€1.2 billion for the «X-class» heavy weapon, before the budget window closes
Defense
Defense
You're buying the weapon of the last war.
In one line Avoided a €1.2 bn commitment on a weapon that a mass attack could have neutralized; requirement realigned to the real threat.
The director-general of armaments, with the budget window open and three generals pushing to sign before the end of the quarter.
A mid-sized defense ministry on a procurement cycle that opens every five years. The supplier — a long-standing national partner — has already invested in pre-production. Refusing now means renegotiating from scratch in five years, possibly with a foreign vendor.
Over the past two years, adversary military doctrine has shifted markedly toward low-cost unmanned aerial vehicle swarms: purchased by the hundreds, deployed to saturate point-defense systems. Adversary budgets for heavy platforms, by contrast, are contracting. Recent NATO exercises simulating multiple simultaneous low-altitude attacks revealed saturation limits in traditional intercept systems at just sixteen concurrent targets. The commercial-drone-to-military-adaptation market has grown 340% in three years; the unit cost of a sacrificeable carrier has halved.
The pressure in the room is unanimous: the operational gap is real, the supplier is ready, the money is there. Waiting means losing the political window and leaving the gap open. But the red-team raises a question no one has formally answered: is the gap we are filling the right one? The X-class platform was designed for the threat that defined the last decade — an adversary with few costly, precise vectors. Against twenty cheap drones launched simultaneously, each intercept costs hundreds of thousands of euros against a target worth a few thousand. The arithmetic of conflict has changed; the requirement has not.
Estimated unit cost to neutralize a single target under each defensive architecture (illustrative data).
In recent NATO exercises, traditional intercept systems reached their saturation limit at 16 simultaneous targets — against operational swarms of 40–80 units. Over the same period, the commercial-drone-to-military-adaptation market grew 340% in three years.
What if we were buying the weapon of the previous war? The threat is shifting toward cheap drone swarms, built to be sacrificed by the thousand. Against them a heavy platform is huge, hugely expensive to operate and easy to saturate: twenty arrive at once, you can't stop them all. The real gap to fill is defense against swarms — not another behemoth.
Provenance: adversary military doctrine (open sources) · requirements document · supplier risk register · internal red-team base (confidential).
Composite cases, in the method of the Harvard Business Review: reconstructions based on real, recurring situations in each sector, merged and anonymized to protect confidentiality. The decision dynamics are authentic; names, figures and details are altered and not traceable to any single client or case. The «provenance» notes describe the type of evidence the engine cites with traceability in production. The Δ-CSI values illustrate the intensity of the pressure the contradiction put on the assumptions.