Air Warfare

General Atomics teams with Saab on AEW, unveils new air-launched effect

The company also announced the launch of a new launched effect known as the Precision Exportable Launched Effect, or Pele.

2506_PELE_PRESS_RELEASE_1920X1080_L18235PARIS AIR SHOW — General Atomics Aeronautical Systems dropped two new announcements on the first day of the Paris Air Show, unveiling a new air-launched effect known as Pele and announcing a partnership with Swedish defense giant Saab to add an Airborne Early Warning and Control (AEW&C) capability to the MQ-9B Reaper.

The Saab announcement involves taking a suite of the European firm’s AEW sensors and packaging them onto a pod aboard the Reaper. The goal is to have an MQ-9 flying with the package by 2026.

The two claim the sensor package — the details of which were not revealed in a press release — “will span a wide range of applications, including early detection and warning; long-range detection and tracking; simultaneous target tracking and flexible combat system integration, all over line-of-sight and SATCOM connectivity.”

The companies are positioning the move as a way to provide countries who can’t afford a full, dedicated early warning platforms — such as the E-2 Hawkeye or Saab’s GlobalEye, which presumably will share some sensors with the new system — with a cheaper solution, particularly at a time when missile defense is a growing concern across the globe.

“High and low-tech air threats both pose major challenges to global air forces,” GA-ASI President David Alexander said in the announcement, adding the system “will transform our customers’ operations against both sophisticated cruise missiles and simple but dangerous drone swarms. We’re also making AEW capability possible in areas it doesn’t exist today, such as from some navy warships at sea.”

“We are bringing our exceptional ability to detect and track challenging objects to customers looking to use MQ-9B to meet their specific needs,” Carl-Johan Bergholm, head of Saab’s business area surveillance, said in a statement. “This unmanned medium-altitude AEW solution, leveraging core competencies of both companies, has excellent potential to complement our existing AEW&C portfolio and provide customers with yet another cutting-edge capability.”

Pele Getting Hot

The company also announced the launch of a new launched effect known as the Precision Exportable Launched Effect, or Pele.

Described as semi-autonomous, Pele is effectively an attritable, propellor-driven small UAS that can be launched from other airborne assets, such as the MQ-9, or from the ground.

The system has an 11-foot wingspan and 16-horsepower engine, per the company, and comes with internal mission payload storage and an onboard electro-optical infrared sensor that can provide full-motion video. The firm claims a maximum gross takeoff weight of 250 pounds, seven hours of endurance and a 500 nautical mile range.

It comes at a time when the US military, especially the US Army, is experimenting with air launched effects — a term signifying, at its core, launching a smaller system off of a larger one.

GA is also using the event to showcase its Collaborative Combat Aircraft offering, dubbed the YFQ-42A by the US Air Force, with a full-scale model at its booth. While the CCA program is for USAF use, many European nations are eyeing similar concepts for their future needs.

Updated 6/16/25 at 2:15 am EST with comment from Saab.

PHOTOS: Paris Air Show 2025

PHOTOS: Paris Air Show 2025

The Eurocopter TIger showed off its moves above the 2025 Paris Air Show. (Bartosz Głowacki/Breaking Defense)
The Airbus A400M takes to the skies about Le Bourget during the 2025 Paris AIr Show. (Bartosz Głowacki/Breaking Defense)
The Airbus Racer, an experimental compound helicopter, showed off at the 2025 Paris Air Show. (Bartosz Głowacki/Breaking Defense)
The Fouga CM170 above the skies of the Paris Air Show. (Bartosz Głowacki/Breaking Defense)
AVIC, a Chinese aerospace firm, came to the Paris Air Show 2025 to show of its wares. (Hélène de Lacoste / Breaking Defense)
An attendee takes a break at the Paris Air Show on June 18, 2025. (Daniel Woolfolk / Breaking Defense)
Military officials were among the attendees at the Paris Air Show in June 2025. (Hélène de Lacoste / Breaking Defense)
French defense and space firm Hemeria brought along a surveillance blimp to the Paris Air Show 2025. (Aaron Mehta / Breaking Defense)
Lockheed Martin subsidary Sikorsky's S-97 made its international debut at the Paris Air Show this year. (Michael Marrow/Breaking Defense)
The French and European Union flags fly high above the 2025 Paris Air Show. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Dassault showed off the many countries who have bought the Rafale at its booth. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
It might be an air show, but the best way to get around the long runway? That's the commuter train. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Companies try different things to stand out at the Paris Air Show. In this case, Turkish Aerospace set up a booth serving traditional Turkish coffee, complete with a rug-adorned lounge. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Dassault showed off a new UCAV design as the feature of its outdoor pavilion. Meanwhile, the SCAF next-gen fighter model, which had been featured prominently before, was more to the side - befitting a show where the biggest news about SCAF was internal issues between Dassault and its Airbus partner. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
The sun rises on a Eurofighter Typhoon early on day two of the 2025 Paris Air Show. (Aaron Mehta/Breaking Defense)
Elbit Systems booth at the Paris Air Show was blockaded off at the start of the conference. (Valerie Insinna/Breaking Deefnse)
Rafael’s booth at the Paris Air Show, obstructed by black walls, on June 16, 2025. (Valerie Insinna / Breaking Defense)
Dassault exhibits a mock up of the French, German, Spanish Next Generation Fighter at the Paris Air Show (Breaking Defense)
A French Dassault jet banks hard during an aerial show at the Paris Air Show on June 16, 2025. (Daniel Woolfolk / Breaking Denfense)
A visitor pops their head out of the top of an A400M transport aircraft at the Paris Air Show on June 16, 2025. (Aaron Mehta / Breaking Defense)
MBDA anticipates producing 1,000 low cost, one way effectors per month to meet an emerging French combat mass requirement (Breaking Defense)
An Embraer KC390 flies at Paris Air Show 2025. (Daniel Woolfolk / Breaking Defense)
Elbit Systems booth at the Paris Air Show was blockaded off at the start of the conference. (Valerie Insinna/Breaking Deefnse)
French defense firm Dassault shows off a sleek UAV at the Paris Air Show 2025.
IAI’s booth at the Paris Air Show, surrounded by black walls. (Valerie Insinna/Breaking Defense)