NEW Dragon Cart TRANSFORMS Air Strategy

Air Force’s Dragon Cart program turns everyday cargo planes into missile trucks, flooding enemies with dozens of standoff strikes without needing pricey new bombers.

Story Highlights

  • Dragon Cart achieved Program of Record status on April 30, 2026, securing Congressional funding for rapid deployment.[1][2]
  • C-17 Globemaster III carries up to 45 cruise missiles; C-130J handles 12, using standard pallets with no aircraft mods.[5][6]
  • Live-fire success in December 2021 destroyed a naval target with AGM-158 JASSM from MC-130J.[2][3]
  • Affordable Family of Affordable Mass Munitions integrate at under $200,000 each for mass salvos.[6]

Program Transitions to Official Status

Air Force Life Cycle Management Center announced on April 30, 2026, that the Rapid Dragon program, now Dragon Cart, became a Program of Record.[1] Management shifted to the center’s Combat Readiness Directorate on April 1.[1] This status guarantees Congressional funding in future budgets.[2] The Air Force uses Middle Tier Acquisition-Rapid Fielding pathway for quick rollout.[1] Prototype contracts award in May 2026.[1]

Dragon Cart builds on experimental Rapid Dragon tests.[2] The system deploys palletized munitions from cargo aircraft like C-130J Hercules and C-17 Globemaster III.[2] Pallets use standard airdrop procedures without aircraft modifications.[5] Government controls weapons data and technology, speeding transition unlike legacy programs.[2]

Proven Testing and Massive Firepower Potential

In December 2021, an MC-130J airdropped a four-cell Rapid Dragon pallet over the Gulf of Mexico.[2] The system received targeting data in flight from a distant command node.[2] A live AGM-158 Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile destroyed its naval target.[2][3] Earlier tests at White Sands and Eglin Air Force Base validated pallet deployment.[2]

C-17 accommodates five pallets with nine missiles each, totaling 45 Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile-Extended Range munitions.[5][6] Each missile reaches 570 to 1,200 miles.[2] C-130 launches 12 such missiles.[5] The program started in December 2019, achieving first powered flight and live fire in 24 months.[3][4]

Affordable Munitions and Strategic Edge

Dragon Cart integrates Family of Affordable Mass Munitions, including Zone 5 Technologies Rusty Dagger and Co-Aspire Rapidly Adaptable Affordable Cruise Missile.[2] These cost under $200,000 each with over 575-mile range.[6] Air Force plans $12 billion for nearly 28,000 such missiles over five years.[6] Pallets support disposable, weapon-agnostic launches.[5]

U.S. Special Operations Command Europe conducted an overseas operational event.[4] The system expands strike options from standoff distances using government-owned battle management.[3] Fielding targets 2027, enhancing flexibility against peer threats without diverting bomber fleets.[6] Cargo aircraft operate beyond enemy defenses, multiplying firepower.[5]

Sources:

[1] U.S. Air Force Plans to Deploy Cruise Missiles from Cargo Aircraft by …

[2] Rapid Dragon (missile system) – Wikipedia

[3] RAPID DRAGON – Air Force Research Laboratory

[4] [PDF] RAPID DRAGON – Air Force Research Laboratory

[5] U.S. Air Force Targets 2027 Deployment for Cargo-Launched Cruise …

[6] Air Force’s Rapid Dragon, which turns cargo aircraft into missile …