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Anduril's Fury CCA on display at the Avalon Airshow.
AVALON, Australia—Anduril is trying to interest the Royal Australian Air Force in its Fury collaborative combat aircraft (CCA) and would consider local production of the uncrewed system if it won an order, says company president and head of strategy Christian Brose.
“If there were an opportunity to provide our [CCA] to the Australian government, we would absolutely produce here if that was something that the Australian government wanted,” Brose said in an interview here at the Avalon Australian International Airshow.
The company last year won one of two U.S. Air Force CCA development contracts, with the goal to fly the system this year. General Atomics was the other winner.
Based on conversations with Australian military officials, Brose says, “it does seem like they're envisioning a future where they're not just going to have a single provider and a single design.”
Anduril set up its Australia business three years ago and has grown the team to about 200 staff, Brose says.
The company also is chasing other opportunities in the country, including in the counter-uncrewed aircraft system area.