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MBDA showcases hybrid high-energy laser, interceptor counter-drone system

The European missile house says that the hybrid platform, which could enter service with Germany before the end of the decade, has been designed to address the “growing challenge of small, fast, and low-cost unmanned aerial threats.”

MBDA air defense
MBDA displays a hybrid air defense system that combines a laser with an interceptor at the Berlin Air Show on June 11, 2026. (Breaking Defense)

BERLIN — As Europe struggles with drone incursions and proliferation of uncrewed systems rise on the battlefields of Ukraine, MBDA today presented what it’s calling a novel solution at the Berlin Air Show: a turret mounted high-energy laser paired with a missile interceptor system.

The European missile house says that the hybrid platform, which could enter service with Germany before the end of the decade, has been designed to address the “growing challenge of small, fast, and low-cost unmanned aerial threats.” The pairing of the DEWS-L laser weapon and the company’s DEFENDAIR guided missile offers “overlapping engagement envelopes.”

The laser is specifically intended to neutralize close-range targets, including drone swarms, as depicted in an infographic presented by company officials during a press briefing. 

The new combo comes as militaries, and therefore defense firms, the world over race to combat the threat of drones and missiles without breaking the bank on pricey interceptors.

MBDA plays a leading role in other laser-based programs, including spurring development of the UK’s DragonFire system, which is estimated to cost less than £10 ($13) a strike. In 2024, the high-tech asset shot down airborne targets at a test range in northwest Scotland, a first for the UK.

MBDA’s rollout of the DEWS-L and DEFENDAIR system also arrives as the company is making a strong push to develop and sustain German and European deep precision strike capabilities with an expanding product portfolio that also includes one-way attack drones, next-generation guided missiles, as well as hypersonic weapons.

Those efforts align with changes in customer behavior too. Thomas Gottschild, managing director at MBDA Germany, said that Berlin, for example, has somewhat shifted away from air defense toward prioritising precision strike capabilities. He also stressed, however, that demand has “exploded” for conventional munitions as the conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East see so many stockpiles tested.

“[T]o replenish this demand, it will take quite a while. That is for us, as an industry, an additional challenge, but also an opportunity,” he noted.

PHOTOS: ILA Berlin 2026

PHOTOS: ILA Berlin 2026

Space4Future rocket
A rocket appears ready to blast off at the opening of the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. But it's just a model. (Breaking Defense)
F-35 at the Berlin Air Show
A Berlin Air Show attendee sporting an F-35 t-shirt stands in front of the plane itself on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Eurofighter cockpit
An attendee checks out the cockpit of a Eurofighter Typhoon at the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Elbit quadcopters
The German arm of Israeli defense giant Elbit brought along a few quadcopters for the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Uvision Heroes
Uvision displayed variants of its Hero one-way attack drones at the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Glenair tubes
It's not all hulking weapons and full-sized aircraft at Berlin Air Show 2026. Here Glenair showed off various components that do... something... to make larger systems and utilities work. (Breaking Defense)
Ukraine at Berlin Air Show
After more than four years of fighting Russian forces, Ukraine's defense industry takes time to court interest at at the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
General Atomics CCA
General Atomics' drone wingman makes an appearance at the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Refueler at Berlin Air Show
A refueling tanker does its thing over the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
rocket transport
A model rocket waits to be ferried to a launch pad during space day at the Berlin Air Show on June 11, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Moon display
A giant moon with orbiting satellites greets attendees at the Berlin Air Show on June 11, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Rolls Royce concept engine
All those Collaborative Combat Aircraft are going to need to have a powerplant, so at the Berlin Air Show 2026, British firm Rolls Royce showed off its concept system on June 11, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Ghost Bat in Berlin
Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger and Boeing Australia Managing Director Amy List pose in front of an MQ-28 Ghost Bat drone at the Berlin Air Show on June 10, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Deutsche Aircraft D328MR
Deutsche Aircraft's multi-role D328MR sits on display at the Berlin Air show on June 11, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
FIXAR 025
Virginia-based FIXAR says its FIXAR 025, seen here at the Berlin Air Show on June 11, 2026, is a fully electric VTOL UAV. (Breaking Defense)
Berlin Air Show Space Day
The Berlin Air Show looks even higher than the skies for its dedicated space day on June 11, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
AI exoskeleton
Attendees at the Berlin Air Show on June 11, 2026 could say hello to a kind of creepy model sporting an AI-supported exoskeleton made as part of the NoGravEx and GraviMoko projects, developed within the German Space Agency. (Breaking Defense)
Typhoon engine
The engine that powers a Eurofighter Typhoon was on display at the Berlin Air Show 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Leonardo AW249 demo
A Leonardo AW249 attack helicopter approaches at the Berlin Air Show on June 11, 2026. (Daniel Woolfolk / Breaking Defense)
Drones
Unmanned systems, from potential collaborative combat aircraft to a smaller, one-way attack drone on display outside the Airbus pavilion at the Berlin Air Show on June 12, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Airbus A400M
Crowds at the Berlin Air Show line up to take a tour of the cargo hold of the Airbus A400M transport aircraft on June 12, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Tiger
German airmen mill about a Tiger attack helicopter at the Berlin Air Show on June 12, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Wiesel 1
Say hello the Wiesel 1, a lightly armored "weapon carrier" in use by the German military since 1990. (Breaking Defense)
Taurus missile
A German servicemember explains the Taurus long-range strike missel, on display at the Berlin Air Show on June 12, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
An FPV quadcopter, operated by a German servicemember, buzzes around a hanger at the Berlin Air Show on June 12, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
Eurodrone
A Eurodrone, product of an international European team, on display at the Berlin Air Show on June 12, 2026. (Breaking Defense)
C-130J patch
A retro C-130J patch on a German servicemember's uniform at the Berlin Air Show. (Breaking Defense)