under contracts awarded to Anduril and General Atomics, companies will build and test prototypes of their respective CCA designs. The Air Force expects to field fully operational CCA capability before 2030.

Space Dynamics Laboratory’s (SDL) Dark Swarm Project

The CCA initiative also aligns with a project Hoeven worked to fund between SDL—a Utah-based University-Affiliated Research Center (UARC)—and University of North Dakota (UND). Specifically, SDL came to North Dakota to utilize local expertise for a Naval Research Laboratory project on unmanned aircraft swarms. Hoeven secured $6 million for this project in FY24 bringing total project funding since FY21 up to $23 million.

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