Combat in space or on the moon will be swift and catastrophic because spaceships and habitats are inherently fragile. Due to severe mass and volume constraints, they cannot be armored effectively. The winning strategy is not to withstand a hit, but to avoid detection, targeting, and being fired upon entirely.
Palmer Luckey argues that journalists often misrepresent necessary R&D failures (like small, controlled fires on test ranges) as major setbacks. These "successful failed tests" are crucial for rapid innovation but are framed as scandals for clicks, ignoring the normal realities of hardware development.
Anduril developed functional optical camouflage that makes drones nearly invisible to the human eye. However, the technology is not deployed because modern adversaries use thermal, infrared, LiDAR, and radar sensors, which would easily detect such a system. Hiding in the visible spectrum alone is an obsolete advantage.
Palmer Luckey states that if UAP technology is real and can be understood, it will obsolete all current defense systems. Therefore, until that breakthrough occurs, military development must proceed on a completely independent track, treating the UAP phenomenon as a separate universe that cannot influence current strategy.
To ensure wartime scalability, Anduril designs systems like fighter jets to be manufacturable on existing industrial lines (e.g., Ford plants). This avoids building specialized factories and leverages the country's current industrial base, a key lesson from WWII for enabling rapid, massive production.
Unlike traditional contractors paid for hours, Anduril invests its own capital to build products it believes the government needs. This model incentivizes speed and effectiveness, as profit is tied to successful products, not billable hours. This shifts the financial risk from the taxpayer to the company.
Anduril's autonomous Fury fighter jet flies alongside manned aircraft as a force multiplier. It extends the pilot's sensor and weapons range while taking on high-risk maneuvers. This allows for strategies that involve sacrificing autonomous assets to gain an advantage, without the ethical problem of losing human lives.
