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The NZDF will send 50 personnel to the United States for a US military drone exercise involving aerial and ground drones, marking a visible New Zealand Defence Force role in advanced unmanned systems training. The deployment underscores ongoing NZ defence cooperation with the US and places local forces in a high‑tech operational setting.
Exercise focus and personnel
RNZ reports the group will take part in a “aerial and ground drones exercise”, a mixed-domain activity that tests how units integrate unmanned platforms with troops on the ground. While specific timing and locations were not detailed, the exercise will involve both air and land drones, requiring technical coordination and field-level decision‑making.
The scale—50 personnel—signals a meaningful commitment rather than a token presence. For the NZDF, it offers exposure to systems and tactics that are shaping modern conflict, where unmanned capabilities are increasingly central to surveillance, logistics and operational tempo.
Why it matters for defence cooperation
Participation strengthens ties with the US military and builds “interoperability” in areas where technology is evolving quickly. It also gives New Zealand military personnel practical experience alongside allies, a factor that influences future readiness and capability development at home.
The move highlights how the New Zealand Defence Force is positioning itself within allied training networks as drones become standard tools of warfare, signalling a broader shift toward tech‑enabled defence partnerships.