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Anduril announces team for its Golden Dome space-based missile interceptor effort

By Thomson Reuters May 5, 2026 | 8:00 AM

By Mike Stone

WASHINGTON, May 5 (Reuters) – Defense technology company Anduril Industries on Tuesday announced its consortium to develop space-based interceptors for the U.S. Space Force, as ​part of the Trump administration’s Golden Dome for ‌America missile defense initiative.

Unlike existing ground-based systems, the Space-Based Interceptor (SBI) program deploys weapons in orbit, enabling the U.S. military to engage and destroy threats earlier in their flight path, intercepting missiles sooner after launch.

Anduril ‌said ​its consortium includes Impulse Space, Inversion ⁠Space, K2 Space, Sandia ⁠National Laboratories, and Voyager Technologies, bringing together commercial space startups and established research institutions to deliver what the company described as “affordable, scalable” interceptor solutions.

The Department of Defense’s Space ​Force has awarded 12 companies contracts to develop space-based missile defense interceptor systems worth up to a combined $3.2 ⁠billion. Other recipients include Northrop Grumman , ⁠RTX’s Raytheon , SpaceX, and Lockheed Martin , among ​others.

The U.S.’s “near-peer adversaries have invested in exotic, highly maneuverable vehicles, ​introducing considerable challenges to protecting the U.S. homeland,” Gokul ‌Subramanian, Anduril’s senior vice president of engineering, said in a statement.

The goal is to demonstrate an integrated interceptor capability within the Golden Dome architecture by around 2028, adding an ⁠orbital layer to U.S. homeland defense.

Golden Dome, expected to cost $185 billion, plans to expand ground-based defenses such as interceptor missiles, sensors ⁠and command-and-control systems ‌while adding space-based elements to detect, track ⁠and potentially counter incoming threats from orbit.

Golden Dome’s ​director, ‌Space Force General Michael Guetlein, has previously ​identified the ⁠SBI program as the initiative’s highest-risk element, citing scalability and affordability as the central challenges. He has said directed energy weapons and next-generation artificial intelligence represent the most promising technologies for driving down cost-per-kill.

(Reporting by Mike Stone in Washington; Editing ​by Lincoln Feast.)