Scheduled follow-up · Dec 31, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Dec 31, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Dec 27, 2026
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Scheduled follow-up · Dec 18, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Dec 18, 2026
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Scheduled follow-up · Dec 01, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Nov 30, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Nov 25, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Nov 15, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Nov 14, 2026
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Scheduled follow-up · Nov 01, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Aug 11, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Jul 31, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Jul 15, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Jul 01, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Jun 30, 2026
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Scheduled follow-up · Jun 08, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Jun 01, 2026
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Scheduled follow-up · May 31, 2026
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Scheduled follow-up · Apr 30, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Apr 15, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Apr 02, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Apr 01, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 31, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 31, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 19, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 17, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 15, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 01, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Mar 01, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Feb 28, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Feb 28, 2026
Scheduled follow-up · Feb 15, 2026overdue
Scheduled follow-up · Feb 15, 2026overdue
Update · Feb 14, 2026, 04:31 AMin_progress
Restating the claim: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows the concept has been actively pursued by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 and allied offices, with public reporting describing plans to create an online marketplace offering performance data, user feedback, and procurement paths.
Update · Feb 14, 2026, 02:47 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The aim is an online, Amazon-like portal where agencies can access test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, reporting described JIATF 401 planning an online marketplace to purchase counter-UAS gear for homeland defense and interagency use, tying the marketplace to a broader counter-UAS procurement ecosystem. Early steps included acquiring systems to test and inform the marketplace ecosystem.
Current status and milestones: By January 2026, the Pentagon via JIATF 401 described an associated acquisition (DroneHunter F700) under Replicator 2, with shipments planned for testing in spring 2026. Officials anticipated initial operating capability for the Counter-UAS Marketplace around March 1, 2026, as a procurement/feedback hub rather than a full program of record.
Source reliability and interpretation: Coverage from Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) and Air & Space Forces Magazine (Jan 2026) provides the most concrete details about marketplace plans, acquisitions, and IOC timing. The marketplace is described as evolving, with no publicly posted deployment date prior to 2026-03-01, supporting an in_progress assessment.
Follow-up note: If IOC occurs by 2026-03-01, a follow-up should verify marketplace deployment status, interagency access, and the availability of data/feedback. See sources: Breaking Defense (Nov 2025), Air & Space Forces Magazine (Jan 2026).
Update · Feb 14, 2026, 12:51 AMin_progress
Restated claim: The Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress and evidence: November 2025 reporting described the marketplace as a central hub to test, compare, and acquire counter-UAS tools, with data libraries and procurement pathways. December 2025 coverage indicated ongoing development and piloting of the hub, with interagency collaboration and testing activities cited as steps toward deployment.
Status assessment: While there is clear evidence the project is underway, there is no publicly confirmed live launch as of early 2026. Independent outlets describe an in-progress timeline rather than a completed, widely accessible portal. Public official confirmation is limited due to restricted access to some DoD pages.
Reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense and Military.com is consistent and credible within defense journalism, though direct DoD confirmation has been sporadic. A concrete official deployment date has not been announced publicly.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 10:54 PMin_progress
Restating the claim: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from defense-focused outlets in late 2025 indicates the Army-led task force is actively pursuing an online marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchase of counter-UAS capabilities for multiple agencies. Multiple reports describe this as a planned or in-progress marketplace rather than a deployed system.
Progress and current state: Breaking Defense reported on November 17, 2025 that Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is establishing an online counter-UAS marketplace to allow interagency customers to access a range of vendors and test results, with data on performance to guide procurement. Defense One and Executive Gov echoed that the marketplace was planned to accompany a broader UAS marketplace, with no firm launch date announced and no dedicated budget yet identified.
Completion status: As of February 2026, there is no public evidence that the counter-UAS marketplace has launched or is fully deployed. Reports consistently note that a launch date has not been set and that funding would come from various pools (operations & maintenance, RDT&E, procurement), with policy work and testing activities continuing in parallel. A counter-UAS summit and related testing/evaluation efforts were outlined as next steps in late 2025.
Milestones and dates: Key dates include the November 2025 reporting on marketplace planning and the announced counter-UAS summit intended for rollout in the same period, but no concrete deployment date has appeared in public, official or reputable media reporting. The coverage emphasizes ongoing development, policy work, and integration with an expanding UAS marketplace rather than a finished product.
Source reliability note: The cited coverage comes from reputable defense outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Executive Gov) that closely track DoD acquisition and interagency efforts. While these outlets are industry-focused and may reflect early-stage planning, they consistently describe the marketplace as planned or in development rather than deployed, and they highlight the lack of a formal launch date or budget to date.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 08:34 PMin_progress
Brief restatement of the claim: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is intended to provide a centralized hub for DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options to federal entities and partners. The goal is for interagency access to a single, curated data and acquisition resource for counter-UAS capabilities.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets reported in late 2025 that an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning and developing a digital marketplace for counter-UAS. Nov 2025 coverage notes plans to stand up an online marketplace to centralize testing data, performance information, and procurement options, with a broader UAS marketplace component as well (DOD emphasis on testing and data-driven decisions) [Breaking Defense, Military.com, Defense One]. A decoupled note from Breaking Defense confirms ongoing work, with a c-UAS summit planned to outline collaboration with interagency partners and testing/test data sharing approaches (no launch date set). Government and defense-focused outlets thus indicate progress is developmental and planning-stage rather than deployed.
Progress status against completion condition: As of February 13, 2026, there is no public record of a fully deployed, live counter-UAS marketplace accessible to interagency and law enforcement partners. Reports describe ongoing planning, data-sharing concepts, and testing frameworks, but no announced go-live date or confirmed operational access. Several articles emphasize that the marketplace is still in the development and planning phase, with milestones like summits and data-standardization efforts rather than a finished procurement portal.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 announcement of the marketplace concept by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross (JIATF 401) and closely timed coverage of a planned c-UAS/summit to refine testing and acquisition processes. December 2025 reporting describes the Army-led effort to establish a federal digital marketplace under JIATF 401, with a focus on sorting, testing, and sharing information about counter-drone systems. Across sources, there is still no confirmed launch date or system-wide deployment in early 2026. Sources used include Breaking Defense (Nov 2025), Military.com (Dec 2025), and Defense One (Nov 2025).
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 07:14 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting from late 2025 into early 2026 shows the Army-led JIATF 401 moving to stand up an online, Amazon-like marketplace as part of the Replicator 2 program, with initial steps and testing underway (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Air & Space Forces Magazine, 2026-01-18).
Evidence of concrete progress includes the first Replicator 2 acquisitions (e.g., DroneHunter F700 systems) by JIATF 401 in January 2026 and related Pentagon statements that a Counter-UAS Marketplace will host user feedback and test data to inform procurement (
Janes, 2026-01-13; Air & Space Forces Magazine, 2026-01-18).
Sources indicate that the marketplace is designed to deliver data on system performance, installation-specific feedback, and validated procurement options to frontline decision-makers, with an initial operating capability targeted around March 1, 2026 (Air & Space Forces Magazine, 2026-01-18).
While momentum and milestones have been reported, a full deployment and long-term sustainment of the marketplace across all interagency partners may still be developing, and procurement and access pathways are being scaled in through ongoing testing and acquisitions (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Air & Space Forces Magazine, 2026-01-18).
Reliability note: coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and official-reported program milestones; early procurement steps and IOC timing remain contingent on funding, testing results, and interagency alignment (cited sources).
Follow-up date: 2026-03-01
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 04:15 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting in late 2025 described the effort as an online marketplace intended to unify testing data, performance feedback, and vetted purchasing options for c-UAS equipment across DoD, DHS, FBI, and installations (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14). Evidence thus far indicates planning and development activities rather than a completed deployment.
Key progress includes the designation of JIATF 401 to oversee c-UAS efforts and the articulation of a centralized marketplace concept, plus upcoming events to test and evaluate systems before possibly adding them to the platform (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14). Reports note there was no announced launch date and no finalized budget, with funding expected from multiple accounts rather than a single dedicated line (Defense One 2025-11-14). This suggests the initiative remains in the design, testing, and policy-phase rather than fully operational.
Analyses highlighted that the marketplace would also accompany broader UAS market efforts, including policy development for domestic procurement and battlefield-like evaluations to enable apples-to-apples comparisons of counter-UAS solutions (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14). Several outlets referenced a planned counter-UAS summit to align interagency partners on testing, evaluation, and deployment pathways (Def One 2025-11-14; Executive Gov 2025-11-18).
Milestones cited by outlets include hosting a c-UAS summit and continuing testing-with-evaluation activities to inform what components might join the marketplace, but concrete procurement rules, vendor onboarding, and a launch timeline remained unsettled as of late 2025 (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14).
Source reliability appears solid for the claims at hand, with coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and Executive Gov, which regularly report on
U.S. defense modernization and acquisition efforts. The central challenge remains whether the marketplace will achieve a deployed, user-accessible status and how quickly interagency partners will obtain data access and procurement options once launched (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14; Executive Gov 2025-11-18).
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 02:13 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms Army-led efforts to establish an online c-UAS marketplace intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and a centralized procurement channel for interagency customers. The initiative is described as a work in progress with no definitive launch date announced.
Multiple reputable outlets reported on the plan in late 2025. Breaking Defense quoted Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing the Marketplace as part of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) efforts to centralize procurement and testing data, while noting there was no required launch date and no finalized budget. Executive-focused outlets (ExecutiveGov) echoed that the marketplace would run alongside a broader UAS marketplace and would rely on data-driven comparisons of counter-UAS tools.
Evidence of concrete milestones remains limited as of early 2026. Reports indicate initial summits or test events to test testing and evaluation processes were planned, with the marketplace envisioned to house performance data, procurement options, and user feedback. However, there is no public confirmation of a deployed, fully functional marketplace or a date when interagency partners will gain access to the centralized data and procurement pathways.
Dates and milestones cited include November 2025 public discussions and planned testing with interagency partners, and statements that procurement funding would come from multiple DoD and interagency sources rather than a dedicated budget. The reliability of these plans rests on official confirmations from JIATF 401 and DoD leadership, but current reporting centers on planning and intent rather than a completed deployment.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 12:57 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple outlets have reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing a digital, centralized marketplace for counter-UAS and related UAS data, testing results, and procurement options. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) describes the marketplace as part of an integrated UAS/counter-UAS ecosystem and notes policy and testing work accompanying it. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) quotes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross confirming plans for an online marketplace and data-driven comparisons, though without a firm launch date.
Current status and milestones: As of late 2025, the marketplace had not announced a firm deployment date. Reports emphasize ongoing testing, policy development, and interagency coordination, with a planned summit and continued evaluations of systems before addition to the marketplace (Defense One; Breaking Defense).
Dates and milestones: Key coverage cites November 2025 as the period in which the marketplace concept advanced from planning to active development discussions and evolving policy, but no completion date or definitive rollout has been published. Subsequent public statements reiterate that procurement and integration work is tied to broader C-UAS initiatives and testing pipelines rather than a closed launch.
Source reliability and caveats: Coverage from Defense One and Breaking Defense is focused on industry and defense-parity reporting and reflects statements by JIATF 401 leadership. While these outlets are reputable defense-focused publications, formal confirmation from DoD-wide channels or official JIATF 401 documentation is limited in the available open sources. Overall, the reporting supports ongoing development rather than a completed marketplace deployment.
Follow-up note: If a launch date or deployment milestone is announced, a follow-up check should verify access readiness for interagency partners and any stated data/procurement options, as well as the marketplace’s governance and testing metrics.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 11:18 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online marketplace for counter-UAS and a related UAS marketplace to provide authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 08:59 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The sources describe an Army-led effort to create an online hub that compiles test data, performance feedback, and vetted procurement options for counter-drone systems across federal partners.
Evidence of progress exists: multiple outlets report that Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online counter-UAS marketplace intended to accompany a broader UAS marketplace. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and other officials have described plans to stand up a centralized platform to surface authoritative data on system performance and to streamline purchasing for interagency and law enforcement customers (Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Status of completion: There is clear reporting that the marketplace is in development and aims to become a central data/procurement hub, but no publicly disclosed launch date or deployment milestone has been announced. Military and defense outlets note that testing, data validation, and interagency coordination are ongoing, with a planned summit or testing activities to define requirements (Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Milestones and dates: November–December 2025 coverage points to deliberate progress, including announcements of the marketplace concept, coordination with DHS/FBI/FAA and other agencies, and planned testing events. No firm go-live date or procurement window has been published, reinforcing that the effort remains in the development phase (Breaking Defense, Military.com).
Source reliability and incentives: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Military.com, and ExecutiveGov consistently describe an Army-led initiative with explicit interagency procurement goals, reflecting a transparency-oriented posture aimed at accelerating acquisition while addressing past fragmentation. These outlets are considered reputable within defense and government-technology reporting, though official DoD confirmation remains limited due to access constraints on some Defense Department content.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 05:25 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being pursued as part of the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and related DoD initiatives, with emphasis on creating an online or digital marketplace to test, evaluate, and procure counter-UAS capabilities. Multiple reputable outlets describe the marketplace as a planned, ongoing initiative rather than a completed system (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com) citing statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and other officials dated November 2025. The sources consistently note that a launch date or deployment timetable had not been set at that time and that the effort includes policy, testing, and integration work across agencies, with funding and governance still evolving. Overall, the project appears active and progressing, but there is no evidence yet of a deployed, fully operational marketplace accessible across interagency partners as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 03:42 AMin_progress
Restated claim: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets reported in late 2025 that an Army-led joint interagency task force (JIATF 401) planned to stand up an online, Amazon-like marketplace for counter-UAS capabilities, data, and procurement guidance. Sources note preparations, data-sharing concepts, and a summit to outline implementation (Breaking Defense, Defense One,
Army.mil, Military.com).
Current status: By early 2026, reporting indicates the marketplace initiative was active in planning and early deployments, with pilots and policy development underway, but a fully deployed, institution-wide data-access and procurement portal appears not yet completed across all interagency partners. Most coverage frames it as an ongoing program with milestones such as testing, data standardization, and interagency coordination in progress.
Milestones and dates: August 2025 marked its formal establishment discussion via the JIATF 401 framework; November–December 2025 saw announcements of a marketplace being stood up and related testing efforts; December 2025 reports mention imminent or ongoing deployment, but exact deployment dates for all agencies are not publicly confirmed.
Reliability and caveats: Coverage comes from military-focused outlets (Army.mil, Defense One, Military.com) and defense-industry press (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov). While these outlets are generally reliable for defense developments, precise completion timing and full interagency access remain incompletely documented in public sources, and official DoD confirmations were not accessible due to access restrictions for the referenced defense.gov article.
Update · Feb 13, 2026, 02:01 AMcomplete
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple reputable outlets indicate consistent progress toward a centralized digital marketplace under the Army-led JIATF 401 framework, with emphasis on testing, evaluation, and streamlined purchasing (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Military.com).
Evidence of progress includes November 2025 reporting that the Army-led task force planned an online marketplace to connect commanders, DHS, FBI, and other partners with tested components and evaluative data, followed by December 2025 reporting that the marketplace was being launched and tested as part of the broader c-UAS effort (Breaking Defense; Defense One).
By December 2025, a concrete deployment appears to have occurred or been announced, with coverage describing the marketplace as launched or close to launch and positioned to provide authoritative data on performance, feedback, and procurement options for interagency users (Military.com; Defense One). The December 2025 coverage also notes ongoing policy work and testing to ensure vetted, auditable comparisons across vendors and systems (Defense One).
Dates and milestones cited in high-quality defense reporting place the completion condition—marketplace developed, deployed, and accessible to interagency partners—near fulfillment by early 2026. The sources emphasize that while a launch occurred, the program continues to evolve with testing, policy alignment, and integration with existing
U.S. defense and homeland-security operations (Breaking Defense; Military.com; Defense One).
Source reliability: The cited outlets are established defense-technology and policy outlets with access to corresponding U.S. DoD leadership and statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, who oversees JIATF 401. While Defense.gov content was inaccessible at the time of verification, corroboration from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Military.com strengthens the assessment of a deployed or near-deployed marketplace with ongoing development and policy work.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 11:23 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms initial momentum: the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 announced plans in November 2025 to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech, intended to provide a centralized system for authoritative data, performance feedback, and procurement options (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Subsequent coverage in December 2025 notes that the marketplace would accompany a separate UAS marketplace and would enable interagency customers to shop for counter-UAS solutions, with details on data access and evaluation processes described (Military.com, 2025-12-08; Meritalk, 2025-12-22).
There is, however, no publicly available evidence that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options as of February 2026. DoD-facing announcements described ongoing development, an initial testing/evaluation approach, and plans to host a c-UAS summit to align testing and potential marketplace additions, but no firm deployment date or completion milestone has been published (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-20 recap; Meritalk, 2025-12-22).
The completion condition—“Counter-UAS marketplace developed and deployed; interagency and law enforcement partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been publicly met by February 2026. The most concrete statements describe planning, data-sharing architecture considerations, and procurement pathways rather than a live, fully accessible marketplace. The lack of a stated deployment date in reputable reporting supports the assessment of ongoing progress rather than completion (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Key milestones cited include the Nov 2025 announcement of a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech and the Dec 2025 reporting of accompanying marketplace work and testing plans, with a c-UAS summit referenced for further outlining collaboration with interagency partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-20; Meritalk, 2025-12-22). These indicate a structured, phased development process rather than an issued product. No independent audits or third-party validations of data access or procurement options have been publicly documented.
Reliability note: reporting from Breaking Defense and Military/Defense-focused outlets is aligned with industry-insight coverage of DOD efforts and the JIATF 401 mission. While these outlets are reputable within defense journalism, there remains a lack of primary DoD public deployment data or a formal program milestone press release confirming marketplace deployment as of February 2026. The assessment relies on multiple contemporaneous defense trade reporting and the absence of deployment announcements.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 07:03 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence suggests the effort is in the planning and development phase rather than deployed, with emphasis on creating an online hub to compare systems, share testing data, and streamline acquisitions. Several reputable outlets describe the initiative as led by the Army and Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), but without a firm live launch date.
Progress indicators: November–December 2025 reporting from Breaking Defense and Army communications indicate the marketplace concept is being stood up as part of JIATF 401’s digital marketplace efforts, including procurement facilitation and testing data sharing. Army and interagency leaders publicly discussed establishing a centralized portal to host authoritative performance data and to aid interagency procurement decisions. FAA and DHS components are referenced as stakeholders in the broader counter-UAS ecosystem.
Status of completion: There is no announced deployment date or definitive milestone indicating full operational deployment. Sources describe ongoing planning, data standardization, and testing workflows, with a summit and interagency coordination activities referenced as part of ongoing preparation. The completion condition—marketplace developed, deployed, and accessible to interagency partners—remains unfulfilled as of early 2026 based on current reporting.
Milestones and dates: Key public references appear in late 2025 reporting, including a November 17 Breaking Defense briefing of JIATF 401 planning a digital marketplace, a December 11–17 Army interagency symposium on c-sUAS, and a December 2025 Military.com feature outlining the marketplace concept and testing/data-sharing aims. No concrete go-live date or procurement launch is stated in these pieces, underscoring a still-evolving timeline.
Source reliability: The involved outlets (Breaking Defense, Army.mil, Military.com) are reputable defense/agency-focused media with direct access to official statements or proceedings. While primary dates and launch specifics remain sparse, the reporting consistently frames the marketplace as an upcoming capability rather than a deployed, in-use system. Given the incentives of the departments involved to manage procurement and interagency collaboration, the coverage appears cautious and corroborated across multiple credible outlets.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 04:18 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) confirms Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and the JIATF 401 are planning an online, integrated marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and to streamline procurement for interagency and DHS/FBI partners.
Current status: The marketplace has been described as a planned, parallel effort to an Army UAS marketplace, with no announced launch date or firm deployment milestone as of late 2025. Both outlets emphasize that the platform is in development and that testing/evaluation would precede any added offerings.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include a forthcoming c-UAS summit to coordinate testing and evaluation, and confirmation that the task force has not established a dedicated budget yet; funding would come from operations and maintenance, RDT&E, and procurement streams. There is no completion date cited in the public reporting.
Reliability and sources: The most substantial public details come from defense-press outlets (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov) reporting interviews with JIATF 401 leadership. These sources are consistent in describing plans and lack of a fixed timeline, but they do not provide official DoD deployment confirmation.
Incentives and context: The push for a centralized marketplace aligns with interagency procurement efficiency goals and rapid fielding for counter-UAS capabilities, reflecting a policy emphasis on speed, interoperability, and standardized data sharing across agencies. The lack of a defined budget may be a notable constraint on progress until formal funding is established.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 02:17 PMin_progress
Brief restatement: The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS tech to serve military, Homeland Security, FBI, and local law enforcement customers (JIATF 401 context) [Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17]. A week later, Military.com covered the launch of a related marketplace initiative, indicating the Army was moving toward deploying a federal digital marketplace to help agencies identify tested counter-drone systems [Military.com, 2025-12-08].
Status of deployment: The same period described a marketplace that was in the process of standing up and testing, with remarks that there was no firm launch date for full availability and that testing/evaluation would precede broader access [Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17]. Subsequent reporting framed the effort as a launched initiative, but with caveats on scope, ongoing expansion, and interagency access controls [Military.com, 2025-12-08].
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 announcements of a centralized marketplace for c-UAS tools and data, and a December 2025 rollout in which the marketplace began to take shape as a deployable capability, with ongoing testing and interagency coordination described. An additional update in January 2026 referenced refreshed guidance for counter-UAS operations from JIATF 401, indicating continued development and integration efforts (JIATF-401 guidance, Jan 2026) [Breaking Defense, Military.com, War/Gov reporting].
Reliability and perspective of sources: Reports come from defense-focused outlets with direct access to officials (Breaking Defense, Military.com) and reflect the Army-led focus under JIATF 401. They consistently note that the marketplace is evolving, with unspecified procurement scales and staged access for interagency partners, which supports a cautious “in_progress” assessment rather than a fully deployed, fully wired system at once. For balance, these outlets emphasize ongoing testing, data standardization, and the need for enduring interagency partnerships.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 12:44 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) describes an Army-led effort to build an online marketplace for testing, evaluation, and streamlined purchasing of counter-UAS components for installations and interagency use. Defense.gov coverage (Dec 18, 2025) reiterates the marketplace as a cornerstone of interagency integration, emphasizing access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Reports also indicate that a concrete launch date had not been set by late 2025, with ongoing planning and policy work.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 11:04 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being led by the Army in coordination with JIATF 401, with a focus on creating a digital marketplace for vetted counter-drone solutions and test data access. Progress has been described as ongoing, with emphasis on rapid innovation and interagency alignment rather than a fully deployed system as of early 2026. Multiple outlets cite the initiative as foundational to consolidating data, user feedback, and procurement pathways, but stop short of declaring a completed, universally accessible platform.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 08:54 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense community articles describe an Army-led effort to create an online marketplace that would host test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options for counter-UAS gear.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to stand up a digital marketplace to purchase counter-UAS equipment, with leadership signaling the goal of an integrated system for testing, evaluation, and procurement. Defense One and Defense.gov coverage in November–December 2025 reinforced that the marketplace was in the planning and development phase, with no firm launch date announced and policy/test-evaluation steps being pursued.
Current status: As of February 11, 2026, there is no public indication that the marketplace has launched or been deployed agency-wide. Multiple outlets describe ongoing development, stalled on a launch date, and ongoing policy, testing, and funding considerations rather than a completed, deployed platform.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 reporting of a planned marketplace and the December 2025 Defense.gov piece confirming ongoing development and coordination with interagency partners. The articles note that funding and procurement pathways were yet to be set, and a concrete deployment date had not been announced. The absence of a published rollout or operational access as of early 2026 suggests the initiative remains in-progress rather than completed.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Defense.gov, Defense One, and Breaking Defense is consistent in describing a development program led by JIATF 401 with significant interagency coordination. While some outlets discuss expectations and planning, none cite a formal launch or deployment by February 2026. This alignment across specialized defense outlets supports a cautious, in-progress assessment rather than a completed status.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 04:19 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates an Army-led, Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiative to stand up a digital marketplace intended to compare systems, publish testing data, and streamline procurement for federal partners. There is no published completion date; officials describe the marketplace as a work in progress with planned milestones the near term, including events to outline testing and collaboration with interagency partners. Credible sources describe the marketplace as a central data library and purchasing hub rather than a finished product, with deployment timeline not yet set (e.g., Breaking Defense, Military.com).
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 02:53 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It emphasizes a centralized mechanism for accessing test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The reporting describes ongoing efforts to stand up such a marketplace within the broader JIATF 401 framework, but does not indicate a launch date or completed deployment.
Evidence of progress appears in coverage of an Army-led push to create a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech, with officials indicating plans to establish a shared purchasing portal and datasourcing across agencies. Reporting notes that the marketplace is associated with JIATF 401 and is intended to improve purchasing speed and interoperability for interagency partners.
Given the evolving nature of the program and the lack of a declared completion date, the status remains in_progress. Observers should monitor updates from official briefings or subsequent Breaking Defense and DHS/DOJ communications for concrete milestones and deployment timelines.
Update · Feb 12, 2026, 01:12 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting from late 2025 shows Army-led efforts to stand up an online marketplace for counter-drone equipment, data, and testing results, with the goal of streamlining procurement for interagency partners (e.g., DHS, FBI, local law enforcement) and providing authoritative performance data for vendors. There is no evidence yet of a deployed, operational marketplace by early 2026; sources indicate planning, policy development, and involved testing, with no announced launch date.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 10:56 PMin_progress
The claim describes an effort to develop a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting from defense-focused outlets indicates this marketplace is being planned as part of an Army-led, joint interagency initiative (JIATF 401). Key stakeholders include the FBI, DHS, local law enforcement, and military installations, with the marketplace intended to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing of counter-UAS capabilities.
Evidence of progress includes public statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross that the marketplace is in the planning and testing phase, with a counter-UAS summit planned and policy/framework work underway. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) quotes Ross about establishing the online marketplace and providing authoritative data on system performance under varying conditions, but also notes there is no launch date yet. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) similarly describes the initiative as ongoing, with policy and procurement considerations being developed and no firm deployment date announced.
Milestones cited in the reporting include: (1) formal articulation of the marketplace concept by JIATF 401 leadership, (2) coordination with interagency partners on testing and evaluation, and (3) planning for a counter-UAS summit to align policy, science, and procurement approaches. There is explicit acknowledgment that funds for the marketplace are not yet determined and will likely derive from multiple budget lines (O&M, RDT&E, procurement). The articles emphasize that the marketplace will not immediately replace all existing processes but aims to provide a central, standardized pathway for testing, feedback, and purchasing.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 08:25 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: DoD and JIATF 401 have publicly advanced the underlying organizational framework that would support a centralized marketplace. In August 2025, DoD/Defense media briefings described the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 with acquisition and procurement authority, aiming to coordinate counter-UAS activities across agencies (JIATF 401 establishment context). By November 2025, Defense One reported that the Army-led effort was pursuing a one-stop marketplace approach, with planning for a counter-UAS summit and a still-undetermined launch date for the marketplace (Defense One, 11/14/2025). Independent trade coverage in December 2025 also described the marketplace as a core component, highlighting data access, user feedback, and procurement options as central features (MeriTalk, 12/22/2025).
Current status vs. completion: There is clear progress toward a centralized marketplace concept, including organizational establishment and public framing of a marketplace as a key deliverable. However, concrete deployment to interagency and law enforcement partners—i.e., the marketplace being deployed and accessed by users—has not been publicly completed as of early 2026. The available reporting emphasizes planning, governance, and summit events rather than a finished, live procurement portal.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401 with procurement authority, a November 2025 Defense One report noting ongoing marketplace planning and an anticipated summit, and December 2025 coverage underscoring the marketplace as a central initiative. No firm deployment date is provided in these sources, and a launch date remains undisclosed. The pattern suggests incremental development rather than a closed, deployed system by February 2026.
Source reliability and caveats: The most concrete official signal is the DoD-backed establishment of JIATF 401, but there is limited publicly available detail on a finalized, live marketplace or access by partners. Coverage from Defense One and Meritalk (industry-focused outlets) aligns on the marketplace trajectory but does not substitute for an official deployment announcement. Given the incentives of the involved agencies to pursue centralized data and procurement tools, the reporting is cautiously optimistic but remains incomplete without a deployment confirmation.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 07:00 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being pursued by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and is intended to pair with a broader UAS marketplace, with the goal of providing authoritative performance data and streamlined purchasing pathways (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-11).
Evidence of progress shows leadership publicly describing the marketplace concept, its intended data and procurement functions, and plans to test and evaluate systems before adding them to the platform. However, sources note there is no launch date yet and no finalized budget; funding is expected to come from multiple internal DoD pools and related agencies (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-11).
Regarding completion status, there is no evidence that the marketplace has been deployed as of February 2026. Reporting consistently describes planning, policy development, and testing activities rather than a ready-to-use, nationwide deployment (Executive Gov, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-11).
Key milestones referenced in coverage include: (1) the formation of JIATF 401 under DoD, (2) public reiterations of the marketplace concept, (3) planned counter-UAS summits and testing exercises to evaluate candidate systems. No firm deployment date or concrete vendor roster has been announced in reliable outlets to date (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-11).
Source reliability varies with outlet; Defense One and Breaking Defense are reputable defense-focused outlets with firsthand sourcing from DoD leadership, while Executive Gov aggregates government coverage. Taken together, the reporting supports a status of ongoing development rather than a completed marketplace.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 04:22 PMin_progress
The claim asserts that a counter-UAS (C-UAS) marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It cites a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. Based on public reporting, there is evidence of ongoing efforts and planning, but no confirmation that a fully deployed marketplace exists yet for broad interagency use.
Progress indicators show that the effort is being advanced under the Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF) 401 framework. In November 2025, reporting described the Army-led task force planning an online marketplace to purchase counter-UAS equipment and to provide authoritative data on system performance. However, officials indicated there was no fixed launch date and no guarantee of how many systems would be available at rollout (or at all) in the initial phase.
Public sources consistently describe the marketplace as a work-in-progress rather than a live, deployed platform. Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov reported the initiative as a plan or capability in development, with future testing, evaluation, and procurement processes to be established but without a published deployment date. The Transportation Security Administration’s C-UAS testing and data-sharing framework also points to ongoing interagency collaboration and standardized data processes, but not a deployed marketplace matching the stated description.
Dates and milestones publicly referenced include November 2025 statements about launching a digital marketplace and coordinating with interagency partners, and notes that testing, data-sharing catalogs, and procurement workflows are being developed in parallel. The reliability of sources appears high for the claims about ongoing development, though none confirm full deployment or universal interagency access as of early 2026. Overall, the claim remains in_progress pending a verifiable launch and documented access for partner agencies.
Sources indicate a strong incentive alignment across the DoD, DHS, FBI, and other partners to accelerate counter-UAS integration and procurement, but the absence of a concrete deployment date or access criteria suggests the marketplace is not yet deployed. The focus on standardized testing, data cataloging, and centralized procurement parity in multiple reports supports the overall direction, even as a specific, publicly verifiable deployment remains unconfirmed.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 02:22 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms initial moves toward a centralized online marketplace, led by the Army and Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401). However, there is no firm deployment date announced for a fully functional marketplace.
Multiple outlets in late 2025 described the marketplace as a planned or in-development capability rather than a live, fully operational system. Breaking Defense quoted Brig. Gen. Matt Ross in November 2025 describing the marketplace as something the Army-led task force planned to establish, with no launch date specified. Executive Gov and other trade outlets echoed the same framing, noting ongoing testing, data collection, and procurement workflow planning rather than a deploy-and-go solution.
Military.com’s December 2025 coverage characterized the effort as launching or approaching launch, but it did not provide a concrete deployment milestone or confirm that interagency partners already have full access to a centralized data-and-procurement hub. By February 2026, reporting consistently describes the initiative as ongoing, with further work needed to finalize data libraries, testing outcomes, and vendor participation before a live marketplace is available to federal partners. Overall, the status aligns with an in-progress initiative rather than a completed rollout.
Reliability of sources is generally high for this topic: Breaking Defense is a specialized defense industry outlet; Military.com and Executive Gov report on DoD and interagency programs with standard caveats about timelines. All accounts consistently indicate planning, data standardization, and procurement considerations are active, while a concrete, deployed marketplace with broad interagency access has not been publicly verified. The incentives described—accelerating c-UAS procurement and standardizing testing—support a gradual, phased rollout rather than an immediate deployment.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 12:46 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates planning and coordination activities around a centralized c-UAS capability, but no definitive deployment or launch date is disclosed. The emphasis appears to be on facilitating data access and procurement decisions across interagency partners rather than announcing a live, fully functional marketplace to date.
Progress evidence includes late-2025 briefings and discussions by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and DoW/IA leadership, describing efforts to share data, lessons, and procurement approaches among federal, state, and local partners. Reports characterize these efforts as ongoing planning and interagency alignment rather than a completed platform. Notably, December 2025 Army and interagency symposium activities focused on threat understanding and interagency collaboration rather than a deployed marketplace.
There is no publicly available source confirming a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of February 2026. The most concrete statements describe intentions to build an online marketplace and to host coordinating events, with no identified launch date or user access milestones. The available reporting suggests the initiative remains in the development and testing phase, with procurement integration and data-sharing capabilities evolving over time.
Dates and milestones currently cited center on planning and interagency events in late 2025 (e.g., December 2025 symposia) rather than a completed product. The cited coverage does not document a concrete deployment, user registrations, or data feeds to interagency partners. Given the absence of a deployed platform in the sources, the claim should be treated as in_progress rather than complete.
Source reliability varies:
Army.mil and ExecutiveGov provide contemporaneous, defense-aligned reporting with explicit quotes from officials, but neither confirms a live marketplace deployment by early 2026. Taken together, these sources support a trajectory toward a centralized c-UAS marketplace, with ongoing development and interagency coordination, rather than a completed, widely accessible product.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 10:57 AMcomplete
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows this progressed from planning to deployment, with public reports in November 2025 that an online digital marketplace under JIATF 401 was planned to consolidate testing data, performance information, and procurement options (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). By December 2025 reporting indicates the marketplace had launched to help agencies identify and compare vetted counter-UAS systems and access centralized data and testing information (Military.com, 2025-12-08). The project appears to have achieved the completion condition: a deployed, centralized portal accessible to interagency partners for data, feedback, and procurement options.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 08:41 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Army-led JIATF 401 is planning an online marketplace and data ecosystem intended for testing, evaluation, and procurement of counter-UAS capabilities for federal agencies, installations, and interagency partners, with reporting from Defense/Defense-Wide outlets.
Milestones and status: Public reporting describes ongoing planning, data standardization, policy development, and pilot testing; no publicly announced launch date or deployment milestone has been disclosed.
Current status: The completion condition—marketplace developed, deployed, and access provided to data, feedback, and procurement options—has not yet been publicly achieved as of early 2026; expectations are for continued development and testing rather than a ready-to-use platform.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Army.mil, all reputable defense/security outlets, indicating progress but not a finalized deployment at this time.
Conclusion: The claim remains in_progress; a centralized counter-UAS marketplace is in development with data access and procurement workflows being defined, but full deployment has not occurred publicly.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 04:30 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace intended to centralize testing data, performance information, and procurement pathways for counter-drone capabilities. As of early 2026, a launch date for the marketplace has not been announced and no deployed, universal access is in place.
Progress evidence shows substantial planning and public communication. In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described the marketplace as a central system to allow vendors to introduce capabilities, enable testing and evaluation, provide feedback, and streamline procurement for interagency partners (DOD/Defense-press reporting). Defense One and Breaking Defense articles from November–December 2025 reiter the concept and intent, including testing, policy development, and a planned c-UAS summit to discuss implementation.
Evidence of completion or deployment is absent. Reports consistently note that while the marketplace is a stated objective, there is no firm launch date or confirmed list of initial systems. Military.com’s December 2025 piece and Defense One’s November 2025 coverage indicate ongoing development with funding to be drawn from multiple accounts, but no activation or go-live milestone is documented.
Concrete milestones and dates cited include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401, the November 2025 public statements about an online marketplace, and a planned c-UAS summit later in November 2025. The articles emphasize testing, evaluation, and policy work ahead of any formal deployment, suggesting the effort remains in the planning and validation stage rather than completed execution.
Source reliability appears solid for identifying the initiative and its status: Breaking Defense, Defense One, Defense Department reporting cited by Defense/Defense-press outlets, and Military.com. While these sources are defense-industry–focused and may reflect institutional incentives to highlight progress, they consistently note the marketplace as a planned capability with no announced go-live date. Given the lack of a deployed system, the claim should be read as underway but not complete.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 02:31 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting traces the effort to JIATF 401, led by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, with plans for an online marketplace that pairs data on system performance with procurement access, alongside a broader UAS marketplace initiative. Early disclosures describe parallel efforts to establish both a UAS marketplace and a counter-UAS marketplace to support interagency and homeland security needs. The objective is to accelerate access to tested information and purchasing options across federal partners, rather than to field a finished product today. Progress evidence from late 2025 describes planning, testing coordination, and interagency engagement ahead of deployment, with no firm launch date published. Reliability notes: sources are defense and government-coverage outlets summarizing official statements; the program is described as developing, with completion contingent on future testing and funding.
Update · Feb 11, 2026, 01:39 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates early development steps and planning rather than a deployed, fully functional system. Multiple outlets describe the initiative as led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) with a focus on creating a centralized marketplace for tested data, user feedback, and procurement options, but a completed deployment had not occurred by early 2026 (defense.gov article Dec 18, 2025; Breaking Defense and related outlets Nov-Dec 2025).
Evidence of progress includes formal establishment plans for JIATF 401 in 2025 (establishment document Aug 28, 2025) and subsequent reporting that the Army-led task force intended to stand up a digital marketplace and begin testing and policy development in late 2025. Industry-focused outlets and Defense Department coverage describe ongoing efforts to create the marketplace as part of broader counter-UAS posture maturation, with milestones such as test data access, user feedback mechanisms, and procurement pathways being outlined rather than fully implemented.
There is no credible public evidence that the marketplace has been deployed and fully accessible to interagency and law enforcement partners as of February 2026. Articles emphasize planning, pilots, and policy development rather than a completed, live shopping and data-sharing portal. The best-supported conclusion is that the initiative remained in progress, with ongoing work to standardize data, validate procurement options, and integrate interagency participation.
Key dates and milestones cited include the Aug 28, 2025 establishment of JIATF 401, and late-2025 reporting on the marketplace plan and initial testing activities. The Defense Department and defense-press reporting consistently frame the effort as iterative and developing, not yet complete. Reliability scales with the sources: defense.gov for official framing, and defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Executive Gov) for progress updates; all agree on a work-in-progress status.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 11:07 PMin_progress
Brief restatement of the claim: The Defense Department’s interagency task forces are developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence suggests this marketplace is being planned and piloted rather than deployed as a live, fully accessible system. Multiple reputable outlets report that Army-led efforts under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) are developing a digital/UAS marketplace to test, share data, and facilitate purchase decisions (Breaking Defense, Military.com, Defense One, Executive Gov).
Progress indicators include public statements and reporting on a planned or upcoming marketplace; details mention authoritative data on performance, user feedback, and procurement pathways, plus upcoming events like a c-UAS summit to outline how interagency partners will interact with the system (Breaking Defense; Defense One). However, there is no clear, verifiable date for deployment or a fully functioning access portal as of early 2026. Reports describe the initiative as ongoing work with policy development, testing, and vendor engagement still in progress (Executive Gov; Military.com).
What remains in progress or uncertain: the completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been demonstrated as completed publicly. Public coverage emphasizes planning, pilot testing, and governance frameworks rather than a live, widely accessible portal. No official defense-branch announcement confirms full deployment or user access as of February 2026 (sources cited: Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com, Executive Gov).
Dates and milestones: November–December 2025 coverage notes the Army-led task force plans to stand up the marketplace, with events like a c-UAS summit to organize interagency collaboration; August 2025 documents discuss establishment and funding considerations for JIATF 401. These items outline a pathway toward a marketplace rather than a finished product. Reliability notes: outlets cited are specialized defense-focused outlets with generally strong sourcing, though independent verification for a live deployment remains lacking.
Overall reliability: reporting is consistent about an ongoing, in-progress effort led by JIATF 401, with multiple outlets framing the marketplace as forthcoming rather than operational. Given the lack of a deployed, fully accessible portal by early 2026, the claim should be monitored as a developing program rather than a completed outcome (see Breaking Defense, Military.com, Defense One, Executive Gov).
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 09:07 PMin_progress
Summary of the claim: The article describes an effort to create a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 07:07 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. A centerpiece described is a centralized marketplace enabling access to DoD test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement use. The goal is for interagency partners to have a single access point for evaluating and obtaining counter-UAS capabilities.
Evidence of progress shows that multiple reputable outlets reported plans and early development activity rather than a finished product. In November 2025, reports described Army-led efforts to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-UAS data and procurement, intended to provide authoritative performance data and a streamlined purchasing path (Breaking Defense). In December 2025, the Defense Department’s briefing reiterated the marketplace concept as a cornerstone of interagency collaboration (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025). Other outlets similarly described an upcoming online marketplace aimed at consolidating data and acquisition options (ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025; Military.com, Dec 2025).
Current status indicates the marketplace has not yet been completed or deployed as of early 2026. Several sources describe planning, development, and staged rollouts or pilot concepts rather than a fully operational portal accessible to all interagency and law enforcement partners. No source publicly confirms a deployed, end-to-end system with universal access across agencies.
Concrete milestones cited include: (1) November–December 2025 announcements about establishing an online counter-UAS marketplace (Nov 2025 sources), (2) December 2025 Defense Department coverage confirming the marketplace concept as part of layered counter-drone defense (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025), and (3) media coverage noting plans for authoritative data and procurement access to be centralized in a UAS marketplace (Nov–Dec 2025 outlets). The reliability of these reports is high for progress signals but remains ambiguous on a fully deployed platform by early 2026, given the lack of a deployment date in the sources.
Overall, the initiative appears in_progress: a formal marketplace concept is in motion with stated goals and near-term milestones, but a complete, deployed solution accessible across interagency and law enforcement partners has not yet been confirmed. Readers should monitor official DoD updates and defense-industry reporting for a definitive deployment date and user-access milestones. The sources cited are reputable outlets and official briefings that provide credible progress signals without asserting completion.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 04:26 PMin_progress
Restating the claim: the interagency/ law enforcement counter-UAS effort includes a centralized counter-UAS marketplace to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for partners. Evidence of progress: November 2025 reporting from Breaking Defense confirms Army-led JIATF 401 plans to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-UAS technology, including data on system performance and procurement access. December 2025 coverage from MeriTalk documents ongoing efforts to partner with state and local law enforcement and to use a central marketplace to accelerate deployment, with mentions of shared data and procurement options. November 2025 ExecutiveGov article echoes the leadership’s description of a marketplace offering drone detectors and non-kinetic options, and a related summit to coordinate testing and evaluation. Completion status: as of February 2026, these outlets describe active planning and development but no publicly announced launch date or full deployment; the marketplace appears in progress but not yet deployed at scale. Reliability note: sources are defense/industry outlets citing Army officials and task force briefings; direct DoD confirmation remains limited by access, so cross-source corroboration centers on public statements and coverage from multiple reputable outlets.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 02:24 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirming a deployed marketplace is not readily accessible, and the referenced Defense Department piece could not be accessed for independent verification. The concept appears linked to interagency risk-management and data-sharing efforts described by the DoD, but concrete public milestones for a centralized marketplace are not documented as of 2026-02-10.
Evidence of progress is therefore limited to mention of interagency task-force activities and general counter-UAS data-sharing initiatives described by DoD communications, with no clear, verifiable deployment date or list of procurement options publicly released. No definitive completion date or deployment milestone is present in accessible sources.
Given the lack of verifiable deployment data, the claim remains best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed. If a marketplace exists, it has not been publicly evidenced through accessible DoD announcements or independent reporting.
Reliability of sources is constrained by access issues to the cited DoD materials, restricting confirmation to secondary summaries. The most relevant public materials would be official DoD statements or test-data release notes, which are not currently verifiable in open-access formats.
If new DoD communications emerge naming a formal launch or deployment milestones for a counter-UAS marketplace, those would help determine a more definitive status. Until then, monitoring official DoD releases and Joint Interagency Task Force updates is recommended.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 12:45 PMin_progress
Claim in focus: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Current reporting indicates the effort is active and progressing, but no firm deployment date has been announced. Publicly available coverage describes a centralized online marketplace as a core component of Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s (JIATF-401) ongoing work to integrate test data, user feedback, and procurement options across agencies.
Evidence of progress: Defense-focused outlets in late 2025 reported the marketplace as a planned, central feature intended to streamline testing, feedback, and purchasing for counter-UAS capabilities. Defense One described the marketplace as a mechanism to synchronize testing, feedback, and policy with a launch date still to be determined. MeriTalk highlighted collaboration between JIATF-401 and the Defense Logistics Agency to turn grant funding into deployable counter-UAS capacity, with the marketplace cited as a core component.
Evidence of status: There is no published confirmation that the marketplace has been deployed or is fully operational as of early 2026. Multiple articles emphasize planning, policy development, and tests, but stop short of confirming a live, centralized procurement portal accessible to interagency partners. The absence of a concrete launch date suggests the project remains in development or early implementation phases.
Dates and milestones: Key public references show activity in November–December 2025 regarding the marketplace concept and related interagency coordination. No later public milestone or deployment date has been documented in high-quality sources accessible to date. Reliability notes: Coverage from Defense One and MeriTalk is reputable within defense journalism; however, neither provides a definitive deployment date, and the Defense Department’s official confirmation could not be accessed in this search. Continued monitoring of official DoD briefings is warranted.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 11:14 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is to provide a centralized system where users can access test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-drone capabilities.
Progress evidence: Multiple reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS and related UAS data. Officials describe plans to offer authoritative performance data, testing results, and a streamlined procurement pathway for interagency and partner agencies. Public briefings and coverage from late 2025 describe coordination efforts and upcoming c-UAS market-testing events.
Current status versus completion: As of late 2025 and early 2026, outlets describe the marketplace as being developed, with no firm launch date announced and with ongoing testing/evaluation plans and interagency coordination. Sources emphasize that the marketplace is intended to ride alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with future procurement and policy work to enable deployment. There is no public confirmation that the marketplace is fully deployed or that all intended users have ongoing access.
Milestones and reliability: Key milestones cited include the planned c-UAS marketplace testing, a forthcoming interagency summit to align testing and evaluation, and policy/funding considerations for deployment. Reputable outlets such as Breaking Defense and Defense-focused outlets report similar timelines and the involvement of JIATF 401 leadership, providing a corroborated view of ongoing development. Given the lack of a published deployment date, the reports remain cautious about completion, reflecting an ongoing development effort rather than a finished product.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 08:52 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being built to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports from November–December 2025 describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning and developing an online marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing information, and procurement options (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Military.com).
Current status and milestones: There is no publicly announced go-live date as of early 2026; outlets note ongoing development, testing, and interagency coordination, with a planned summit and policy work rather than a deployed platform (Defense One; Breaking Defense; Military.com).
Reliability and context: Sources are defense-focused outlets with access to senior officials and program briefings; they consistently frame the marketplace as a work in progress aimed at centralizing data and procurement, not a completed deployment at this time (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Military.com).
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 04:36 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In late 2025, Breaking Defense reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online marketplace to consolidate testing data, performance feedback, and vetted procurement paths for counter-UAS solutions. Defense One summarized the concept as an online marketplace to purchase counter-drone gear, noting it was still in planning with no fixed deployment date. Execut iveGov echoed the planning status, highlighting data provision and procurement facilitation without a deployed platform.
Current status: Public reporting through late 2025 and early 2026 indicates the marketplace remains in planning/development rather than deployed. Sources describe ongoing testing/evaluation policy work, a planned counter-UAS summit, and vendor testing, but no evidence of a launched portal accessible to interagency partners.
Milestones and dates: Notable milestones include a November 2025 announcement of the marketplace and a counter-UAS summit planned for that period to coordinate testing and evaluation. There is no published completion date or deployment milestone in the sources reviewed, suggesting the project is transitioning toward implementation but not yet completed.
Reliability note: The assessment relies on reputable defense outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov) with direct reporting on JIATF 401 and the counter-UAS marketplace. DoD.gov content could not be accessed for independent verification here; nonetheless, the consistency across multiple outlets supports the interpretation of an ongoing development effort rather than a finished deployment.
Update · Feb 10, 2026, 03:55 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is pursuing an online marketplace to sort, test, and share information on counter-drone systems for federal partners, with the Army as executive agent and cross-agency coordination (DHS, FBI, FAA, etc.). Breakthrough reporting in November 2025 notes a launch date has not been set, but development and testing plans are active.
Current status vs completion: The initiative is advancing, but there is no public deployment or partner access as of early 2026; governance, testing workflows, and funding practices are being established, with procurement options to be added over time rather than a ready-to-use portal today.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 10:35 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple reputable outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning and building a digital marketplace to sort, test, and share information about counter-drone systems for federal partners. Military.com (Dec 8, 2025) describes the marketplace as a central, vetted hub for performance data, testing information, and procurement guidance. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) corroborate the plan and the role of JIATF 401 in coordinating interagency effort. A milestone note from Army sources highlights early progress and a transition from a “community of interest” to a “community of action” in its counter-drone mission (Dec 19, 2025).
Status assessment: As of February 2026, there is consistent reporting that the marketplace is being stood up and tested, but no definitive public indication that it has gone live or that interagency partners have full access. The Defense Department has not published a firm deployment date, and articles describe the marketplace as an ongoing development with phased implementation. The available reporting emphasizes planning, data-sharing objectives, and procurement alignment rather than a completed, widely accessible platform.
Milestones and dates: Key cited dates include November–December 2025 when the task force publicly framed the marketplace, and December 2025 when early operational milestones and 100-day progress were noted by Army leadership. No explicit completion or deployment date is provided in the sources. If progress continues, anticipated next steps would involve formal go-live, partner onboarding, and integration with testing data repositories and procurement streams.
Source reliability note: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and official-leaning industry reporting (Military.com, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov,
Army.mil). These sources align with DoD organizational changes around JIATF 401 and counter-UAS efforts, but none of them show a firm deployment announcement. Overall, reporting remains cautious and describes ongoing development rather than a completed marketplace.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 08:41 PMcomplete
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from 2025 reports indicates Army-led and interagency efforts to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-UAS, with officials describing a centralized hub for performance data, testing information, and procurement options. By December 2025, reporting suggested the marketplace was being launched or stood up to serve federal partners such as DHS, FBI, and local agencies, though exact deployment timelines varied by source.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 07:00 PMin_progress
What the claim states: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of interagency efforts to provide authoritative test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: Late-2025 reporting indicates JIATF 401 intends to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, aiming to centralize data on system performance and provide procurement options for interagency customers.
Current status: As of early 2026, sources describe planning and development activity but no deployed marketplace or launch date; reporting notes no announced launch date and ongoing testing and coordination with interagency partners.
Milestones and reliability: Crew of articles point to interagency symposia and testing to shape the marketplace, with no formal deployment confirmation in the cited material. Coverage relies on defense trade press and official Army communications; none offer a definitive deploy date.
Source reliability: The material comes from Breaking Defense, Army.mil, and ExecutiveGov, which collectively indicate planning and development but stop short of a deployed marketplace; no primary DoD proclamation confirming deployment is publicly accessible in the cited material.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 04:22 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize data, feedback, and procurement for interagency and law enforcement. 2025 reporting indicates an Army-led JIATF 401 effort to create an online marketplace and a common data framework, with no firm launch date announced as of early 2026. Evidence points to ongoing development, testing, and interagency coordination rather than a completed deployment.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 02:21 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting since late 2025 describes the effort as a planned or underway digital marketplace intended to consolidate test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency use. Coverage emphasizes governance and stand-up activities rather than a fully deployed system by early 2026.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 12:44 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence to date shows the effort is organized under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) with a focus on creating an online marketplace and related data/test/evaluation capabilities, but no firm deployment date has been announced. Multiple reputable outlets report that the marketplace is planned and in development, not yet deployed (Nov 2025).
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 11:00 AMin_progress
The claim describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This concept was publicly raised as a priority by DoD-led groups and within interagency discussions in late 2025 (JIATF 401 context). The article note frames the marketplace as a centralized mechanism for authoritative data, test results, and vetted procurement options (Defense/Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Independent reporting indicates that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planned to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace concurrent with an overarching UAS marketplace, with the goal of enabling rapid procurement and better data for decision-makers (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). There was emphasis on providing performance data for different systems so customers could select tools suited to their needs, rather than announcing a fixed launch date (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Subsequent coverage notes that the marketplace remained in development with coordination efforts and planned demonstrations or tests, but no public launch date or firm scope of available systems was disclosed (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). The reporting also indicated that funding for the marketplace was not yet defined, potentially sourcing from multiple DoD budget pools, reflecting the project’s early-stage status (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
By early 2026, there is no evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace; public statements describe ongoing planning, testing coordination, and interagency engagement as prerequisites before any deployment (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). The absence of a published completion date reinforces that the effort is in_progress rather than complete, with milestones likely contingent on testing outcomes and budget decisions (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Source reliability: Breaking Defense is a reputable defense-focused outlet with on-the-record quotes from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and direct reporting on JIATF 401; ExecutiveGov summarizes Breaking Defense coverage and provides context for federal procurement implications. Cross-referencing DoD-origin materials is limited due to access constraints on certain DoD documents, but the public reporting aligns with DoD's ongoing counter-UAS governance efforts. Overall, the reporting supports an in_progress status for a centralized counter-UAS marketplace as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 08:32 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: November 2025 reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning a digital marketplace for counter-UAS tech, aiming to streamline procurement and enable interagency access. Coverage notes ongoing development, with a forthcoming counter-UAS summit to shape policy, testing, and requirements.
Current status: As of early 2026, multiple reputable outlets describe planning and coordination rather than a deployed system. There is no published deployment date or confirmed access for all interagency partners.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones include the November 2025 announcements of the marketplace concept and a counter-UAS summit. Reporting emphasizes policy alignment, testing, and evaluation as prerequisites to deployment, not a launch date.
Reliability note: Reports come from defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Defense News Digest) and industry coverage, which corroborate the marketplace concept but do not show a finalized product. DoD blocking of the source article prevents direct official confirmation in this instance.
Follow-up: Monitor for official DoD or JIATF 401 statements around late 2026 to confirm deployment status and access readiness.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 04:00 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. Public reporting through late 2025 describes the marketplace as an emerging, Army-led digital hub designed to sort, test, and share counter-drone capability data and to streamline acquisition across federal partners (Military.com, 2025-12-08). Subsequent reporting in December 2025 indicates initial milestones and funding plans linked to the marketplace, including a near-term push to deliver counter-UAS capabilities to the southern border and related interagency testing efforts (Army Public Affairs, 2025-12-19). Taken together, the marketplace is actively being developed and piloted, but there is no public evidence that it is fully deployed or universally accessible across all interagency partners as of early 2026. The available sources frame the marketplace as a work-in-progress with concrete pilots and data-sharing objectives rather than a fully mature, all-partner platform (Defense Department and Army press materials; Army Public Affairs, 2025-12).
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 01:55 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Army Public Affairs described JIATF-401 pursuing a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions as part of its 100-day operations and rapid-innovation push (
Army.mil, 2025-12-19). Defense industry reporting outlined a governance shift toward centralized procurement authority and streamlined testing that would underpin a marketplace-like mechanism (Defense News, 2025-08-28).
Current status and milestones: The marketplace concept is actively being developed within JIATF-401, with policy consolidation, testing events, and expedited procurement pathways emphasized. A concrete deployment date has not been publicly announced; initial capability deliveries were planned for early 2026 as part of ongoing efforts (Army.mil, 2025-12-19).
Reliability notes: The most authoritative signals come from official Army communications and established defense outlets; they describe progress and planning rather than a completed, universally accessible portal as of February 2026 (Army.mil, 2025-12-19; Defense News, 2025-08-28).
Bottom line: The counter-UAS marketplace is under active development with clear progress and near-term deployment expectations, but public confirmation of full deployment to interagency and law enforcement partners has not been established by February 2026.
Update · Feb 09, 2026, 12:12 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize data access, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms early design and planning activity around a centralized digital marketplace for counter-UAS solutions, led by Army-influenced interagency efforts (JIATF 401) and interfacing with other federal partners (DHS, FBI) [Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Army, 2025-12-19].
Evidence of progress shows concrete steps toward creating an enterprise data-and-procurement hub, including policy alignment, testing coordination, and readiness to pilot acquisitions through a centralized marketplace framework. Army reporting notes 100 days of counter-drone operations and highlights a marketplace concept as part of Line of Effort 2 (Support Warfighter Lethality) [Army, 2025-12-19].
There is no public indication that the marketplace has been fully deployed or that interagency partners have full access to a live, centralized data and procurement platform as of early 2026. The sources describe ongoing development, governance, and testing activities, with procurement authority and funding arrangements still under establishment for JIATF 401’s marketplace function [Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Army, 2025-12-19].
Key milestones cited include the transition of counter-sUAS efforts to JIATF 401, establishment of authorities and funding mechanisms, and plans to test and validate platforms before adding systems to the marketplace. No firm deployment date is publicly announced by February 2026. The reliability of the cited sources is high, including official Army statements and defense journalism, though specifics remain non-public or tentative.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 10:06 PMin_progress
Summary of the claim: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The current reporting indicates the effort is under development within Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and linked to Replicator 2 procurement activities and homeland defense counter-UAS policy work.
Evidence of progress: Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) states an online marketplace is being built to let installations and agencies purchase tested components with integrated feedback and streamlined procurement. Air & Space Forces Magazine (Jan 18, 2026) reports first Replicator 2 acquisitions underway and notes the Counter-UAS Marketplace was expected to have initial operating capability by March 1, 2026, including access to user feedback for others.
Current status and milestones: As of Feb 8, 2026, there is no public confirmation that the marketplace has fully deployed system-wide or that interagency partners have broad, ongoing access. The March 1, 2026 IOC date is repeatedly cited as an imminent milestone rather than a completed deployment.
Reliability of sources: The strongest corroboration comes from Defense One and Air & Space Forces Magazine, reputable defense outlets. Coverage consistently describes the marketplace’s existence, purpose, and near-term deployment, with no independently verifiable deployment announcements yet.
Incentives and context: The initiative reflects an interagency emphasis on accelerating counter-UAS adoption, standardizing evaluation, and reducing procurement friction for installations and agencies facing drone threats.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 07:57 PMin_progress
The claim concerns a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is under the Joint Interagency
Task Force framework and is being developed to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing of C-UAS capabilities. There is emphasis on a centralized online marketplace that would connect agencies with tested components, vendor feedback, and procurement options. As of early 2026, there is no public confirmation of a deployed marketplace.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 06:23 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates that a centralized marketplace component is a core objective of the Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF-401) effort, intended to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement of counter-UAS capabilities across federal, state, and local partners. As of late 2025, the marketplace was described as an ongoing development with no firm deployment date announced (launch date to be determined).
Evidence from Defense One cites an Army-led push to create an online marketplace where installations and agencies—such as FBI and DHS—can purchase tested and vetted counter-UAS components, with planning for a counter-UAS summit and policy guidance in the near term. MeriTalk corroborates progress toward a shared data and procurement framework, noting ongoing efforts to integrate test data, operational feedback, and procurement options to reduce risk and accelerate deployment. Both sources frame the marketplace as a key, but not yet completed, milestone of the broader interagency counter-UAS effort.
The available reporting through November–December 2025 describes concrete activities surrounding data sharing, vendor testing, and interagency coordination, but does not indicate a full deployment or enrollment of all partners. The stated completion condition in the claim—complete deployment with active access for interagency and law enforcement partners—remains unmet according to the latest public accounts, which emphasize ongoing development and policy work. No firm date for full operational rollout is provided in reputable sources to date.
Key milestones identified include: (1) establishment and operation of JIATF-401 focusing on rapid integration and testing of counter-UAS tech; (2) planning for an online marketplace and a counter-UAS summit; (3) coordination with DLA for logistics, contracting, and funding pathways to move from grants to deployed capability; (4) efforts to create a common air picture across federal and nonfederal partners. The sources also note an emphasis on domestic deployment guidance and installation-level implementation, suggesting multi-phase progress rather than a single launch event.
Source reliability: Defense One and MeriTalk are reputable outlets covering defense and government technology topics with direct statements from JIATF-401 leadership (e.g., Brig. Gen. Matt Ross). While Defense One provides reporting on the marketplace concept and policy/testing work, neither source presents a final deployment date, indicating the claim remains in_progress. The evidence aligns with a credible, official-macroeconomic sequence of development, procurement alignment, and interagency collaboration rather than a completed rollout as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 04:00 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets reported in late 2025 that an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning a federal digital marketplace to test, share information, and streamline procurement for counter-UAS capabilities (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com). The marketplace is described as both a technical library and a procurement hub intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and enable interagency access to vetted tools (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Military.com).
Current status: There is clear planning and discussion about the marketplace, with no disclosed launch date. Reports indicate ongoing testing/evaluation activities and policy development, plus a planned counter-UAS summit to advance testing and governance before deployment (Defense One; Breaking Defense; Military.com).
Milestones and dates: November–December 2025 press coverage cites the assembly of an online marketplace concept, alignment with a broader UAS marketplace, and scheduling of a summit to shape policy, testing, and acquisition processes. No public indication of a go-live date or a completed deployment as of early 2026 (Defense One; Breaking Defense; Military.com).
Reliability note: The sources are established defense-news outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com) reporting statements from JIATF 401 leadership. Defense.gov content was inaccessible in this fetch, so external reporting underpins the current status assessment. The reporting consistently presents the marketplace as in planning and development, not yet deployed (as of early 2026).
Follow-up: Monitor for a formal launch announcement or deployment milestones from JIATF 401, DoD, or participating agencies; expect updates around scheduled summits or procurement policy releases.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 02:04 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting indicates an Army-led initiative (JIATF 401) to stand up a digital marketplace as part of a broader counter-drone initiative, with early planning and interagency coordination underway (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Evidence suggests the effort is in the design and rollout phase rather than fully deployed: the marketplace has been described as a planned capability, with milestones such as interagency summits and the establishment of the task force contributing to progress (Inside Unmanned Systems, 2025-12-01;
Army.mil, 2025-12-19).
Dozens of federal agencies are being rallied around the effort, but a firm deployment date or full access for partners has not been publicly announced (Military.com, 2025-12-08; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
The formal establishment of JIATF 401 to deliver joint counter-small UAS capabilities underpins the marketplace’s purpose and data/procurement functions (DoD PDF establishing JIATF 401, 2025-08-28). Early indicators show progress in organizing interagency collaboration, but no public confirmation of full marketplace deployment (various outlets, Aug–Dec 2025).
Reliability notes: sources are defense-focused outlets and official-looking summaries; timelines reflect planning and rollout phases typical of defense acquisitions rather than a completed system in use today (2025–2026).
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 12:19 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the marketplace concept as part of a broader interagency counter-UAS effort led by JIATF 401, with emphasis on testing, feedback, and streamlined buying processes. As of late 2025 and early 2026, sources indicate that the marketplace design exists and is being worked on, but a concrete deployment date or completed access for agencies has not been published.
Evidence of progress includes Defense One coverage from November 2025 describing the online marketplace as a work in progress, with a launch date not yet determined but a clear plan to test, evaluate, and standardize procurement and feedback mechanisms. The Defense One article also notes that policy, testing, and governance components are being developed in parallel, and that the marketplace would serve a range of agencies (e.g., military installations, FBI, DHS) once launched. Additional industry reporting in December 2025 references related efforts and the broader objective of centralized access to counter-UAS capabilities.
There is no publicly verified record of the marketplace being deployed or accessible to interagency partners by February 2026. The available reporting describes ongoing development, policy alignment, and testing activities rather than a live, fully operational system. The lack of a confirmed launch date from authoritative DoD communications makes it reasonable to categorize the status as still in progress rather than complete.
Reliability notes: coverage from Defense One is a reputable industry-focused outlet that cites official briefings and statements from JIATF 401 leadership. While Defense.gov published the original article describing the marketplace concept, access to that page was blocked in this session, so independent corroboration centers on Defense One’s reporting and related industry coverage. Taken together, these sources present a cautiously neutral view of ongoing development and the absence of a deployed marketplace to date.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 10:58 AMin_progress
Summary of the claim: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS (C-UAS) marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The stated goal is a centralized mechanism to provide authoritative test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options across agencies.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets reported on the Army-led JIATF 401 planning a digital marketplace for counter-drones, with emphasis on providing an online hub to test, evaluate, and purchase C-UAS capabilities. Key reports note that the marketplace was in the planning/testing phase, with no firm launch date announced and plans to hold a counter-UAS summit to shape requirements and testing (Nov 2025). The Defense Department has outlined an integrated approach for testing, evaluation, and eventual procurement alignment, but concrete deployment details remained undisclosed at that time (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Executive Gov).
Progress status against completion: As of late 2025 and early 2026, there is clear ongoing work to establish the marketplace and related policy/test frameworks, but no deployed, fully functional marketplace has been reported. Officials indicated ongoing testing, interagency coordination, and policy development, with procurement funding to be sourced from multiple DoD pools rather than a dedicated, single budget. The completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been met according to the sources consulted (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Executive Gov).
Reliability and incentives: The sourcing includes industry coverage and DoD statements, with cross-checks across defense-focused outlets known for covering DoD acquisitions and counter-UAS efforts. Given the stated lack of a launch date and budget clarity, readers should treat the marketplace as an ongoing program rather than a finished product. The reporting consistently frames the marketplace as an initiative in development, not a finished product (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Executive Gov).
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 08:49 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. Public reporting describes an Army-led effort to stand up an online marketplace that would provide access to tested data, vendor feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities across federal, state, and local partners. The aim is to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing in a single centralized platform (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Evidence of progress exists in the stated formation of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and its initiative to create the marketplace alongside broader c-UAS testing, policy development, and interagency collaboration efforts. Public summaries indicate planning activities, including a counter-UAS summit and policy/framework development, with leadership emphasizing data standardization and comparative testing to support procurement decisions (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
As for completion status, sources consistently note that a launch date for the marketplace had not been set as of late 2025, and that the effort remains in the planning, testing, and policy-setting phase. Reports describe ongoing testing, demonstrations, and interagency coordination, with procurement funding to be drawn from various DOD account lines rather than a dedicated budget line (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Milestones and dates cited include: formation of JIATF 401, planning for a counter-UAS summit in November 2025, and ongoing testing/evaluation coordination to establish a centralized data-and-procurement ecosystem. However, there is no public confirmation of a deployed, fully-functional marketplace by early 2026, and officials continue to describe the effort as evolving rather than complete (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Source reliability: coverage comes from reputable defense-focused outlets and official-leaning outlets reporting on Pentagon and Army-led initiatives. While multiple pieces rely on statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and task-force briefings, there is limited independent review of the marketplace’s operational deployment status to date; thus, findings should be treated as progress updates rather than a deployed system (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Follow-up note: given the ongoing nature of the effort and the absence of a public launch announcement, a future update should confirm deployment status, current users, and any formal procurement mechanisms or access controls for interagency partners (6–12 months after this report).
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 03:58 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is framed as a centralized mechanism for testing data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options across agencies.
Evidence of progress: Multiple 2025 reports indicate the Army-led JIATF 401 is planning and piloting a digital marketplace for counter-UAS tech, with leadership describing an integrated data set, testing/evaluation framework, and procurement pathways. Public briefings and interviews noted that launch dates were not yet set and that the effort remains in planning and collaboration phases.
Current status and milestones: As of late 2025 to early 2026, the marketplace is described as an ongoing initiative rather than a deployed, agency-wide system. Key milestones cited include policy development, testing and evaluation workflows, and a forthcoming interagency summit, but no formal deployment or access rollout has been publicly announced.
Source reliability and caveats: The most credible reporting comes from defense-focused outlets and official Army communications, which describe plans and governance rather than definitive deployment dates. Given budget, policy, and interagency coordination factors, progress is plausible but the completion criterion (deploy and provide access) has not yet been met.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 01:57 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information across federal partners, with the aim of improving procurement decisions and operational understanding. Multiple outlets describe this marketplace as a centralized data library and procurement hub rather than a closed, fully operational system yet.
Update · Feb 08, 2026, 12:08 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross announced that Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online marketplace to test, evaluate, and procure counter-UAS equipment for federal agencies, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement. By December 2025, reporting described the marketplace as ongoing development, described as a centralized hub for performance data, testing information, and vetted procurement options, with a parallel UAS marketplace referenced.
Current status: Multiple reputable outlets describe ongoing planning and development, but no firm deployment date or live access has been publicly announced as of February 2026. Sources note that the Defense Department has not fixed a launch date and that funding for the marketplace remains unsettled and likely to derive from various internal programs rather than a dedicated budget.
Milestones and dates: The November 2025 interagency summit and December 2025 coverage mark key milestones, framing the marketplace as forthcoming rather than deployed. No completion date is provided in public reporting.
Source reliability and caveats: The assessment relies on defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Military.com) that quote task-force leadership and describe plans. These sources are credible for policy developments but describe intended capabilities rather than a confirmed live system. The claim should be updated if a formal deployment and partner onboarding are announced.
Follow-up note: A timely official deployment timeline and partner onboarding criteria should be published to verify progress. A follow-up review by 2026-12-01 is recommended to confirm deployment status.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 10:12 PMin_progress
Restating the claim: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is building an online marketplace to streamline purchasing of tested and vetted counter-UAS components for installations and federal agencies, with policy work on domestic deployment; a launch date had not yet been set as of late 2025.
Current status and milestones: the initiative is moving forward but not deployed; ongoing tests, evaluations, and policy development are described, including plans for a counter-UAS summit and related procurement standards.
Reliability and context: sources include Defense One coverage of JIATF 401’s marketplace efforts, and industry reporting that corroborate ongoing development without a formal deployment announcement.
Incentives and interpretation: the effort reflects a centralized procurement aim to accelerate interagency access and vendor feedback, balancing speed of fielding with safety and standardization across agencies.
Bottom line: as of early 2026, the counter-UAS marketplace remains in development with no deployed deployment date publicly announced; continued updates are expected from Defense One and
U.S. defense press coverage.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 08:03 PMin_progress
Summary of claim and current status: The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting since late 2025 shows an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 401) driving efforts to stand up an online marketplace and related data-sharing capabilities, with emphasis on interoperability and streamlined acquisition. As of early 2026, the marketplace appears in development and planning phases, with no public indication of full deployment or universal access yet.
Progress evidence and notable milestones: Reports describe the marketplace concept as a core element of JIATF 401’s work, including plans to host test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options in a centralized system. Defense One and Breaking Defense coverage from November–December 2025 notes a target of integrating a common data/C2 framework and enabling cross-agency data sharing, along with enterprise licensing considerations. ExecutiveGov and MeriTalk recapitulate the marketplace as part of the broader counter-UAS data-sharing and purchasing ecosystem, with timelines focused on establishing capabilities rather than a finished product.
Evaluation of completion status: There is clear acknowledgment from multiple outlets that the marketplace is being built and integrated with other counter-UAS capabilities, but no definitive public completion date or deployment milestone has been announced. The emphasis in reports is on near-term enablement (shared data, cross-installation access, and marketplace-enabled procurement) rather than a complete, launched platform. Reliability appears high for the existence of initiatives and milestones, though exact scope, vendors, and access controls remain under development.
Timeline and concrete milestones observed: Key public signals include: (1) stand-up of JIATF 401 as the coordinating body for counter-UAS efforts (2025), (2) statements about implementing a common C2 framework and enterprise licenses within the next 90 days for cross-agency sharing (per Defense One), and (3) ongoing work to align DHS, FBI, and military installations around standardized data access and procurement options. Reports from late 2025 emphasize the marketplace as a central feature, with testing, data standardization, and training consolidation as parallel tracks. No firm deployment date or user-access date has been disclosed.
Source reliability and caveats: Coverage from Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and MeriTalk, while credible in defense-technology reporting, reflects early-state project updates and official briefings. The Defense Department’s own article on the topic is inaccessible in this instance, so cross-checking with independent outlets helps validate the basic trajectory. Given the incentives of the agencies involved (enhanced interoperability and rapid procurement), the reporting is consistent with an ongoing modernization effort rather than a completed rollout.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 06:24 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing efforts around a digital marketplace component as part of JIATF-401’s counter-sUAS program, including plans to consolidate user feedback and procurement information to accelerate decision-making. In December 2025, JIATF-401 marked 100 days of operations and described progress toward a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions, with a focus on integrating policy, testing, and rapid capability delivery. By January 2026, reporting indicates the marketplace was moving toward initial operating capability, including examples of testing purchases and a plan to publish user feedback and procurement data on the platform. Multiple outlets note a broader objective of enabling an Amazon-like experience for installations to access data, feedback, and procurement options, but as of early February 2026 the marketplace was not yet fully deployed across all interagency partners.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 03:56 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The article describes a centralized mechanism intended to allow access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for DOW counter-UAS efforts.
Progress evidence: Reporting from Defense One (Nov 2025) confirms an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) effort to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS gear, including testing, vetting components, and providing a centralized purchasing pathway. The piece notes that a launch date for the marketplace had not yet been determined and that a counter-UAS summit was planned to discuss policy, science, and technology.
Current status: There is no publicly available evidence indicating the marketplace has been deployed or fully operational as of early 2026. The Defense One article specifies that the launch date remained to be determined and emphasizes ongoing development, testing, and policy work rather than completion.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 Defense One report announcing the marketplace initiative, the planning of a counter-UAS summit, and ongoing evaluation/policy activities by JIATF 401. No concrete deployment date or completion confirmation is documented in the sources consulted.
Source reliability: The primary verifiable reporting comes from Defense One (a reputable defense-focused outlet) covering statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401. Additional corroboration appears in defense-industry and trade coverage around the same period, which consistently notes ongoing development without a deployed marketplace by late 2025. The absence of primary DoD deployment confirmation (due to access limitations to defense.gov content) is noted, but the available independent reporting remains coherent about an in-progress status.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 02:01 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: November 2025 reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planned an online marketplace to streamline procurement of counter-UAS technologies for interagency and military partners. December 2025 interagency symposia and DoW/IA coordination efforts emphasize data sharing, threat mitigation, and resource coordination across DoW and law enforcement partners.
Current status: Public deployment or active access by interagency partners to a centralized marketplace has not been publicly verified as of early 2026. The available material points to planning, coordination, and advocacy for a marketplace rather than a deployed portal.
Milestones and dates: Notable references are the 2025-11 announcements of a marketplace plan and the 2025-12
symposia focusing on shared DoW/IA procurement and data-sharing practices. No confirmed completion date or deployment milestone is published.
Reliability note: Sources are official or government-aligned outlets (ExecutiveGov,
Army.mil) reporting on interagency planning and coordination, which supports the plausibility of progress but does not confirm a deployed marketplace.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 12:26 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centrally provide interagency and law enforcement partners access to data, feedback, and procurement options.
Since late 2025, reporting indicates active efforts to stand up a federal digital marketplace under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), led by the Army, to organize testing data, performance information, and procurement pathways for counter-UAS capabilities.
Public sources describe progress toward an online marketplace that would unify data, testing results, and vendor options for government customers, but there is no public record of full deployment or formal completion as of early 2026.
Reliability notes: sources are defense-focused outlets and official statements; while they indicate steps toward a marketplace and data framework, concrete deployment milestones remain incomplete in the public record.
The coverage points to ongoing work, pilots, and implementation phases rather than a completed system, with continued updates expected from the Army and defense press.
Follow-up on completion would be warranted around an announced deployment date or formal acceptance by interagency partners; a tentative check-in date is 2026-06-01.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 10:56 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: November–December 2025 reporting from multiple credible outlets confirms the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) is pursuing a centralized, digital marketplace intended to store testing results, provide performance data, and streamline procurement for counter-UAS gear. Army.mil notes JIATF-401 leadership updating interagency partners and prioritizing a marketplace for capability sharing, data, and collaboration (Nov 13, 2025). Defense One's Nov 14, 2025 piece describes “one-stop shopping” for counter-drone gear and a central hub for testing and evaluation policy. Military.com (Dec 8, 2025) describes the portal as an ongoing effort with no firm live date announced yet.
Progress status: By early 2026, articles describe continued development and planning rather than full deployment. Officials cite plans to test, evaluate, and centralize data before enabling agency-wide procurement access, with a future summit and policy work component. No definitive publicly stated launch/deployment date is reported, and the Defense Department has not confirmed a live, interagency-access portal as of February 2026.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include (a) the November 2025 interagency coordination meetings and briefing by JIATF-401 leadership (Army.mil, Defense One), (b) Defense One’s November 14 piece confirming a marketplace concept and testing/evaluation integration, and (c) Military.com’s December 8 article indicating ongoing development without a live date. These collectively indicate progress toward a central marketplace, but not completion.
Source reliability note: Reporting from Defense One,
Army.mil, Military.com, and Breaking Defense (via summarized coverage) all reference official DoD/JIATF-401 briefings and events. While not all articles provide primary documents, they consistently reflect the same programmatic trajectory and stated goals, supporting a cautious conclusion that the marketplace is in development rather than deployed.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 08:49 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from official and coverage sources indicates the effort is planned and advanced, not yet deployed. Progress includes Army-led discussions of a UAS/counter-UAS marketplace, authoritative testing data, and procurement pathways, with near-term interagency activities planned (Army.mil 2025-11-13; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17). No completion date or deployed platform has been announced; the marketplace remains in development with upcoming summits and testing events described as near-term steps.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 04:49 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The article describes a centralized mechanism for interagency access to data such as DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: I could not access the Defense Department article to confirm milestones or deployment details, and no independent outlets readily document a launched or deployed marketplace as of the current date. There are no verified public reports of concrete milestones (e.g., data portal availability, partner access, or procurement channels) in accessible sources.
Status assessment: Because verifiable, independent reporting is not available, it is not possible to confirm completion or ongoing deployment. The claim remains unverified in the public record; if progress exists, it has not been clearly publicly documented by reputable outlets.
Source reliability notes: The primary source is a Defense Department piece that I cannot access directly due to access restrictions, which limits confirmatory verification. Other high-quality outlets do not appear to have published corroborating details on a counter-UAS marketplace to date.
Incentives and interpretation: If a marketplace is emerging to centralize interagency data and procurement options, potential incentives would include streamlined interagency collaboration and standardized procurement. Without public milestones or outcomes, it is premature to assess impact on operations or procurement efficiency. Given the lack of verifiable progress, the claim should be treated as in_progress until concrete evidence emerges.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 02:47 AMin_progress
Summary of the claim: The article states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The aim is to provide an authoritative, centralized platform for capability sharing and testing across the interagency landscape. The claim reflects ongoing program intent rather than a completed product as of the reporting period.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable defense outlets and official channels reported in late 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing a digital marketplace for counter-UAS, with emphasis on capability sharing, testing data, and streamlined procurement. The Army Pentagon briefings and Defense/Defense One reporting describe a marketplace concept, with policymakers planning testing, demonstrations, and policy development in parallel to marketplace design (JIATF 401 updates; Breaking Defense, Defense One,
Army.mil, Nov 2025).
Current status against completion: The marketplace has been described as in development with no fixed launch date as of November 2025. Reports indicate ongoing work to define data standards, testing protocols, and procurement processes, plus a forthcoming interagency summit to refine policy and implementation. There is no public evidence of a deployed, fully functional marketplace accessible to all interagency partners by early 2026.
Reliability and incentives: The sources used (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Army.mil) are reputable defense outlets and official military communications. The incentive structure centers on rapid deployment of counter-UAS capabilities to homeland defense and interagency partners, balanced by testing and evaluation to ensure interoperability and safety. Given evolving acquisition authorities and interagency dynamics, ongoing updates are expected as milestones are reached.
Update · Feb 07, 2026, 12:50 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms Army-led efforts to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS, designed to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing across multiple agencies. There is no evidence of a final deployment or official completion date as of early 2026, only ongoing planning and position statements from officials involved.
Key progress includes leadership statements and media briefings in late 2025 describing the marketplace concept, its data-driven procurement aim, and the plan to test and evaluate vendor offerings before adoption. Notable reporting notes that the marketplace would provide authoritative performance data, feedback loops, and vetted procurement options, with launch timing still to be determined. Independent outlets cited preliminary milestones such as organizing a counter-UAS summit and establishing policy guidelines, but did not document a deployed system in operation.
Evidence of continued advancement appears to be in a planning and policy-development phase rather than a completed product. Articles from Defense One and Breaking Defense in November 2025 describe the marketplace as under development, with no confirmed launch date and a focus on synchronization of testing across services. A Defense.gov article referenced by the claim also points to the program as a cornerstone effort, but access to that specific article could not be authenticated in this check; other reputable outlets corroborate the general timing and intent.
Dates and milestones identified in reporting include mid-to-late 2025 planning activities (summits, demonstrations) and high-level statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross about data-driven procurement and integration across agencies. The reliability of sources is high where outlets specialize in defense policy and procurement coverage (Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov); however, the exact state of deployment cannot be confirmed from publicly accessible records as of February 2026. Given the missing concrete deployment date, the status remains that progress is ongoing but not completed.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 10:38 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates Army-led efforts to establish a digital marketplace for counter-UAS information and procurement were announced in late 2025, with emphasis on providing authoritative performance data and a centralized hub for interagency users (e.g., Breaking Defense, 2025; ExecutiveGov, 2025).
Multiple pieces describe the marketplace as planned or developing rather than deployed. Sources note the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online hub to test, evaluate, and potentially purchase c-UAS solutions, but no launch date or funded deployment milestones were publicly confirmed at that time (Military.com, 2025; Breaking Defense, 2025).
Progress evidence thus far points to ongoing planning, interagency coordination (DHS, FBI, FAA, DHS components, and others), and testing activities that would feed the marketplace data and procurement options. There is no public confirmation of a fully operational marketplace accessible to intended partners as of early 2026 (Military.com, ExecutiveGov, 2025).
Milestones cited include leadership statements about creating a centralized data/procurement hub, organizing a c-UAS summit, and aligning with the broader Army UAS marketplace effort. The reporting emphasizes process, governance, and testing rather than a deployed platform.
Reliability note: The sources are defense-focused trade press and government-aligned outlets describing internal DoD initiatives; they reflect official statements but do not represent a DoD primary press release. The core claim is supported as a developing effort, not a completed deployment.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 08:51 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: November 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online marketplace that would consolidate testing data, performance comparisons, and procurement pathways for counter-UAS gear to support interagency buyers.
Current status: By February 2026, multiple outlets describe ongoing planning and policy work, with no publicly announced launch date and no deployed portal, emphasizing data-driven evaluation and centralized procurement concepts rather than a finished product.
Milestones and dates: Reported milestones include hosting a counter-UAS summit, testing and evaluating systems before potential marketplace inclusion, and securing a budget from multiple sources; these elements signal a plan rather than a completed deployment.
Source reliability note: Coverage from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Executive Gov) tracks DoD procurement and task-force activity, generally corroborating the planned marketplace but not a launched system as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 06:53 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting from defense-focused outlets describes an Army-led effort under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to create an online marketplace housing tested data, vendor information, and procurement options for federal partners, framing it as a centralized hub for testing, evaluation, and purchasing. Evidence indicates the concept moved from planning to active development in late 2025, with references to a counter-UAS summit, policy work, and ongoing testing coordination (BD, Defense One, ExecGov).
Progress is evidenced by statements from JIATF 401 leaders and multiple outlets noting the marketplace is in development and that initial demonstrations and policy discussions are underway. November 2025 coverage emphasizes a launch timeline to be determined, with a focus on creating an integrated system for vendors to present capabilities, receive feedback, and align with department needs. December 2025 reporting suggests the project is advancing toward a live hub, though no go-live date is announced (BD, Defense One, Military.com).
As of February 2026, there is no publicly confirmed deployment date or evidence that the marketplace is live. Most articles describe ongoing development, testing, and policy work rather than a finished product. The DoD has not issued a formal launch announcement, and coverage repeatedly notes that a live portal remains forthcoming (BD, Military.com, ExecGov).
The milestones cited include the formation of JIATF 401, planned interagency summits, and the establishment of testing/evaluation workflows intended to standardize data across agencies. The pattern across sources shows a transition from concept and pilots in 2025 toward tentative implementation in 2026, with continued emphasis on data centralization, procurement pathways, and user feedback (BD, Defense One, Military.com).
Sources cited are defense-focused trade press with credible industry insight, but there is no single official DoD press release confirming go-live. The alignment of multiple independent outlets supports the general trajectory of progress, while formal, contracted deployment details remain sparse pending an official DoD update (BD, Defense One, Military.com, ExecGov).
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 04:17 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates a concerted push by JIATF 401 to create such a centralized, multi-agency procurement and data-access mechanism as part of a broader counter-UAS effort (november 2025–december 2025 coverage). The marketplace concept is described as a cornerstone of the program, intended to provide authoritative data, performance feedback, and validated procurement options to users across federal, state, and local partners (Breaking Defense; GlobalSecurity.org). Progress, however, is characterized as ongoing planning and development rather than fully deployed capability as of early 2026.
Evidence from industry-focused and defense-focused outlets shows leadership signaling the marketplace would accompany broader counter-UAS and UAS market initiatives, with emphasis on interoperability, data sharing, and expedited procurement pathways. Reports note that the effort includes coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and support for interagency purchasing processes, but no firm deployment date or completion milestone is publicly announced. Analysts describe the marketplace as still in the design and testing phases, with demonstrations or symposia referenced rather than formal fielding.
Multiple sources describe measurable steps toward the marketplace, such as plans to stand up an online portal and to curate data on system performance under varying conditions. The discussions reiterate that the marketplace will host DOW test data, user feedback, and procurement options, and that it aims to accelerate fielding by reducing risk and consolidating access. Yet, there is no public confirmation that interagency partners currently have full access to a deployed, operational marketplace.
Concretely dated milestones are scarce in the public record. December 2025 reporting centers on the task force’s intensifying efforts and the anticipated alignment with other procurement and testing activities, with further progress updates anticipated in late 2025 or 2026. The absence of a published completion date or deployment confirmation supports characterizing the status as ongoing development rather than complete deployment.
Reliability of sources appears solid for the described trajectory: reputable defense- and policy-focused outlets reporting on official statements from JIATF 401 leadership and associated agencies. The coverage consistently frames the marketplace as an evolving component of a layered, interagency counter-UAS strategy, not a fully realized, ready-to-use system at this time. While the core idea is well-documented, the public record does not show a completed deployment as of February 2026.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 02:17 PMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting from 2025 indicates active development with leadership structures in place, but no public deployment date has been announced. The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of layered counter-drone defense, with data access, test results, and procurement options targeted for interagency use.
Progress evidence: August 2025 saw the Pentagon announce a Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to coordinate counter-drone efforts across agencies, signaling formal market-like coordination for data sharing and acquisitions. Subsequent coverage throughout late 2025 described the marketplace as an emerging capability and a central element of interagency collaboration, with ongoing planning and stand-up activities rather than a finished product.
Current status and milestones: available reporting points to ongoing development, integration, and governance of a centralized marketplace concept, but no confirmed completion or deployment for all intended partners as of early 2026. Milestones cited include task-force formation and cross-agency coordination efforts rather than a published launch date.
Reliability note: sources are defense-focused outlets and official-friendly coverage (Defense News, Defense One, Military.com, Meritalk, Breaking Defense, and government-provided briefings). While credible, none provide a definitive deployment date, underscoring the ongoing nature of the effort.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 12:30 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets in late 2025 described the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning an online marketplace for counter-drone data, test results, and procurement options, with testing and evaluation processes to precede additions (Breaking Defense; Defense One; ExecutiveGov). Progress toward deployment remains unclear, with sources framing the effort as ongoing development rather than a finished product by February 2026. A December 2025 piece similarly framed the initiative but did not confirm live access for partners.
Milestones and dates: The formal establishment of JIATF 401 occurred around August 2025, creating the governance for counter-UAS work and procurement authority. November 2025 reports outline marketplace plans and testing/evaluation, while early 2026 reporting stops short of confirming a deployed, partner-accessible portal. Reliability: The strongest signals come from defense-focused outlets corroborating planning phases; some summaries rely on press coverage rather than official DoD deployment notices, so status should be treated as in_progress rather than complete.
Conclusion: Current public reporting supports ongoing development toward a centralized counter-UAS marketplace, with intent to provide data, feedback, and procurement options to interagency partners, but no definitive deployment or partner access date has been publicly confirmed. If the completion criterion is deployment and active access, the claim appears not yet fulfilled as of early 2026.
Reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, and Military.com provides credible reporting on the initiative and milestones, but none shows a confirmed live deployment; readers should monitor DoD statements for a definitive status update.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 11:07 AMin_progress
The claim describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms Army-led efforts to stand up an online marketplace to streamline procurement and testing of counter-UAS capabilities, with emphasis on providing authoritative data on system performance to aid selection decisions (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Progress evidence shows concrete steps: JIATF 401 is coordinating the marketplace concept alongside broader UAS market efforts, planning tests, demonstrations, and a counter-UAS summit to outline policy, testing, and evaluation frameworks (Breaking Defense; Defense One). Officials describe the intent to integrate data feeds, testing feedback, and vetted procurement options to support interagency needs, but no firm launch date or deployment milestone has been announced (Breaking Defense, Defense One).
Current status indicates the marketplace remains in the planning and testing phase. Reports note that budget and funding sources are still to be determined, with potential allocations from O&M, RDT&E, and procurement pools, and that the testing and evaluation framework is being synchronized across departments to enable relative comparisons of vendor solutions (Breaking Defense; Defense One). A summit and ongoing demonstrations are described as near-term steps to finalize requirements before any deployment (Defense One; Executive Gov).
Overall, the evidence points to an in-progress effort with planned milestones, not a completed, widely deployed marketplace as of early 2026, with continued coordination across multiple agencies and ongoing testing and policy development.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 08:54 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The interagency task force is developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The stated aim is a centralized mechanism providing access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. This is described as a foundational component of a broader layered counter-UAS capability.
Evidence of progress: Multiple outlets in late 2025 documented the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS gear. Officials described establishing a central marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement across military installations and interagency partners (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025; Defense One, Nov 14, 2025).
What is known about the status: The marketplace was described as being developed with launch dates not yet determined, and with activities such as a counter-UAS summit planned to outline testing and policy. Sources emphasize ongoing work rather than a deployed, fully operational portal as of that reporting (Breaking Defense; Defense One).
Milestones and timelines: Reported milestones include coordinating testing and evaluation to enable relative comparisons of vendor capabilities and creating accompanying policy for domestic deployment. No concrete deployment date or full catalog of validated procurement options was publicly announced, suggesting progress in design and planning rather than completion (Breaking Defense; Defense One).
Reliability note: The strongest publicly available reporting comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) that quote task-force leadership about ongoing development and lack of a firm launch date. While these sources are reputable, there is no independently verifiable public launch announcement as of early 2026. Given the obvious incentives of the DoD and interagency partners to modernize counter-UAS capabilities, the coverage aligns with an in-progress procurement-enabled marketplace rather than a completed deployment.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 04:21 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace concept is intended to centralize DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency use.
Progress evidence: Reports from late 2025 indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning and moving toward a digital marketplace framework to support counter-UAS tech selection and acquisition. Coverage describes a centralized shopping, testing, and policy-development effort tied to interagency collaboration.
Current status: As of early 2026, public reporting describes ongoing planning and initial actions rather than a fully deployed, accessible marketplace. No public government confirmation has cited a deployed system with continuous interagency access.
Milestones and reliability: Milestones cited include stand-up plans, policy work, and testing/evaluation processes announced in fall–winter 2025, with ongoing implementation into 2026. The reliability of sources is high for defense-tech trade press and official-aligned outlets, but no formal deployment date is publicly confirmed.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 02:31 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort was announced and is being pursued under JIATF 401, with leadership emphasizing a centralized marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchase of counter-UAS solutions (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One, Nov 2025).
Evidence of progress shows initial planning steps and policy development are underway. Reports describe the creation of an online marketplace concept, the alignment of counter-UAS data and testing frameworks, and the intent to link interagency and DHS/Law Enforcement procurement pathways, but no firm launch date has been published (Nov 2025 press coverage).
There is no publicly available confirmation that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options as of early 2026. The most concrete statements indicate a launch date is still to be determined and that a c-UAS summit and testing/evaluation framework were planned to advance the project (Nov 2025 sources).
Source reliability varies but is centered on defense trade outlets and trade press reporting, which accurately cite statements from JIATF 401 leadership. While these outlets provide timelines and milestones, the reporting remains focused on planning and policy steps rather than a deployed, enterprise-wide system at this time.
Update · Feb 06, 2026, 12:44 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple reputable outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online marketplace to consolidate testing data, performance feedback, and vetted procurement pathways for counter-UAS capabilities (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Executive Gov, Nov 2025).
Source coverage describes the marketplace as intended to provide authoritative data on how systems perform under varying conditions and to streamline purchasing across agencies, including DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, JIATF 401 director, emphasizes a central system to test, evaluate, and feed back to vendors, with the goal of offering a range of options tailored to different threat environments (Breaking Defense; Defense One, Nov 2025).
Officials have not announced a launch date or a firm budget for the marketplace. Articles note that the initiative is in the development and policy-testing phase, with plans for a counter-UAS summit to discuss testing, evaluation, and acquisition pathways, and with funding anticipated from multiple internal DoD sources rather than a dedicated budget (Defense One; Executive Gov, Nov 2025).
Reliability and relevance: the reporting comes from established defense and government-coverage outlets citing statements from JIATF 401 leadership. While these pieces describe clear intent and near-term milestones (summit, testing, policy development), they consistently indicate that a deployed, fully functional marketplace has not yet launched as of the articles (Nov 2025). The core claim—existence and development of a centralized marketplace for data, feedback, and procurement—appears corroborated, with no evidence of completion to date.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 10:32 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being pursued as part of the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiatives to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities across agencies, rather than a fully deployed system. Multiple outlets describe an online marketplace concept tied to c-UAS data, performance data, and procurement options, but without a firm launch date or full deployment details.
Evidence of progress shows formal recognition of a digital marketplace as a core initiative. Breaking Defense reported in November 2025 that JIATF 401 planned to stand up a digital marketplace to host counter-UAS tools and provide authoritative data on system performance to interagency customers. Executive Gov summarized this as an online marketplace intended to let military and intelligence leaders purchase counter-UAS solutions and access performance data, with coordination planned through a forthcoming c-UAS summit.
As of early 2026, there is no public confirmation that the marketplace is deployed or fully operational. The reporting consistently describes ongoing planning, data collection, testing, and interagency coordination rather than a completed procurement portal. The anticipated milestones include testing and evaluation events, vendor engagement, and potentially a launch tied to broader UAS marketplace efforts, but a concrete completion date has not been disclosed.
Key dates and milestones cited in reporting include the November 2025 period when the marketplace was described as being stood up in concept, and media coverage of collaboration efforts and planned summits within the ensuing weeks. The sources emphasize a structured, phased approach—build the data and evaluation framework first, then deploy the procurement portal to interagency partners—rather than a single, announced launch.
Reliability-wise, the most concrete statements come from defense-focused outlets reporting on official briefings and statements by JIATF 401 leadership. While Breaking Defense and Executive Gov provide coherent accounts of the marketplace concept and intended use, neither confirms a public deployment date or full access by interagency partners. The lack of a published deployment date suggests a cautious interpretation: progress is underway, but the completion condition has not yet been satisfied.
Follow-up notes: Given the ongoing nature of the initiative, a formal update or launch announcement would help confirm status. Consider revisiting in late 2026 to verify whether the marketplace has deployed and begun provisioning data, user feedback, and procurement options to interagency and law enforcement partners.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 08:37 PMcomplete
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple public reports indicate progress toward a centralized online marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and purchasing options, led by the Army and JIATF 401. By December 2025, several outlets described the marketplace as launched or nearing launch, with authorities citing a central hub for evaluating, testing, and acquiring counter-UAS capabilities. The reporting trend suggests a concrete milestone was reached with public notice of a centralized procurement and data-access mechanism, though initial rollout details and scope varied across outlets and timelines.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 06:55 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable
U.S. defense outlets reported in November 2025 that an Army-led effort (JIATF 401) is planning or developing an online counter-UAS marketplace to enable capability sharing, testing data access, and coordinated procurement for interagency partners (Breaking Defense, Defense One,
Army.mil). These pieces describe a digital marketplace, a testing/evaluation data set, and a forum for interagency collaboration as core elements of the plan.
Current status: Public reporting through late 2025 indicates active development and coordination, including plans for a counter-UAS marketplace, a data/testing framework, and related governance. There is no publicly announced deployment or completion date, and sources describe ongoing steps such as summits, policy work, and testing/evaluation activities rather than a finished product.
Milestones and dates: Notable milestones cited by outlets include planning/stand-up activities in November 2025 (e.g., digital marketplace concept, testing/evaluation data, interagency coordination). Some articles mention upcoming counter-UAS summits and continued interagency engagement, but none reference a formal launch or full deployment by early 2026.
Source reliability and caveats: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Army.mil) and reflects official task-force aims reported by military/defense channels. While these sources are generally reputable within the defense reporting ecosystem, detailed implementation timelines and the marketplace’s operational status remain unclear publicly, and some outlets may echo briefings or brief summaries rather than formal DoD publications.
Note on incentives: The push toward a centralized marketplace aligns with interagency efficiency goals and streamlined procurement, which can incentivize standardization and rapid access to counter-UAS capabilities across agencies. The absence of a firm deployment date may reflect the complexity of interagency governance and acquisition controls inherent in such a marketplace.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 04:20 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence indicates the effort is under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 with Army leadership, aimed at testing, evaluating, and streamlining acquisition, but no fully deployed system has been announced as of early 2026. Public reporting from late 2025 describes an online marketplace concept and related policy work, with launch date still to be determined.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 02:16 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from multiple outlets indicates the initiative is being planned as an online marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement of counter-UAS systems. The core concept is to provide an authoritative data set, performance feedback, and vetted procurement paths through a single platform.
Progress indicators show the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) publicly framing the marketplace as a near-term objective, with statements in November 2025 describing the marketplace as under development and linked to a broader UAS marketplace. Defense and government trade outlets report ongoing planning, vendor testing, and policy coordination activities, including a planned counter-UAS summit to align testing and evaluation with marketplace entries. There is no published launch date or deployed platform as of early 2026.
Current status: not deployed and no firm completion date has been announced. Reports emphasize that the marketplace will offer vetted vendors, data on system performance, and procurement options, but funding remains unfinalized and the scope is still being defined, with leadership targeting testing and policy groundwork rather than a ready-to-use portal. Multiple sources describe ongoing coordination across DoD, DHS, FBI, and interagency partners, but stop short of a deployed, interagency-accessible system.
Source reliability and balance: coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and Executive Gov/Executive Mosaic outlets provides contemporaneous, non-partisan reporting on official statements and planned milestones. These outlets are regarded as reputable defense and government-sourcing news organizations, and their reporting aligns on the marketplace being in planning rather than completed. The consistency across independent outlets strengthens the assessment that progress is real but incomplete.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 12:47 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reports from Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) and Military.com (Dec 2025) describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 pursuing an online marketplace to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information with federal partners.
Status and milestones: The initiative is framed as moving toward a digital marketplace with data standardization, testing information, and interagency coordination, but no public record confirms a live, fully deployed system as of early 2026. Some outlets mention planned summits and ongoing governance discussions.
Source reliability and caveats: The coverage from defense-focused outlets is credible and reflects near-term planning and leadership statements, yet official DoD confirmation of a live marketplace remains limited due to security and procurement sensitivities. Timelines may shift as funding and acquisition authorities are finalized.
Context on incentives and scope: The marketplace aims to streamline procurement and data access for interagency users, potentially accelerating acquisitions and standardizing evaluations, which could shift interagency buying practices and risk considerations.
Follow-up date: 2026-06-01
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 11:03 AMin_progress
Restated claim: The Defense Department's interagency effort is developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress and evidence: Multiple reputable outlets report that the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning and standing up an online marketplace to sort, test, share information, and streamline procurement for counter-UAS technologies. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) notes the marketplace will provide authoritative performance data and a range of options for interagency customers, with no firm launch date announced at that time. Military.com (Dec 8, 2025) describes the marketplace as a federal digital hub for vetted counter-UAS systems and testing data, led by the Army under JIATF 401, and connected to broader C-UAS testing and acquisition efforts. Inside Unmanned Systems (Dec 1, 2025) details the inaugural interagency summit and a broader push to accelerate testing, data-sharing, and procurement across DHS, FBI, DHS components, FAA, and other entities.
Current status relative to the completion condition: The marketplace has been described as being planned, stood up in concept, and in the process of development, with discussions of data-sharing infrastructure and procurement pathways. There is no reported deployment date or confirmed operational rollout as of early 2026. The evidence points to ongoing development and coordination, rather than a fully deployed, widely accessible portal.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the November 25, 2025 interagency summit for JIATF 401 and the subsequent December 2025 reporting that a centralized marketplace is being established to test, evaluate, and procure counter-UAS capabilities. Specific launch dates and system availability remain unannounced, indicating the project is in progress rather than complete.
Source reliability note: The referenced articles come from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Military.com) and industry/academic-coverage outlets (Inside Unmanned Systems). They summarize statements from JIATF 401 leadership and illustrate a clear trend toward centralized data-sharing and procurement, but lack an official DoD press release detailing a concrete deployment date. Taken together, they provide a credible, corroborated view that the marketplace exists in planning and early implementation stages rather than being fully deployed.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 08:39 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from official and reputable defense press indicates planning is underway rather than a finished product, with emphasis on testing, data standards, and interagency collaboration. Army leadership and defense journalism describe an online or digital marketplace concept as a key element of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 efforts, but no firm deployment date has been announced. The focus remains on creating an integrated, test-verification-driven platform rather than a fully deployed, publicly accessible portal at this time.
Recent reporting highlights that the initiative includes providing an authoritative data set for testing and evaluation, capability sharing across agencies, and a procurement pathway, but crucially notes that a launch date is still to be determined. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) and Army.mil (Nov 13, 2025) depict ongoing development and coordination across the DoD, FBI, DHS, and other partners, with planning for a future marketplace and interagency summit. There is no published completion confirmation or date; the effort is described as progressing rather than complete.
Taken together, the available reporting shows progress in concept development, governance, and interagency alignment, but the completion condition—"marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access"—has not been achieved as of early February 2026. Independent coverage corroborates ongoing work rather than a launch, and notes the need for testing, policy, and funding decisions still in flux. The sources are consistent in portraying an evolving program with milestones and demonstrations rather than a finished platform.
Reliability note: the primary sources are Army and defense-press outlets; Defense One and
Army.mil are reputable within defense reporting, though they describe a work-in-progress program with official deployment dates yet to be set. Cross-verification with additional official DoD statements or congressional briefings would strengthen certainty about milestones. The incentives for timely deployment appear tied to interagency coordination, testing outcomes, and budget planning, which help explain the current cautious progression toward a marketplace rather than an immediate rollout.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 04:31 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, effectively serving as a one-stop portal for tested data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Multiple interagency and defense-industry reports in late 2025 describe JIATF 401, led by the Army, planning and initiating a digital marketplace to test, evaluate, and centralize counter-UAS data and procurement. Notable coverage includes Defense One (Nov 2025) and Military.com (Dec 2025), which outline the marketplace concept, governance, and first steps toward a centralized hub for federal users.
Current status as of 2026-02-04: The marketplace has been publicly announced and is under development, but there is no widely reported confirmation that a live, fully deployed portal with complete interagency access is available. Several outlets note that a launch date is to be determined and that testing/evaluation and policy development accompany the marketplace, suggesting a staged rollout rather than full immediate deployment.
Milestones and dates: August 2025 saw the initial establishment of JIATF 401 to consolidate counter-small UAS efforts. By November–December 2025, reporting emphasized planning, testing, and the creation of a centralized hub, with a later launch date to be announced. The available reporting does not cite a concrete, universal go-live date or a fully open access state as of early 2026.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Defense One, Military.com, and Breaking Defense/Executive Government outlets provides front-line reporting on policy and program design from government officials (e.g., Brig. Gen. Matt Ross) and describes planned capabilities and governance. While these outlets are reputable defense-coverage sources, they describe ongoing development rather than a completed, deployed system as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 02:55 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing efforts to create an online/marketplace-like system as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) approach to counter-UAS, led by the Army and interagency partners.
Evidence of progress shows that in November 2025, officials described plans to stand up a digital marketplace that would provide authoritative performance data, user feedback, and procurement pathways for counter-UAS tools. Reports from Breaking Defense quote Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and note that the marketplace would run alongside an Army UAS marketplace and would not yet have a launch date.
Additional coverage in November 2025 confirms the initiative is in the planning and testing phase, with events such as a counter-UAS summit anticipated to coordinate testing and evaluation of candidate systems before potential inclusion in the marketplace. The narrative emphasizes data-driven selection and multiple vendors to address varying threat environments.
As of early 2026, there is no published indication that the marketplace has been deployed or opened for interagency and law enforcement access. The sourcing indicates ongoing development, limited budgets, and a phased approach rather than a ready-to-use portal. The balance of sources portrays progress as iterative and contingent on funding and evaluation outcomes.
Update · Feb 05, 2026, 01:12 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Current reporting describes the marketplace as an ongoing development, not a fully deployed system. The emphasis is on planning, testing, and policy work rather than a completed rollout.
Progress evidence: November 2025 coverage notes the marketplace as a planned centralized hub to streamline procurement, testing, and feedback across agencies. December 2025 reporting describes efforts to create a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions and to support testing events that drive procurement. A 100-day update highlights policy consolidation and integration activities within JIATF-401 that include marketplace concepts.
Completion status: No public source shows full deployment or universal access to interagency and law enforcement partners as of early 2026. The material consistently frames the marketplace as underway with a launch date undetermined and ongoing development steps.
Milestones and reliability: Reported milestones include November 2025 planning for the marketplace, December 2025–January 2026 initial capability deliveries to the southern border, and ongoing policy integration. These are credible but do not constitute final completion; the narrative is coherent across Defense One and
Army.mil.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 10:52 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This is framed as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) efforts to integrate counter-UAS capabilities across federal and local agencies.
Evidence from reputable outlets shows that the effort is moving from planning to implementation, with announcements in late 2025 describing the creation of an online marketplace intended to provide authoritative data, test results, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Breaking Defense and MeriTalk report that the Army-led task force intends to stand up a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace alongside broader data-sharing initiatives. These pieces emphasize centralization of data and procurement access, but do not specify a launch date.
As of the current date, there is no reported completion date and no public announcement of full deployment. The Defense-related reporting notes a planned marketplace, ongoing testing, and engagement with interagency partners, but stops short of confirming that interagency and law enforcement partners have commercial-grade access at scale yet. The available coverage describes progress and intent, not a finished, operational platform.
Concrete milestones cited include: (1) the establishment of JIATF-401 to manage counter-UAS R&D and procurement, (2) plans for an online marketplace to provide data on system performance and procurement options, and (3) ongoing coordination with DHS, FBI, DHS agencies, and local law enforcement for data sharing and testing. These help establish the trajectory toward a centralized marketplace, but the absence of a deployment date means progress is ongoing rather than complete.
Source reliability varies but remains credible: Breaking Defense provides a contemporaneous defense-industry perspective; MeriTalk documents interagency collaboration and funding-adjacent steps; and Defense Department-related briefings (as reported) frame the marketplace as a core component of the broader c-UAS effort. Taken together, they support a status of ongoing development with measurable progress, rather than final completion.
Follow-up note: The claim aligns with stated incentives to accelerate interagency access to data and procurement options, reducing deployment risk and improving acquisition timelines for counter-UAS capabilities. Continued monitoring should confirm a formal deployment date and user access milestones as the marketplace transitions from planning to operations.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 08:28 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting indicates an Army-led effort to create an online, centralized marketplace that would consolidate DOW test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options for interagency users such as the FBI and DHS. As of late 2025, there was no firm launch date announced; officials described planning, testing, and policy work accompanying the marketplace development.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 07:03 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to
DOD test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting through late 2025 indicates the concept has moved from planning toward implementation, with multiple outlets describing an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) effort to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech and related data.
In terms of progress evidence, November–December 2025 reporting highlights formal efforts to create a centralized marketplace, an authoritative data/testing environment, and interagency collaboration forums as core milestones. Sources note planning and coordination across DoD and partner agencies, with a launch timeline still to be determined rather than a deployed, fully operational system by early 2026.
There is no public evidence as of February 2026 that the marketplace has been fully deployed or that interagency partners have uniform, ongoing access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Several articles describe ongoing development, upcoming interagency events (e.g., counter-drone summits), and the intention to publish or enable a centralized access point, but explicit deployment or broad access milestones are not documented in reputable outlets.
Key dates and milestones known from available reporting include the November 2025 surge of planning activity, the December 2025 coverage of marketplace formation, and notices that a launch date remains to be determined. Given the absence of definitive deployment confirmation or user-access metrics, the claim remains plausible but uncompleted as of the current date.
Source reliability varies but includes defense-focused outlets and Defense Department communications that are generally considered high-fidelity for policy and capability discussions. While some outlets emphasize the initiative’s strategic rationale and interagency incentives, they also reflect preliminary stages rather than finished implementation.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 04:16 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The published materials describe a centralized online marketplace intended to host DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency users.
Evidence of progress: Multiple late-2025 reports confirm the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online counter-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described plans to provide authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement pathways, with a focus on interoperability across federal, state, and local partners. The effort is tied to ongoing testing, evaluation, and a scheduled counter-UAS summit to align interagency cooperation (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025; ExecutiveGov summary; GlobalSecurity coverage of a December 2025 symposium).
Current status against completion: There is clear intent to deploy a marketplace and associated procurement pathways, but no public confirmation that the marketplace is fully deployed or accessible nationwide by interagency and law enforcement partners. Reports emphasize planning, data provision, and pilot-like testing rather than a live, widely available deployment.
Dates and milestones: November–December 2025 coverage notes the marketplace concept, data-sharing goals, and a planned summit to drive testing and evaluation. GlobalSecurity’s December 18, 2025 piece highlights the marketplace as a central focus, with demonstrations of progress rather than completion. No firm launch date is cited in the sources, and Breaking Defense notes the entity has not announced a launch date.
Source reliability: The reporting comes from defense-focused outlets with cross-checks to official briefings (e.g., Breaking Defense, GlobalSecurity, ExecutiveGov). While Defense Department outlets were blocked in this search, the corroborating reporting from multiple independent outlets strengthens the characterization that the marketplace is in development and not yet deployed. The coverage is consistent on the high-level approach and procedural steps, though exact deployment status remains unconfirmed.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 02:16 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance, user feedback, and procurement options, with development announced but no launch date set.
Multiple credible outlets describe the marketplace as part of a broader digital marketplace initiative for counter-UAS, with leadership emphasizing diverse vendor participation and data-driven selection. The project appears to be in the planning and testing phases, rather than fully deployed, as of late 2025.
Reliability of sources is high, citing industry-focused defense outlets and official-channel reporting on task force goals and timelines. The completion status remains uncertain pending a formal launch date and funding allocations.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 12:36 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting from late 2025 describes an Army-led effort under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to stand up a digital marketplace that would host authoritative testing data, performance reviews, and procurement options for counter-drone capabilities (sources: Breaking Defense; Military.com).
As of early February 2026, there is no definitive public DoD confirmation that the marketplace is fully deployed nationwide, only reporting that the initiative is advancing and that leadership envisions a centralized portal when ready.
Key milestones cited include plans for a centralized hub that compares systems, shares testing information, and guides procurement, with initial emphasis on counter-small UAS and interagency coordination ( Breaking Defense, Military.com, Nov–Dec 2025).
Reliability of the sources is reasonable: Breaking Defense and Military.com cover defense procurement and interagency efforts, though neither provides a formal DoD deployment date or official launch confirmation.
Overall, the claim remains plausible and progress is reported, but a fully deployed marketplace status has not been publicly confirmed as of 2026-02-04.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 08:45 AMin_progress
Summary of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress shows active efforts by the Army-led JIATF 401 to create a centralized online hub that would host testing data, performance evaluations, and procurement options for counter-UAS tools, with officials signaling a marketplace as a core component of the initiative. A November 2025 Breaking Defense report quotes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing the marketplace as a central system intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and to streamline user choice for interagency customers. The same reporting indicates there is no fixed launch date announced at that time and that initial development and testing discussions were ongoing.
Additional corroboration comes from late-2025 official coverage: the U.S. Army published a December 2025 piece noting interagency symposia on counter-UAS strategies and procurement coordination, which underscores the ongoing work to coordinate data-sharing and equipment access across federal, state, and local partners. Military-oriented outlets in December 2025 and January 2026 framed the marketplace as an upcoming, centralized data-and-procurement portal rather than a fully deployed system.
Taken together, the signaling from 2025–2026 shows progress in planning, testing, and interagency coordination around a centralized counter-UAS data and procurement concept, but the marketplace had not yet been publicly deployed by early 2026. The sources consistently describe ongoing development, testing, and stakeholder alignment rather than a completed rollout. Reliability is strengthened by multiple independent outlets (Breaking Defense, Army.mil, Military.com) reporting consistent themes about the marketplace’s purpose and status.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 04:39 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as a centralized hub for testing data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options across federal partners.
Progress to date: Multiple reputable outlets report that the DoD-led effort to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS is underway under JIATF 401, with announcements in late 2025. Reports describe plans to organize testing data, evaluations, and procurement pathways, but no firm live date is published (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-11).
Evidence of deployment status: December 2025 coverage notes the marketplace is in development and testing, not yet deployed publicly for broad access. The project is described as ongoing with no announced go-live date (Military.com, 2025-12).
Reliability and incentives: The sources are defense-focused outlets with track records on JIATF 401 and counter-UAS policy, though there is no primary DoD public confirmation of a launch date. Incentives appear to center on interagency coordination, standardized testing data, and streamlined procurement, aligning with homeland security objectives.
Conclusion: The claim remains in_progress, with credible reporting confirming ongoing development and planning for a centralized counter-UAS marketplace, but no deployment or partner access has been publicly announced as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 03:27 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress to date: In late 2025, Army-led efforts under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) publicly described creating an online marketplace for counter-UAS hardware, data, and vendor evaluation information. Officials indicated the marketplace would accompany a broader UAS marketplace and would be used by military installations, DHS, the FBI, and local law enforcement. No firm launch date has been announced.
Evidence on completion status: Multiple outlets report that the marketplace is in development with planning and testing activities but have not published a deployment date. Defense One notes no launch date has been set, and Breaking Defense describes ongoing testing/evaluations and policy work rather than a live deployment. This suggests the project remains in the design and pilot/testing phase rather than completed.
Milestones and dates: A counter-UAS summit was planned to advance policy, science, and testing discussions, and the task force has described efforts to synchronize performance metrics and enable testing/evaluation of vendor capabilities before inclusion in the marketplace. The emphasis remains on establishing a centralized access point rather than announcing a rollout deadline.
Reliability of sources: Coverage comes from defense-industry outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense) and related reporting on JIATF 401 leadership statements. While not official Defense Department press release, these outlets corroborate the marketplace concept, the lack of a fixed launch date, and the ongoing development and testing nature of the effort.
Update · Feb 04, 2026, 01:41 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) announced plans to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace and an accompanying UAS marketplace, intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and a centralized procurement path for interagency customers. Reports describe ongoing development, testing, and planning for a marketplace demonstration or summit with interagency partners.
Current status: Multiple outlets report the marketplace is in development with testing and coordination activities, but no published deployment date or confirmed deployment to interagency partners as of early 2026. Emphasis remains on testing, evaluation, and populating the marketplace with validated data and procurement options.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones occurred in November–December 2025, including announcements of marketplace planning and a plan to host testing and an interagency summit. Later reporting notes preparations for rollout and further interagency coordination, without a fixed launch date.
Source reliability: The reporting comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecGov, Defense One, Military.com, among others), which regularly cover DoD counter-UAS initiatives. While not all sources are primary DoD releases, the convergence of multiple independent outlets supports the overall in-progress status and described milestones.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 11:36 PMcomplete
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 established a digital marketplace concept in 2025, with the goal of sorting, testing, and sharing information about counter-drone systems across federal partners. By December 2025, Military.com reported that the U.S. Army had launched a federal digital marketplace under JIATF-401 to provide a central hub for vetted counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement guidance, suggesting progress from concept to deployment. The coverage also notes ongoing coordination with agencies such as DHS, FBI, FAA, and DHS components, and emphasizes the marketplace’s role as a centralized information and procurement resource rather than a purely internal database.
Evidence of progress includes explicit milestones and statements from defense-focused outlets: (1) the November 2025 reporting that the marketplace was planned and would serve as an authoritative data source for performance and procurement; (2) the December 2025 launch reporting that the marketplace was live and serving federal users, with described features such as comparing systems and viewing testing information. These sources collectively indicate that the marketplace has moved from planning to deployment and initial use by interagency partners.
As of early February 2026, there is no widely conflicting reporting indicating cancellation or delay, and major outlets describe the marketplace as operational or recently deployed. The reliability of sources is strongest for Military.com and Breaking Defense, with Defense Department context corroborating the initiative's scope and interagency scope. Overall, the available reporting supports that the counter-UAS marketplace has been developed and deployed and is accessible to interagency and law enforcement partners for data, feedback, and procurement options.
Notes on reliability: Military.com provides direct coverage of DoD-led initiatives with event dates (Nov–Dec 2025) and quotes from Army leadership, while Breaking Defense contextualizes the planning phase. Official DoD communications and Defense.gov summaries from the same period corroborate intent and governance (Army as executive agent, JIATF-401 leadership). While some outlets speculate on implementation details, the core milestones—planning, launch, and interagency access—are consistently reported by reputable defense-focused outlets.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 08:17 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. In late 2025, multiple reputable outlets described an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiative to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS gear and related data, with aims to consolidate testing/evaluation data, vendor access, and centralized purchasing pathways. Reports did not announce a launch date or confirm full deployment as of that period.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 06:55 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is a centralized online platform that provides authoritative test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency users. The project is tied to the broader JIATF 401 initiative and a parallel UAS marketplace effort.
Progress evidence: Multiple reputable outlets reported in November 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 plans to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace. Officials described plans for a marketplace offering data on system performance, a range of vendor options, and procurement pathways for interagency partners (DOD, DHS, FBI, local law enforcement). Sources indicate early planning and no fixed launch date (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Current status: As of early 2026, reporting describes ongoing development with no publicly announced deployment date or confirmed operational access for interagency partners. The emphasis remains on creating an integrated framework that ties together c-UAS data, testing feedback, and procurement options, rather than a fully deployed, enterprise-wide portal.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the task force’s mandate to consolidate c-UAS R&D and testing under JIATF 401, and the intention to create a marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace. A firm launch date has not been disclosed, and sources frame the effort as iterative with possible future summits or testing events to validate platforms before inclusion in the marketplace (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Reliability note: The most concrete statements come from defense-focused outlets and government-aligned trade press, all reporting plans and intent rather than a completed deployment. Given the lack of a deployed platform by February 2026 and the absence of a public completion date, the claim remains plausible but unproven as completed.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 04:13 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting indicates JIATF 401 is pursuing an online marketplace to centralize access to tested data, user feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities, with coordination across agencies and support from DLA and FEMA for funding pathways.
Current status and milestones: Coverage from November–December 2025 describes planning, testing, and policy development, with a launch date not yet set. The marketplace appears to be in development, accompanied by related testing, summits, and procurement-planning activities rather than a deployed system.
Reliability note: Sources are defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, GlobalSecurity.org) reporting on official briefings and task-force activities; they consistently frame the marketplace as a work-in-progress with upcoming events rather than a completed deployment.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 02:18 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting in late 2025 described the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning and testing an online marketplace to consolidate data, performance information, and purchase options for counter-UAS tools. There is no published completion date, and officials indicated the marketplace would launch after further testing and coordination with interagency partners. Overall, reporting suggests the project is in the planning and development phase rather than completed.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 12:26 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence points to ongoing development under JIATF-401, with reports describing an online marketplace intended to centralize testing data, operational feedback, and procurement options for federal partners. In its first 100 days, JIATF-401 highlighted rapid integration, delivery of counter-sUAS capabilities, and ongoing efforts to establish a digital marketplace as part of an enterprise approach. Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as an active, evolving initiative rather than a fully deployed, finished product. Overall, the status is best characterized as in_progress given the progression and announced milestones without a formal deployment date.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 10:49 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting confirms the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is pursuing an online, centralized marketplace intended to sort, test, evaluate, and facilitate procurement of counter-drone technologies for federal partners and installations.
Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as in the planning and development phase, not yet deployed. No credible source shows a live, fully operational marketplace as of early 2026.
Evidence points to ongoing planning, testing frameworks, and policy work, with no fixed launch date announced. The concept is framed as a hub for performance data, testing information, and procurement pathways, but completion status remains uncertain.
Key milestones cited include interagency summits and testing/evaluation activities to standardize data and comparisons across vendors, rather than a deployed purchasing platform. Contemporary reporting emphasizes readiness architecture and governance rather than a completed marketplace.
Source reliability is reasonable given coverage by defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com, etc.), but most pieces describe intended capabilities and timelines rather than a verified operational deployment. The Defense Department has not announced a live go-live date or initial vendor list as of February 2026.
Update · Feb 03, 2026, 10:03 AMin_progress
Summary of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options for counter-drone capabilities.
Evidence of progress: In 2025, reporting consistently described a government-led push to create a digital marketplace or catalog for counter-UAS gear, led by the Army and Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), with goals to provide tested systems, test data, and validated procurement options to interagency partners (e.g., Breaking Defense, Nov 2025; Defense News, Aug 2025; ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
Current status and milestones: Several outlets reported ongoing work to stand up the marketplace or related digital procurement platforms, with references to courses, vendor catalogs, and interagency coordination efforts tied to the JIATF 401 effort; however, there is no clear, publicly verifiable deployment date as of early 2026, and multiple pieces describe planning or pilot phases rather than full deployment (e.g., Military.com, Dec 2025; Breaking Defense, Nov 2025).
Reliability and incentives: The sources are government-focused or defense-industry trade outlets; while they consistently describe an interagency and Army-led effort, specifics about data access, scope, and user onboarding vary and are not uniformly confirmed by a single official release. This warrants cautious interpretation of progress as iterative and phased rather than fully deployed at all interagency sites by February 2026. For a fuller assessment, a direct DoD marketplace status update or JIATF 401 release would be ideal (Defense News, Aug 2025; Military.com, Dec 2025).
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 10:23 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It posits a centralized platform to access test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-drone systems.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, reporting indicated the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was pursuing an online marketplace to streamline buying and testing of counter-UAS gear, with a launch date yet to be determined (Defense One, Nov 14, 2025). By January 2026, the DoD publicly announced that JIATF 401 had conducted its first acquisitions, purchasing two Fortem DroneHunter F700 units, signaling tangible movement toward a more formalized procurement pathway (
Janes, Jan 15, 2026; DoD press release, Jan 13, 2026).
Current status vs. completion condition: The marketplace is described as in development with procurement and testing integration, and as of early February 2026 there is evidence of initial acquisitions and ongoing policy work, but no publicly confirmed deployment or full operational rollout of a centralized marketplace for interagency access (Defense One, Nov 2025; Jane’s, Jan 2026; DoD press release, Jan 2026).
Milestones and timelines: Reported milestones include (1) establishment of JIATF 401 in 2025 to lead counter-UAS efforts, (2) planning for a counter-UAS marketplace to enable testing, feedback, and procurement, and (3) DoD confirmation in January 2026 of the first purchases under the program, with delivery expected by spring 2026 (Defense One, Nov 2025; Breaking Defense/Defense One equivalents cited; Jane's, Jan 2026).
Reliability and incentives: The coverage from reputable defense outlets corroborates ongoing development and initial acquisitions, suggesting movement toward a centralized marketplace. The incentives appear to center on speed, interoperability, and unified procurement for interagency partners, aligning with DoD goals to streamline buying and feedback across agencies.
- Defense One, One-stop shopping for counter-drone gear is aim of joint task force, Meghann Myers, Nov 14, 2025
- Jane’s, New C-UAS task force makes first acquisition, Meredith Roaten, Jan 15, 2026
- DoD press release, Jan 13, 2026
- Breaking Defense, New Army-led task force plans to stand up digital marketplace for counter-drone tech, Nov 17, 2025
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 08:14 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows initial steps and planning rather than a deployed product. In July 2025, DoD announced the stand-up of a joint interagency task force to accelerate counter-UAS capability development and fielding. By November 2025, reporting indicated the Army-led JIATF 401 planned an online marketplace to centralize procurement data, test performance data, and user feedback for c-UAS, aligned with an Army-led marketplace effort. No published completion date or deployment milestone for the marketplace exists; sources describe planning and subsequent steps rather than a finished product.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 06:47 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress to date shows that senior DoD leadership and the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 have prioritized a counter-UAS marketplace as a core component of those efforts. In November 2025, a high-level Army public briefing described plans to establish an online marketplace that would provide authoritative data on system performance and enable customers to select appropriate tools. That briefing framed the marketplace as part of a broader push to accelerate procurement and interoperability across agencies.
Subsequent reporting and official statements through December 2025 and early 2026 indicate ongoing development and integration work. Army public affairs materials from November 2025 repeatedly emphasize using the marketplace to streamline access to tested counter-UAS capabilities and to standardize data for testing and evaluation across interagency partners. Trade publications in late 2025 also described the marketplace as a central access point for interagency and law enforcement needs.
Concrete milestones cited in public materials include establishing vehicles to procure counter-UAS equipment already in use and planning for an enduring, plug-and-play data-and-procurement ecosystem. However, there is no published, firm completion date, and officials stress that the marketplace will evolve iteratively as vendors, test data, and partner requirements mature.
Source reliability: The Army’s public-facing briefing and subsequent Army Public Affairs coverage are strong, primary indicators of ongoing development. Additional coverage from defense-focused outlets corroborates a broader interagency push and the marketplace’s role in data sharing, testing, and procurement. However, detailed, independent verification of a fully deployed, interagency-accessible marketplace remains pending as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 04:16 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting in late 2025 notes a focused effort by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) to build such a marketplace for capability sharing, testing data, and procurement coordination, with an emphasis on interoperability across agencies. There is no evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of early 2026; statements describe near-term planning and upcoming interagency events rather than a completed product.
Progress indicators include a November 2025 interagency meeting at
the White House where senior leaders discussed integrating sensors, data sets for testing and evaluation, and collaboration across military, law enforcement, and intelligence partners. Reports describe the task force’s objective to create a centralized marketplace for capability sharing, an authoritative testing data set, and a forum for interagency collaboration, but they also note that a launch date for the marketplace had not been set and that related summits were planned rather than completed deployments.
Evidence of the promise’s status being ongoing (not finished) rests on the absence of a deployment milestone and on multiple outlets describing near-term planning rather than a live product. Defense-focused coverage from late 2025 emphasizes planning, coordination, and piloting steps, with references to a future interagency summit and continued development rather than a completed marketplace.
Reliability of sources: while Defense.gov content is blocked in this instance, corroborating reporting comes from Defense One (Nov 2025) and Unmanned Airspace (Nov 2025), which discuss the same interagency intent and marketplace objectives. These sources are industry and defense-coverage outlets with specialized expertise, but they are not primary procurement or policy documents; the absence of an official deploy-by date further supports an in-progress status. The overall depiction is consistent across multiple reputable outlets, though precise deployment timing remains unspecified.
Overall assessment: the counter-UAS marketplace appears to be in the development and planning stage, with interagency collaboration, data-sharing frameworks, and procurement coordination being pursued but no deployed platform reported by early 2026. The completion condition—marketplace developed, deployed, and accessible to partners—has not yet been met as of this date.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 02:16 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms the effort includes a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions and related policy coordination, with ongoing integration work and testing driving toward deployment rather than full completion. The Army’s December 2025 update describes initial milestones and a planned early-2026 delivery of capabilities to the southern border and other sites, indicating progress but not a finished, widely deployed marketplace as of now.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 12:38 PMin_progress
Restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence to date: In November 2025, the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 announced plans for an online marketplace to consolidate procurement of counter-UAS equipment and to provide authoritative performance data from tests and evaluations (Breaking Defense; Defense One). Complementary reports described the marketplace as part of a broader UAS marketplace and noted testing and evaluation would guide vendor access (Executive Gov). Progress milestones: The initiative has been publicly framed as underway, with a planned counter-UAS summit and ongoing policy/testing work, but no launch date or deployment detail has been announced (Breaking Defense; Defense One). Completion status: There is no evidence of a deployed or fully deployed system; the project remains in planning and development phases (Breaking Defense; Defense One). Timescales and milestones: Reported activities include a forthcoming summit and formal testing/evaluation processes to standardize measurements across vendors, but concrete deployment dates remain unspecified (Executive Gov; Defense One). Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets reporting on Pentagon acquisition and interagency coordination; early reporting emphasizes planning and governance rather than a deployed marketplace.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 10:56 AMcomplete
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence exists that progress has moved from concept to implementation, with the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) driving a digital marketplace intended to sort, test, and share counter-drone information across federal agencies. Public reporting indicates the marketplace was launched as of December 2025, with the aim of providing a single, vetted data and procurement hub for interagency customers to evaluate and acquire counter-UAS tools. Reliability note: Defense-specialist outlets Breaking Defense and Military.com provide dated milestones; defense.gov content was inaccessible in this check, but corroborating reporting supports the trajectory.
Progress milestones: (1) JIATF 401 leadership established a framework for centralizing counter-UAS data and procurement; (2) December 2025 deployment of a federal digital marketplace intended to sort, test, and share information about counter-UAS systems; (3) ongoing integration with interagency partners and testing pipelines. Completion status: the marketplace has been launched and deployed to interagency partners, fulfilling the stated completion condition in practical terms. If gaps remain, they pertain to data population or broader onboarding, as initial reporting suggested.
Dates and milestones: November–December 2025 rollout with statements from JIATF 401 leadership; December 2025 articles describe the marketplace as live for interagency use. Current date (Feb 2026) shows active operation and further integration efforts. Source reliability: Breaking Defense and Military.com are established defense outlets documenting the development and rollout; limitations include lack of direct DoD press release in this check.
Follow-up note: An update review around 2026-04-02 could confirm ongoing data population, onboarding, and any governance changes. Incentives for agencies to engage the marketplace include streamlined procurement, standardized testing data, and safer deployment of counter-UAS capabilities.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 08:29 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms the effort is being pursued under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and is intended to function as an online, centralized marketplace that aggregates test data, performance feedback, and vetted procurement options. Multiple outlets note that a launch date has not been set and that the marketplace remains in planning and development phases (Defense One, Breaking Defense) (Nov 2025).
Progress evidence shows formal structure and governance for the marketplace through the JIATF 401 framework, with leadership describing the goal of an integrated system that enables testing, evaluation, and feedback to vendors, followed by streamlined procurement pathways (Defense One; Breaking Defense) (Nov 2025). Additional reporting identifies ongoing efforts to pair the marketplace with broader UAS/test-data programs and to hold policy discussions for domestic deployments, indicating gradual advancement rather than a completed deployment (Defense One; Breaking Defense) (Nov 2025).
The completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been met by February 2026. Sources consistently state that a launch date remains undetermined and that the marketplace is still in development, with planning activities and pilot discussions continuing (Defense One; Breaking Defense) (Nov 2025). There is no public evidence of full deployment or formal access orders for interagency partners as of the current date (Feb 2026).
Key milestones cited include the establishment of JIATF 401 as the managing entity, statements that the marketplace will provide authoritative data on system performance, and the scheduling of industry and interagency engagements to refine requirements and testing methods (Defense One; Breaking Defense) (Nov 2025). The first concrete, public indicator of deployment or formal partner access appears absent, suggesting continued progress rather than completion (Nov 2025).
Source reliability varies slightly across outlets, but Defense One and Breaking Defense are reputable defense-news outlets with direct coverage of official, on-the-record statements from JIATF 401 leadership. The core claim remains plausible but uncompleted as of early 2026, with ongoing development and planning reported rather than an activated marketplace (Nov 2025).
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 03:58 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing development of a marketplace and interoperable data/procurement framework as part of JIATF 401’s counter-UAS initiatives. These efforts aim to give interagency partners a centralized mechanism for test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options, but explicit deployment milestones are not publicly dated.
Progress is evidenced by high-level statements from JIATF 401 leaders, public discussions of a data-driven marketplace, and plans to integrate sensor data from multiple sources into a common air picture for interagency use. Media coverage in late 2025 and early 2026 notes a path toward a component-based, plug-and-play marketplace rather than a single monolithic system, with ongoing testing and evaluation to standardize performance measurements across demonstrations.
Industry and government reporting describe collaboration with logistics and contracting entities to move from grant funding to deployable counter-UAS capacity, and to accelerate procurement through a centralized marketplace. Authorities emphasize a phased approach, focusing on interoperable data sharing, repeatable evaluations, and quick fielding of affordable, attritable solutions suitable for interagency use.
Taken together, the evidence supports the claim’s direction and progress, but publicly available information does not confirm full deployment or universal access by a fixed completion date. The incentives for agencies and industry—speed to fielding, standardized data, and cost-effective procurement—underscore continued momentum toward a centralized marketplace, with ongoing updates anticipated from JIATF 401 and related partners.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 01:54 AMin_progress
Restatement of claim: The defense interagency effort aims to develop a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple outlets report that the initiative is moving toward a digital marketplace, with governance and procurement integration discussed by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and related DoD entities in late 2025. Coverage describes plans to stand up an online marketplace to aggregate test data, operational feedback, and vendor options for interagency use (DOD/Defense.gov coverage; Breaking Defense and Executive Government summaries).
Current status as of 2026-02-01: There is clear reporting that the marketplace is being planned and developed, but no public confirmation that a deployed, fully functional marketplace is live for interagency and law enforcement partners. Independent outlets describe ongoing development, testing, and procurement integration debates rather than a completed rollout. A January 2026 milestone notes acquisition updates (e.g., Replicator 2) but does not equate to marketplace deployment.
Milestones and timelines: Key milestones cited include the formal establishment and integration activities within JIATF 401 (late 2025), and subsequent procurement and capability updates in early 2026. The primary completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed with access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been publicly met as of 2026-02-01 according to the cited reporting.
Source reliability and incentives: Coverage from Defense.gov, Breaking Defense, and Executive Gov are generally reputable within defense and public sector journalism, though most pieces describe plans and internal discussions rather than a public, auditable deployment. Given the incentive structure (military readiness and interagency interoperability), the absence of a deployed marketplace aligns with typical programmatic scaling from planning to implementation phases.
Update · Feb 02, 2026, 12:05 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing a digital marketplace as part of its counter-UAS ecosystem, but there is no public deployment or fully operational status as of early 2026.
Progress evidence shows the effort is active: late-2025 statements from JIATF 401 and defense-press reporting describe plans for an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on performance and to streamline procurement, testing, and interagency collaboration. A formal launch date has not been disclosed and remains contingent on funding and testing outcomes.
There is currently no completion confirmation. DoD/Army communications describe ongoing planning, with near-term events (e.g., interagency summits) referenced but no deployed marketplace or access portal publicly announced.
Source reliability is strong for indicating intent and ongoing development (Breaking Defense, Army.mil, and Defense.gov coverage), though the lack of a deployed system suggests the claim remains in progress rather than complete."
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 09:58 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing efforts around JIATF-401 to create a centralized marketplace that provides authoritative data on performance, user feedback, and validated procurement options to streamline acquisition and deployment. Coverage from defense-focused outlets describes the marketplace as a core component of a broader push to accelerate counter-UAS capability delivery across federal, state, and interagency partners, with leadership signaling progress and near-term milestones. Evidence indicates the marketplace is being designed and piloted, but there is no public confirmation of full nationwide deployment by February 2026.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 07:57 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress exists in multiple reports describing intent and early development. In November 2025, Breaking Defense described an Army-led push to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone technology, aimed at interagency and installation partners. Defense One reported a parallel effort focused on a one-stop shopping approach for counter-drone gear under the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) umbrella.
As of February 2026, there is no widely publicized confirmation that the marketplace has been deployed and is actively accessible to interagency and law enforcement partners. Reports emphasize planning, policy development, and procurement framework work rather than a fully operational, centralized portal.
A related development cited by sources in late 2025–early 2026 is the broader push to establish a formalized marketplace or procurement pathway for counter-UAS equipment, rather than a finished, widely used system.
Milestones and context: (1) November 2025—publicized plans for a digital counter-UAS marketplace and coordinated procurement channels. (2) December 2025–January 2026—coverage of policy guidance and related acquisitions supporting counter-UAS capabilities. (3) Early 2026—references to procurement expansions and continued development under NDAA 2026 provisions that affect counter-UAS authority. The reliability of these sources is high for status updates, though deployment dates remain unconfirmed.
Bottom line: The claim is moving forward, with progress in planning, governance, and procurement scaffolding, but a fully deployed, interagency-accessible marketplace was not publicly confirmed as of early 2026. Continued monitoring is warranted to confirm deployment milestones and actual partner access.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 06:23 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace to consolidate data, performance information, and procurement options for interagency use, but no launch date has been announced (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025). Defense One notes efforts toward a common network and enterprise data-sharing framework for counter-UAS, again without a firm deployment date (Dec 19, 2025).
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 03:57 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates that a centralized digital marketplace is the objective of the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), with emphasis on providing a range of counter-drone tools and a streamlined path to procurement for interagency partners (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025). As of early 2026, there is no evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace; multiple outlets describe ongoing planning, testing, and readiness activities without a firm launch date (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025; ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 01:59 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the effort is advancing under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) with a centralized, vetted hub concept for testing data, user feedback, and procurement options, but a full deployment has not been publicly announced as of early 2026.
Progress evidence includes JIATF-401’s 100-day milestones, policy consolidation, and ongoing efforts to create an enterprise approach that includes a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions. Army and Defense outlet coverage describe activities such as site assessments, priority asset mapping, and near-term capability deliveries tied to homeland defense and border missions.
Key milestones cited in reporting are policy unification for counter-UAS authorities, the Replicator 2 asset-prioritization process, and planned near-term deliveries to the southern border, all framed as steps toward the marketplace rather than its formal launch. Several outlets note that a launch date for the marketplace remains undetermined, with testing and interoperability work ongoing.
Reliability of sources is strong, with multiple mainstream outlets (Defense One,
Army.mil, Military.com) reporting directly on JIATF-401 leadership statements and documented program milestones, supporting the overall trajectory while stopping short of a confirmed live deployment. The picture points to credible progress and near-term deliveries, but the marketplace’s live deployment status requires official confirmation.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 12:17 PMcomplete
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) moved from planning to deployment, establishing an online central hub for vetted counter-UAS data and procurement, accessible to federal partners (DOD-affiliated reporting and defense press).
Progress and milestones: In November 2025, Defense One reported JIATF 401 was planning a digital marketplace and related policy/testing work. By December 2025, Military.com announced that the Army-led marketplace was launched to sort, test, and share information about counter-drone systems for agencies including DHS, FBI, and other federal partners, signaling deployment and initial access for interagency users.
Current status as of 2026-02-01: The marketplace appears to be deployed and operational, with ongoing testing, data-sharing, and procurement workflows described by multiple outlets. Defense reporting emphasizes the marketplace as a central hub for performance data, evaluation, and streamlined purchasing, intended to support interagency and law enforcement needs stateside and at critical sites (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Military.com).
Reliability and context: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and Military.com is consistent about a centralized purchasing and data-sharing portal under JIATF 401, led by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, with emphasis on testing/evaluation, data standardization, and procurement alignment. While initial timelines for full scaling are variably described, the preponderance of 2025 reporting supports completion of a deployed marketplace rather than mere planning (sources cited: Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com).
Follow-up note on incentives: The initiative aligns with interagency efficiency and risk management goals, consolidating vendor access and authoritative performance data to accelerate procurement and fielding of counter-UAS tools across federal partners, a pattern consistent with defense acquisition incentives to reduce duplication and increase decision speed.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 10:52 AMcomplete
The claim asserts a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 launched a digital marketplace concept in late 2025, with multiple outlets describing a centralized hub for vetted data, testing information, and procurement options (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). By December 2025, coverage suggested the marketplace had launched or was close to deployment, providing interagency access to data and vetted counter-UAS capabilities (Military.com, 2025-12-08). The implementations emphasize centralized data, procurement pathways, and standardized testing to accelerate interagency acquisition while maintaining safety standards. Sources are contemporaneous defense-industry outlets with explicit ties to JIATF 401 and the Army as executive agent, supporting the claim’s current status, though formal government confirmation remains limited in accessible public records.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 08:49 AMin_progress
The claim describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Recent reporting confirms an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS equipment and data, but as of late 2025 there was no announced launch date. Projects discussed include providing authoritative data on system performance and a streamlined way for agencies to test, evaluate, and purchase solutions, with planning and policy work ongoing (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Nov 2025).
Evidence suggests progress in concept and policy alignment rather than deployment. Ongoing testing, evaluation frameworks, and the planning of a counter-UAS summit are cited, with funding to be drawn from multiple DoD accounts, but no definitive deployment milestone or date has been disclosed (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Nov 2025).
Updated guidance for homeland installations released by JIATF-401 in January 2026 reinforces expanded authorities and cross-agency information-sharing, signaling continuing work to integrate counter-UAS capabilities across the department. This does not indicate a deployed marketplace yet (Executive Gov, Jan 2026).
Overall, the marketplace appears on the roadmap with ongoing policy, testing, and procurement framework work, but there is no public indication of completion or deployment by the stated date. Reliability is high for policy and planning updates from established defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Executive Gov).
Scheduled follow-up · Feb 01, 2026
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 03:53 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, reporting confirms the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 plans an online marketplace for counter-UAS to provide authoritative performance data and procurement options, with testing and interagency coordination discussed (no launch date announced) (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Status of completion: The marketplace is described as being in planning and testing phases, not yet deployed to interagency partners, with funding and launch timing still unsettled.
Source reliability and context: Coverage relies on statements from JIATF 401 leadership and trade/defense outlets; no DoD-wide deployment announcement has been published, suggesting an incremental, multi-year rollout typical for interagency procurement tools.
Follow-up: Monitor DoD/JIATF 401 updates and credible defense reporting for milestones or a public deployment date, with a targeted check-in around mid-2026.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 02:05 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Defense-focused reporting in late 2025 confirms the Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing an online marketplace intended to provide authoritative data on system performance, access to tested components, and streamlined procurement. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described the marketplace as a plug-and-play, component-based approach, with testing and evaluation guiding deployment. Public briefings and interviews from November 2025 (Defense One,
Army.mil) indicate the marketplace concept exists and is moving toward implementation, rather than being fully deployed.
Current status: The marketplace has not yet been launched with a concrete, nationwide deployment date. Officials indicated that vehicles exist to order counter-UAS gear, but the centralized marketplace launch date remained to be determined as of November 2025. The emphasis remains on integrating interagency needs, standardizing mission command interfaces, and ensuring data sharing across DHS, NORTHCOM, and other partners, rather than announcing a completed, all-agency rollout.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 Defense One briefing noting a launch timeline to be determined, and a November 14, 2025 Defense One report describing the marketplace as in development with ongoing policy and testing work. The Army/NORTHCOM roundtables in November 2025 corroborate ongoing work on authority, data sharing, and interoperability, rather than a finished product. A later January 2026 roundup emphasizes continued progress, not formal completion.
Source reliability note: Sources include Defense One coverage of
Brig. Gen. Ross and JIATF 401, and U.S. Army public affairs briefings. These outlets are considered reputable for defense reporting and provide contemporaneous quotes and policy context. While the Defense Department page cited in the original article was inaccessible, multiple independent outlets corroborate the marketplace concept and its developmental status.
Overall assessment: Based on available public reporting through Defense One and Army public affairs, the counter-UAS marketplace is actively being developed and prepared for interagency access, but a deployed, fully operational marketplace is not yet in place as of early 2026.
Update · Feb 01, 2026, 12:00 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress to date shows the effort is active but not yet deployed system-wide. Army-led reporting in December 2025 described JIATF-401 advancing a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions, alongside policy, testing, and enterprise data coordination efforts. The Army's 100-day update (Dec 2025) highlighted ongoing integration work, site assessments, and a plan to deliver initial capabilities and data-informed procurement pathways in the near term.
Evidence of concrete milestones includes Defense One reporting that the marketplace is in development with a launch date not yet determined, and Army materials indicating an upcoming initial delivery of counter-sUAS capabilities (roughly $18 million) to the southern border in January 2026 as part of a broader testing and fielding effort.
Additional context from multiple outlets notes a broader push to harmonize performance metrics, test data, and feedback loops across interagency partners, with an emphasis on a centralized mechanism to test, validate, and procure C-UAS capabilities. This points to progress toward a usable marketplace, but not a fully deployed, department-wide interface as of the end of January 2026.
Source reliability: The core claims come from official Army communications (
Army.mil), Defense-focused outlets (Defense One), and defense-industry reporting (Breaking Defense, Executive Government). Collectively they describe an ongoing, multi-month effort with staged deliveries and policy development, rather than a completed, all-access marketplace on day one. The most cautious interpretation remains that the marketplace is under development and being progressively deployed.
Scheduled follow-up · Feb 01, 2026overdue
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 09:57 PMin_progress
The claim describes a centralized counter-UAS marketplace that would provide interagency and law enforcement partners access to test data, operational feedback, and vetted procurement options. Reports in late 2025 described the effort as active development under Joint Interagency Task Force 401, with leadership indicating the creation of an online hub for testing, data sharing, and procurement guidance. While these sources attest to momentum, they do not indicate a formal launch date or a deployed platform as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 07:53 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence progress: Public reporting from late 2025 shows active work by JIATF-401 to establish a marketplace component as part of their counter-UAS efforts. Nov 2025 briefings and interviews reference a planned marketplace and a push to standardize data access and procurement pathways. MeriTalk (Dec 22, 2025) explicitly notes that a core component is a marketplace enabling access to test data, feedback, and validated procurement options. These sources indicate ongoing development rather than a deployed, turnkey system.
Current status against completion condition: There is clear intent and multiple milestones toward a marketplace, but no evidence in early 2026 of a deployed, fully operational platform with universal interagency access. Public statements emphasize vehicles to procure and test, data standardization, and ongoing integration with interagency partners, not a formal launch and rollout. The lack of a concrete deployment date or implementation completion in sources suggests the effort remains in progress rather than complete.
Dates and milestones: November 2025–December 2025 communications highlight the marketplace concept, testing, and cross-agency collaboration. November 2025 statements reference a synchronized testing/evaluation approach and plans for an interagency marketplace, with subsequent December coverage noting the data-access and procurement components as central to the effort. These milestones support a trajectory toward deployment but stop short of confirming full deployment.
Reliability and context of sources: The cited materials come from credible outlets covering defense developments (Army.mil, Defense One) and industry-facing coverage (MeriTalk). They reflect official statements and interviews rather than independent verification of a deployed marketplace. Taken together, they support a status of ongoing development rather than completion.
Follow-up note on incentives: The joint task force framing and interagency collaboration imply incentives to accelerate data sharing, standardize procurement, and enable rapid fielding of counter-UAS capabilities. Ongoing DoD updates will be needed to confirm milestones and any deployment announcements.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 06:20 PMcomplete
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting since 2025 shows the effort moving from planning to implementation, led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) under Army leadership, with a focus on testing data, performance information, and procurement options in a centralized hub.
The objective described in the claim aligns with the task force’s stated goal of providing an authoritative, centralized marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and vetted procurement pathways.
Progress evidence includes November 2025 disclosures from Breaking Defense that the marketplace was in planning stages, followed by December 2025 reporting that the Army-led effort was establishing a federal digital marketplace to sort, test, and share information about counter-drone systems for multiple agencies. These sources collectively indicate movement toward deployment rather than mere discussion.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 03:55 PMin_progress
Restated claim: The defense interagency effort is developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: JIATF-401 has framed the marketplace as a core element of integrating counter-UAS data, feedback, and procurement pathways, with policy and interoperability work described by Defense One (2025-11-14) and related DoD coverage. MeriTalk notes ongoing engagement with state and local law enforcement and the central marketplace aim to enable access to test data, feedback, and validated procurement options (2025-12-22).
Current status and milestones: As of late 2025, the marketplace is under development with no published deployment date; planning includes a counter-UAS summit and continued component testing and policy development to support future deployment (Defense One 2025-11-14; ExecutiveGov 2026-01-27). The overall program indicates progress toward an integrated data-and-procurement framework, but completion and deployment have not been achieved by early 2026.
Reliability note: The reporting sources are credible defense outlets and government-focused trade coverage, citing senior DoD officials and program milestones. While there is consistent progress toward a marketplace, a formal deployment date has not been announced, so the claim remains in_progress rather than complete.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 01:57 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence to date shows the effort is moving forward but not yet completed, with the marketplace described as an upcoming online tool rather than a fully deployed system.
Progress indicators: the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and Army-led efforts have publicly described plans to establish an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on counter-UAS capabilities, vetted procurement options, and user feedback. Additional reporting notes a broader push to create a centralized procurement and data-access portal for interagency partners and local law enforcement.
Current status and milestones: as of January 2026, there is no public evidence of a fully deployed, operational marketplace. Public reports describe preparatory work, governance structures, and ongoing development rather than a completed platform with live interagency access. The completion condition remains unmet according to available reporting, with no disclosed deployment dates.
Details on deployment timelines are sparse in high‑reliability outlets, but multiple outlets frame the initiative as ongoing through late 2025 and into 2026. The consistency of coverage across defense-focused outlets supports a cautious, in-progress assessment rather than a finished product.
Source reliability note: cited outlets include Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, Military.com, and MeriTalk. While not all are official DoD press releases, they converge on a developing, governance-backed effort anchored by JIATF 401 and counter-UAS programs, with no evidence of full deployment at this time.
Follow-up: continued monitoring of DoD and JIATF 401 communications is recommended to confirm any deployment milestones or access changes.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 12:14 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting since late 2025 shows sustained emphasis on a digital marketplace concept, but no public deployment date has been announced. Multiple reputable outlets describe an Army-led effort to create an online marketplace and testing/evaluation framework, yet characterize the launch as pending with no firm go-live date (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One).
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 10:34 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 08:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners is being developed. The claim aligns with public reporting that the Army-led JIATF 401 plans to establish an online marketplace for counter-UAS and UAS technologies to streamline data access and purchasing for multiple agencies. Progress evidence: Breaking Defense reported in November 2025 that
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross announced the intent to stand up a digital marketplace that provides authoritative performance data and a range of procurement options, though no launch date was given. Additional outlets in November 2025 described parallel efforts to create a centralized procurement channel for counter-UAS gear across DoD and interagency partners. Milestones and timing: Reports indicate the marketplace is part of a broader push to consolidate c-UAS and UAS data and testing in a centralized portal, with planned coordination across DoD components and agencies like DHS and the FBI; concrete deployment dates have not been disclosed. Status and completion assessment: As of the latest public reporting, the marketplace remains in development and planning stages with no deployed system or access for interagency partners yet. The claim’s completion condition—deployment with interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options—has not been met, based on available sources from late 2025. Reliability and incentives: Coverage cites a centralized procurement rationale to improve speed and uniform access for multiple agencies, consistent with DoD interagency collaboration goals. Follow-up note: A concrete update on deployment status, data access interfaces, and procurement workflows should be published when DoD or JIATF 401 releases new milestones or a launch date.
Scheduled follow-up · Jan 31, 2026
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 04:31 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reporting from Breaking Defense and Military.com describes an Army-led effort under JIATF 401 to establish a federal digital marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement options, with ongoing planning and no fixed go-live date.
Current status: The marketplace is described as being developed, with emphasis on centralized data access, authoritative performance data, and vendor options. Public deployment milestones have not been publicly published as of early 2026.
Dates and milestones: The initiative traces to the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401 and subsequent statements in late 2025 about standing up the marketplace; no specific launch date has been disclosed in accessible sources.
Source reliability note: Reports come from defense-focused outlets citing DoD-led briefings and statements. Some DoD materials are not publicly accessible, so independent verification of exact timelines is limited; overall, the picture is of an ongoing development rather than a completed deployment.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 03:00 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article from December 18, 2025 describes a cornerstone effort to create a counter-UAS marketplace as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiative, aiming to provide interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Public reporting in late 2025 indicates that the Army-led JIATF 401 is moving toward standing up a digital marketplace for counter-drone technology, with coverage noting ongoing actions to accelerate procurement and fielding, and to consolidate data and sourcing for interagency partners (e.g., FBI, DHS, local law enforcement). These items align with milestones cited by defense press and defense-industry outlets in November–December 2025.
As of January 30, 2026, there is no publicly verifiable confirmation that the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed across DoD and partner agencies. Independent reporting emphasizes planning, leadership, and initial actions, but concrete deployment or full access by interagency partners has not been documented in high-quality public sources.
Source reliability: Defense Department communications provide the primary official framing of the marketplace concept and its expected role. Supplementary reporting from defense-focused outlets in late 2025 corroborates progress toward a digital marketplace and centralized procurement, though these outlets vary in depth of verifiable detail. The overall takeaway is that the project is progressing but not yet deployed as of the date cited.
Update · Jan 31, 2026, 01:02 AMin_progress
Restatement of claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) described plans for an online counter-UAS marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and to streamline purchase decisions for military, DHS, FBI, and other partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Subsequent reporting confirms that the marketplace concept was being pursued as part of broader JIATF 401 efforts, with Defense Department communications and related outlets noting the centralized data, testing feedback, and procurement pathways as design goals (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14). December 2025 coverage reiterates the initiative but does not indicate a launch date or a deployed state.
Current status and milestones: As of January 2026, there is evidence of active development and planning, but no public indication of formal deployment or interagency access being live. The cited sources describe the intended function and governance, not a completed marketplace in use. The projected completion date remains unspecified, and deployment appears contingent on funding, testing, and interagency coordination.
Source reliability and notes: The assessment relies on reputable trade and defense outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) and policy-focused summaries (GlobalSecurity references) that corroborate the marketplace concept. Defense.gov coverage appears blocked in this check, so corroboration comes from multiple independent, professional outlets detailing the same initiative and its status. Given the forward-looking nature of the reporting, ongoing verification through official DoD updates is recommended.
Scheduled follow-up · Jan 31, 2026overdue
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 10:41 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence suggests progress is underway but the marketplace has not yet been deployed. Multiple reputable outlets reported in November 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online marketplace to aggregate tested counter-UAS components and provide authoritative performance data, with a launch date not yet determined (Defense One; Breaking Defense). Executives and reporters described testing, policy development, and planned summits as part of the ongoing process (Defense One; Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
There is no public, confirmed deployment date as of early 2026. The sources emphasize planning, testing, and interagency coordination rather than a live, centrally accessible procurement portal in operation stateside or within interagency networks (Defense One; Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Source quality and reliability: coverage comes from defense-focused outlets with direct reporting on DoD initiatives (Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov). These outlets consistently frame the marketplace as an emerging capability, not a completed deployment, which aligns with the claim’s stated completion condition and the absence of a published launch date.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 08:24 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: November 2025 reporting described an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort to build an online marketplace to purchase tested and vetted counter-UAS components, with aims to streamline testing, feedback, and procurement for interagency partners and installations; policy work accompanying it was also noted.
Current status: A launch date for the marketplace has not been announced; officials described the marketplace as an ongoing development with testing, evaluation, and policy formation rather than a deployed system.
Milestones and dates: November 2025 coverage highlighted creation of the online marketplace and associated domestic deployment policies, plus plans for a counter-UAS summit. December 2025 coverage reiterated ongoing development without a firm deployment date.
Source reliability: Reports from Defense One cite JIATF 401 leadership and DoD context; these are credible for defense-program progress but do not show a live, nationwide deployment as of early 2026.
Incentives note: The Army and interagency partners have clear procurement and interoperability goals that favor a centralized marketplace to reduce duplication and streamline testing, acquisition, and feedback loops.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 06:43 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: In late 2025, multiple reputable outlets reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to stand up a digital, centralized marketplace to test, compare, and purchase counter-UAS capabilities, including data on system performance and procurement options. Completion status: There is no published launch date or deployed marketplace as of early 2026; reports indicate ongoing development, testing, and interagency coordination with upcoming summits to outline testing and evaluation. Dates/milestones: Key items include the November 2025 announcements and subsequent coverage noting the lack of a launch date, with a 2025–2026 cycle of events implied. Source reliability note: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets citing DoD leadership; while not uniformly prescriptive, they describe active development and a roadmap rather than a completed platform.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 04:07 PMin_progress
Brief restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is to provide an online, plug‑and‑play data and procurement hub for counter-UAS capabilities across the homeland defense ecosystem (Defense and Army communications during 2025 rounds).
Evidence of progress: In 2025, Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was publicly established to synchronize counter-UAS efforts and to engage interagency partners (JIATF 401 overview and public briefings).
What has been completed vs. ongoing: Vehicles and procurement channels to acquire counter-UAS capability reportedly exist, and the marketplace concept has been described as a component-based, plug‑and‑play approach rather than a single full-stack system. Officials emphasized that the marketplace would host data on system performance and allow customers to select appropriate tools, with ongoing testing and evaluation across interagency partners.
Dates and milestones: August 27, 2025 marked the establishment of JIATF 401 to lead homeland counter-UAS efforts. November 2025 transcripts and press events indicate ongoing discussions about the marketplace’s structure, data sharing, and evaluation standards, with demonstrations and joint testing framed as future milestones.
Reliability and neutrality of sources: The reporting relies on statements from JIATF 401 leadership and public roundtables (
Army.mil), Defense-focused outlets (Defense One), and industry/observer coverage (MeriTalk). These sources describe the marketplace as an intended, ongoing capability rather than a fully deployed system, and acknowledge authority and legislative considerations that influence timelines.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 02:10 PMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms the effort is underway but not yet deployed, with planning and development activity described by DoD leadership and press outlets. The marketplace aim is to streamline testing, feedback, and purchase decisions across agencies.
Evidence of progress includes public statements by Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s leadership and Defense Department spokespeople, and coverage describing the creation of a digital marketplace and related policies (planned testing and feedback mechanisms). Reports note that a launch date for the marketplace has not been announced and that the effort is part of a broader counter-UAS initiative (including policy development and component testing) [Defense One, 2025; Federal News Network, 2025].
There is also explicit emphasis on integrating testing, evaluation, and procurement pathways for small UAS countermeasures, with interagency participation highlighted (e.g., FBI, DHS) and the goal of a centralized purchasing hub. Across sources, the core milestone remains the deployment of a functional marketplace rather than mere planning, though timelines are not published. The districts and agencies involved have begun outlining governance, testing standards, and cross-agency procurement concepts (as reported in late 2025). [Defense One, 2025; Federal News Network, 2025].
Reliability note: sources include Defense One (a defense industry and policy outlet) and Federal News Network (federal government-focused). Both emphasize ongoing development and lack of a firm deployment date, reflecting typical early-stage milestones rather than a completed product. Readers should treat current coverage as indicating progress toward deployment, not completion. [Defense One, 2025; Federal News Network, 2025].
Context on incentives: the initiative aligns with DoD and Army counter-UAS modernization goals and efforts to accelerate acquisition through a centralized marketplace, potentially expediting vendor testing, feedback, and fielding. The absence of a fixed launch date suggests funding, policy alignment, or governance steps remain to be fully resolved. In this sense, the project appears driven by national security objectives and interagency collaboration, with timing contingent on policy and budget processes. [Defense One, 2025; Federal News Network, 2025].
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 12:31 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401 described plans to establish an online marketplace that consolidates performance data and procurement options for counter-UAS tools, alongside a parallel UAS marketplace (Breaking Defense, 11/17/2025). By December 2025, Defense One reported the Army-led task force pursuing a common command-and-control framework to connect marketplace data and data-sharing across installations (Defense One, 12/19/2025).
Status of completion: As of late 2025, officials indicated development and testing activities, but no launch date had been announced for the marketplace, and there is no public confirmation of a completed deployment (Military.com, 12/08/2025; ExecutiveGov/Breaking Defense, 11/18–11/17/2025).
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the stand-up of JIATF 401 in August 2025, plans to host a counter-UAS summit to coordinate testing, and the ongoing work to test and evaluate components for potential marketplace inclusion (Breaking Defense, 11/17/2025; ExecutiveGov, 11/18/2025; Defense One, 12/19/2025).
Source reliability and caveats: Reports from Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com, and Executive Gov corroborate the marketplace’s development, though the Defense Department article originally cited for the claim was not accessible for independent verification. Collectively, these sources describe planning, testing, and coordination activities without a confirmed launch date.
Overall assessment: The marketplace appears to be in a development and planning phase with ongoing interagency coordination and testing. Given the absence of a deployed system by January 2026, the status is best characterized as in_progress, with ongoing efforts and future deployment contingent on funding, approvals, and testing outcomes.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 10:55 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting ties the effort to the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and related interagency workflows, describing an online marketplace for data, testing feedback, and validated procurement options. The marketplace is framed as a companion to a broader UAS marketplace intended to provide performance data and user-oriented buying options for multiple agencies.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 08:58 AMin_progress
The claim posits that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from 2025 reporting indicates the effort is underway under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and is described as a centralized hub for test data, user feedback, and procurement information, not a fully deployed system. There is, however, no publicly announced deployment date or completion milestone yet.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 04:25 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: multiple 2025 reports describe an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning and testing a digital marketplace to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information across federal partners. In August 2025, JIATF 401 was established to consolidate counter-small UAS efforts, with subsequent interagency summits and testing activities through late 2025.
Status of completion: there is no public record that the marketplace has been deployed nationwide; articles note the marketplace is in development or planned, with emphasis on data sharing, testing data, and procurement guidance rather than a live, fully accessible portal. Defense and defense-industry outlets describe the path toward a common network and enterprise-wide access, not a finished product.
Key milestones and dates: Aug 28, 2025 establishment of JIATF 401; Nov–Dec 2025 reporting on planned marketplace and interagency summits; Dec 19, 2025 reporting that a common network and data-sharing framework are targets within 90 days. These indicate progress and planning but not deployment.
Source reliability and caveats: rely on Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Military.com reporting, which cover official disclosures and task-force statements; none confirm a live, deployed marketplace as of early 2026. Given the ongoing evolution of JIATF 401, the claim remains plausible but unverified as completed.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 02:21 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Nov 2025 reports from Breaking Defense indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 plans to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace with authoritative data on performance to help users select appropriate tools. Similar reporting in ExecutiveGov corroborates the plan as ongoing development rather than a deployed system.
Additional context: December 2025 coverage highlights the broader push toward centralized procurement pathways for counter-UAS tech, describing ongoing development and planning rather than a live launch.
Current status and milestones: As of Jan 29, 2026, no public confirmation of marketplace deployment exists; sources describe planning, testing coordination, and funding considerations without a published launch date.
Source reliability and caveats: The principal accounts come from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Military.com) with consistent framing of the marketplace as a work in progress, not a completed system. Cross-source consistency strengthens the cautious conclusion that deployment has not yet occurred.
Follow-up: Monitor official DoD statements from JIATF 401 and the Army for any launch announcements or milestone tests, and watch for NDAA appropriations or policy updates that could codify funding or governance for the marketplace.
Update · Jan 30, 2026, 12:42 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Nov 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is establishing an online marketplace to sort, test, and share information about counter-UAS systems for federal partners, including interagency and law enforcement agencies. Industry-focused outlets quote the task force commander describing a central hub to test, evaluate, and procure counter-UAS gear, with accompanying policy development and data sharing plans.
Current status vs completion condition: The marketplace is being stood up and tested, with no firm launch date published. Multiple outlets describe ongoing work to create a centralized data library, testing results, and procurement pathways, but deployment and access for partners have not been publicly confirmed as completed as of late 2025.
Reliability note: Reports come from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com) citing statements from JIATF 401 leadership and contemporaneous briefings; the DoD press environment corroborates the general timeline and goals, though a definitive live deployment date remains undisclosed.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 10:53 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the initiative is part of the broader JIATF 401 effort to centralize counter-UAS capabilities and procurement across federal agencies.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to stand up an online marketplace to acquire counter-drone technology, accompanied by plans to test and evaluate platforms for interagency use. By December 2025, Military.com noted the Defense Department’s announcement of a marketplace to help federal partners identify and acquire counter-UAS capabilities, signaling advancement toward deployment. These pieces describe a progressing, not-yet-complete, marketplace development with interagency collaboration as a core driver.
Current completion status: There is no evidence of a fully deployed, operational marketplace as of January 2026. Sources describe ongoing development, coordination with interagency partners, and upcoming testing/summits to finalize offerings and data supply. A related emphasis has been on guidance and testing processes for installations, which accompanies but does not replace a live marketplace.
Reliability notes: The cited reporting comes from Breaking Defense, Military.com, and Executive Gov that monitor
U.S. defense procurement and interagency collaboration. Defense.gov content referenced in the claim is inaccessible due to access restrictions, so conclusions rely on corroboration from multiple industry-facing outlets. Overall, the reporting portrays a credible, iterative progress toward a centralized marketplace rather than a completed deployment.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 08:15 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress exists in official DoD communications from 2025 indicating ongoing interagency work on counter-UAS capabilities, including efforts to integrate skills and strengthen collaboration. A Defense Department story dated December 18, 2025 describes a cornerstone effort around a counter-UAS marketplace and the goal of enabling interagency and law enforcement access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. A contemporaneous Defense Department piece from November 13, 2025 notes interagency engagement aimed at strengthening counter-UAS cooperation and the broader enterprise, including cross-agency coordination that would underpin a marketplace.
There is no public DoD statement or credible reporting that confirms the marketplace has been completed and deployed to end users. The available DoD items reference development and coordination phases rather than a finished product with full access for partners.
Concrete milestones such as a launch date, user enrollment figures, or procurement option catalogs have not been publicly published. The closest signs are narrative descriptions of interagency integration efforts and the stated purpose of a centralized marketplace, rather than a deployed, operational system with confirmed access.
Source reliability: The most relevant sources are official Defense Department releases and briefings, which lend credibility to the claim’s framing (development and interagency coordination). Where DoD outlets were inaccessible directly, reporting summaries and cross-links to DoD communications corroborate the general trajectory of ongoing work rather than a completed deployment.
Follow-up note: If new DoD communications or a formal marketplace launch announcement appears, a targeted update should be issued. Plan a follow-up around mid-2026 to verify deployment status and partner access levels.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 06:47 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: 2025 governance shifts and the creation of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 are described as part of a broader effort to align authorities and rapidly deliver C-UAS capabilities. Defense-focused outlets discuss ongoing work toward a digital marketplace, procurement pathways, and data-sharing mechanisms, with no firm deployment date published as of late 2025. Training and interagency coordination initiatives are advancing alongside marketplace discussions.
Current status and milestones: Public reporting through late 2025 portrays the marketplace as a developmental objective rather than a deployed system. There is evidence of related courses and information-sharing initiatives, but no verifiable public confirmation of full deployment or access by interagency partners.
Reliability note: Sources include Defense One, Defense News Digest, War.gov, and JCS/JKO updates. These outlets are reputable for defense reporting, but they describe ongoing work rather than a completed marketplace, and official public confirmation of deployment remains unavailable.
Bottom line: The counter-UAS marketplace appears to be progressing as a program concept with governance and training initiatives, but public evidence does not yet show a deployed, widely accessible marketplace for interagency partners as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 04:13 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence in 2025–2026 shows Army-led JIATF 401 efforts to create an online marketplace, with testing, vendor integration, and feedback loops described by Defense One and Breaking Defense. By January 2026, reports indicate initial operating capability is targeted for March 1, 2026, and that pilots have begun with limited deployments to inform broader procurement decisions (Air & Space Forces Magazine). Overall, the marketplace appears to be progressing in stages rather than being fully deployed nationwide at this time.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 02:15 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress indicators: In November 2025, reports described JIATF 401 planning an online marketplace to house data, performance insights, and vetted procurement options for counter-UAS tools, intended for interagency use. Coverage framed this as a planned capability rather than a deployed system.
Current status: As of early 2026, there is no publicly documented deployment of the marketplace. The emphasis remains on planning, testing coordination, and interagency alignment, with no launch date announced or partner access described.
Milestones and dates: Public milestones cited include the November 2025 announcements of the marketplace concept and an upcoming counter-UAS summit to coordinate testing and evaluation. Absence of a launch date or deployment signals ongoing development rather than completion.
Source reliability: The principal accounts come from defense-technology press (Breaking Defense) and government-technology outlets (ExecutiveGov), which report on official statements and planned capabilities rather than independent verification of deployment. The evidence supports an in-progress status with planned milestones to come.
Overall assessment: Given the available reporting, the counter-UAS marketplace remains in development, with no deployed access for interagency partners at this time.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 12:18 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is developing an online counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The aim is a centralized platform where authoritative test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options can be accessed by authorized entities.
Evidence of progress exists but no deployment completion as of now. Defense-focused reporting in November 2025 describes plans for an online marketplace and notes ongoing efforts to test, evaluate, and standardize data and performance attributes across vendors, with a launch date still to be determined (Defense One; Breaking Defense).
Current status: the marketplace appears to be in development, with emphasis on testing, evaluation, and policy formation, rather than a fully deployed, user-ready portal. Several outlets describe milestones such as establishing data standards, enabling vendor feedback loops, and aligning procurement pathways, but none report a live, all-access deployment to interagency partners (Defense One; Breaking Defense).
Reliability note: sources are defense-focused outlets and reports from late 2025 that describe ongoing development rather than a finished product. Attempts to access the primary DoD article were blocked, so the assessment relies on secondary coverage from Defense One and Breaking Defense for progress updates (Defense One; Breaking Defense).
Synthesis: the claim is broadly plausible and supported by multiple outlets documenting ongoing marketplace development, but a completed deployment to all interagency partners has not been reported publicly as of the current date.
Follow-up considerations: a future update should confirm whether the marketplace has launched, its user access model, and any formal interagency procurement mechanisms.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 10:28 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting through late 2025 indicates the marketplace is in development, described as a planned centralized system rather than a deployed product.
November 2025 reporting from Breaking Defense notes that the Army-led task force plans to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech, with no launch date yet and emphasis on providing a range of options and authoritative data. This frames progress as ongoing and not yet complete.
December 2025 summaries from GlobalSecurity reinforce the initiative as a central component of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense, highlighting ongoing integration with the Defense Logistics Agency and interagency partners. The coverage suggests continued work rather than final deployment.
Reported milestones include coordination with the DLA to enable procurement pathways and a law enforcement symposium cited to align testing, data sharing, and capability delivery. No specific deployment date or universal partner access is documented.
Overall, evidence points to substantial progress toward a centralized marketplace, but public records do not show full development or deployment by early 2026. The incentives appear to center on faster procurement, standardized data, and reduced fielding risk, leveraging multiple funding sources.
Reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets citing official briefings and statements; no independently verifiable deployment date or access list is identified in the sources used.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 08:36 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence publicly available in late 2025 confirms ongoing efforts toward creating a centralized online hub for testing data, performance information, and procurement options, led by JIATF 401 with Army involvement. Reports describe the marketplace as a core component intended to streamline data access and procurement options for federal and interagency users ( Breaking Defense, Military.com, MeriTalk ).
Progress toward a deployed marketplace is described as ongoing but without a published go-live date. November 2025 coverage notes the plan to stand up a digital marketplace and to provide authoritative data on system performances, while clarifying that no launch date had been set. December 2025 reporting indicates partnerships and outreach to law enforcement and domestic partners, with the marketplace framed as a central hub to reduce risk and speed deployment, but still described as not yet live.
Available sources emphasize the marketplace as both a technical library and a buy‑decision guide, intended to consolidate testing data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The approach aims to improve cross‑agency understanding of counter‑UAS capabilities and accelerate responsible deployment, particularly in environments with aircraft and crowd safety considerations.
Key milestones cited include the formation of JIATF 401, ongoing testing and data collection efforts, and interagency coordination with DHS components, the FBI, DHS grant programs, and the DLA for contracting support. However, none of the sources provide a concrete completion date or explicit deployment milestone for the marketplace itself.
Source reliability varies but collectively supports a cautious, progress‑oriented view: Breaking Defense provides contemporaneous military‑focused reporting; Military.com covers official briefings and the agency’s stance; MeriTalk highlights partnerships with state/local law enforcement and funding mechanisms. While these outlets are reputable, they describe aspirations and intermediate steps rather than a finalized, publicly available marketplace today.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 04:18 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from Defense.gov confirms the Army and JIATF 401 are pursuing a centralized marketplace built around test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. As of late 2025 and early 2026, no deployment date had been announced, and the program remains in planning and development stages.
Multiple defense outlets report ongoing planning and advocacy for a central hub that would enable interagency access to performance data and purchasing options for counter-UAS capabilities, DHS components, and installation commands. These sources describe the marketplace as part of a broader push to standardize testing, evaluation, and acquisition across agencies.
Independent coverage notes the marketplace is intended to accompany a broader set of UAS marketplace efforts, with policy guidance and testing frameworks still under development. Several articles emphasize that the initiative aims to shorten procurement timelines and improve decision-making for counter-UAS systems, but launch is contingent on funding and interagency coordination.
Current reporting consistently indicates progress in concept and planning, including planned interagency summits and testing regimes, but no formal deployment or completion of the marketplace. Analysts caution that the timeline is unclear and subject to changes in budgets and evolving threat landscapes.
Source reliability is bolstered by cross-checking Defense.gov with respected defense outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) and industry-focused outlets (Military.com), which collectively corroborate an ongoing development process without a public completion milestone.
Follow-up should track any announcements of a launch date, funding approvals, or pilot deployments to determine whether the marketplace has become fully operational.
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 02:32 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting describes an Army-led effort, via JIATF 401, to stand up an online marketplace that would provide authoritative performance data and a centralized procurement path (Breaking Defense, 2025; Executive Gov, 2025).
As of late 2025, officials described progress as ongoing with no fixed launch date or deployment milestone announced publicly. The emphasis has been on structure, testing, evaluation, and future integration rather than a ready-for-use portal (Breaking Defense, 11/2025; Executive Gov, 11/2025).
Multiple outlets framed the marketplace as a work-in-progress, with plans to host a c-UAS summit and coordinate with interagency partners before adding systems to the portal. There is no public confirmation of actual interagency access to a deployed data/ procurement portal by January 2026 (Breaking Defense, 11/2025; Executive Gov, 11/2025).
The reliability of these sources is high for defense-adjacent coverage, but none published a Defense Department press release confirming deployment. The dominant narrative describes ambitions, governance, testing, and funding pathways rather than a completed product (various 2025 outlets).
If a deployment announcement has occurred after late 2025, it has not yet been publicly corroborated by primary DoD communications; ongoing monitoring of official DoD channels is advised to confirm milestones (follow-up suggested).
Update · Jan 29, 2026, 12:40 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress exists primarily in planning and pilot announcements rather than a deployed, fully operational product. Reports in late 2025 describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning an online, centralized marketplace to sort, test, and share information about counter-UAS technologies for federal agencies (e.g., the Army-led effort cited by Breaking Defense and Military.com; Dec 2025 coverage notes a central hub for testing data, user feedback, and procurement options).
What is completed, what remains: the initiative has defined objectives, governance, and a pathway toward a centralized data/procurement portal, but there is no public confirmation that a live, fully deployed marketplace exists for interagency partners as of January 2026. Multiple outlets stress that timelines are contingent on policy, testing standards, and interagency coordination, with early 2026 milestones described but not publicly completed.
Key dates and milestones: November–December 2025 reports (JIATF 401 formation, marketplace planning, and procurement considerations) mark the transition from concept to implementation. Independent coverage emphasizes the marketplace would be a centralized tech library and procurement portal, but specifics on go-live dates or initial deployments have not been announced.
Source reliability: reputable defense and policy outlets (Breaking Defense, Military.com, Defense One, ExecutiveGov) are used, all reporting based on statements from JIATF 401 leadership and Defense Department context. While not all details are uniformly synchronized across outlets, the consensus indicates ongoing development rather than completion by January 2026.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 10:33 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The idea envisions a single online hub where agencies can access test data, operational feedback, and vetted procurement options to streamline counter-drone acquisitions.
Public reporting indicates ongoing work and planning rather than a deployed, fully functional marketplace. In November 2025, a Breaking Defense article quoted Army-led JIATF 401 officials describing plans to stand up a central online marketplace that would provide authoritative data and a range of acquisition options, but they did not set a launch date (Breaking Defense, 11/17/2025).
Further, a December 2025 Military.com piece outlining the Defense Department and Army-led efforts notes that the marketplace was still in development and there had been no announced live deployment or go-live date, suggesting the project remains in the planning/test/implementation phase (Military.com, 12/08/2025).
Overall, the available reporting portrays progress toward creating a centralized data/resource hub for counter-UAS, but no concrete deployment milestone or access for interagency partners has been publicly confirmed as completed-to-date. Sources show the initiative is moving forward, with intended data centralization and procurement guidance as core features, yet a formal launch remains unreported and unresolved so far. Reliability: the sources are trade/defense outlets reporting on official briefings and statements; primary timelines appear fluid and are not independently verifiable as of now.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 08:13 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department described this marketplace as a central mechanism for interagency access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Progress evidence beyond the initial description remains limited due to access barriers to the primary source (Defense.gov) and evolving public reporting.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that JIATF 401 planned to stand up a digital marketplace aligned with a broader UAS marketplace, aiming to provide authoritative data on system performance and a menu of options for interagency customers. A related Military.com piece in December 2025 stated the Army-led effort had been tasked to lead a federal digital marketplace under JIATF 401 to sort, test, and share information about counter-drone systems. These reports indicate active planning and program maturation, with no firm live-launch date published by the defense agencies.
Status as of early 2026: Public outlets present mixed signals on whether the marketplace has gone live. Breaking Defense emphasized that a launch date had not been set and that the effort was still in planning steps, including a counter-UAS summit. Military.com claimed a December 2025 launch, but this is not corroborated by an official DoD release accessible to the public. The discrepancy suggests the marketplace may be deployed in stages or framed as a phased rollout rather than a single go-live event.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones discussed include the establishment of JIATF 401 as the executive agent for counter-UAS, the creation of a centralized hub for testing data and procurement guidance, and a summit to align policy, science, and procurement requirements. While late-2025 reporting points to progress and near-term onboarding of data and tools, explicit confirmable dates for full deployment remain absent in widely accessible primary sources. If a live portal exists, it has not yet been consistently documented across reputable outlets.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense and Military.com is informative and reputable for defense policy progress, but neither source provides the official DoD go-live confirmation. The Defense.gov article described the marketplace but is currently inaccessible to verify specifics directly. Given the mixed public signals and lack of a definitive launch announcement from DoD, the status should be read as ongoing development rather than completed deployment. The incentives for interagency collaboration and centralized procurement strongly support continued advancement toward a unified marketplace.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 06:25 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Current evidence shows the effort is in planning and development stages, with a focus on establishing a centralized marketplace for testing data, user feedback, and procurement options rather than a fully deployed system. Key milestones cited include leadership briefings, interagency meetings, and public statements about intended capabilities, but no formal deployment date has been announced.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting from November 2025 describes the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 as planning an online, centralized marketplace to aggregate counter-UAS data, testing results, and vendor options. The Pentagon-era task force and DoD-across-agency leadership have held interagency meetings to align on the concept and ensure interagency collaboration. These sources collectively indicate ongoing planning, coordination, and governance development rather than completed deployment.
Evidence of completion status: As of January 28, 2026, there is no verifiable confirmation that the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Public accounts emphasize near-term goals, testing frameworks, and data-sharing mechanisms, but stop short of announcing a live, operational marketplace.
Dates and milestones: November 17–18, 2025 coverage notes the intention to stand up an online marketplace and accompanying data/testing framework. November 13, 2025 White House–level interagency meeting discussed priorities and the marketplace concept, signaling ongoing development. No completion date is provided.
Reliability and sourcing note: The core claims come from reputable defense journalism and official Army communications, which discuss planning and governance rather than a finished product. While outlets have framed the marketplace as a near-term deliverable, independent verification of a deployed marketplace remains outstanding. Overall, sources point to an in-progress initiative with ongoing interagency collaboration.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 03:59 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Several outlets reported that an Army-led, Joint Interagency Task Force 401 initiative is building an online marketplace to test, evaluate, and purchase counter-drone (C-UAS) capabilities for federal agencies and installations (Defense One, 2025; Breaking Defense, 2025; Military.com, 2025).
Evidence of progress: In late 2025, multiple outlets described concrete steps toward standing up the marketplace and related policy/testing work, including plans for testing components, sharing feedback, and enabling streamlined procurement (Defense One, 11/14/2025; Breaking Defense, 11/17/2025; Military.com, 12/08/2025). These reports indicate organizational momentum, stakeholder engagement, and scheduling around a C-UAS summit and related activities.
Current status and completion: There is no reporting of a deployed, fully operational marketplace by January 28, 2026. Most sources describe ongoing development, with no firm launch date announced and ongoing policy, testing, and governance work embedded in the effort (Defense One, 11/14/2025; Military.com, 12/08/2025; ExecutiveGov, 11/18/2025). Thus, the completion condition—marketplace developed and deployed with partner access—has not yet been met.
Dates and milestones: Notable milestones cited include a planned C-UAS summit and ongoing testing and evaluation activities through late 2025, with authority and leadership assigned to JIATF 401 and Army leadership (Defense One, 11/14/2025; Breaking Defense, 11/17/2025; Military.com, 12/08/2025). Source reliability is strengthened by coverage from defense-focused outlets with access to officials (Defense One, Military.com, Breaking Defense).
Reliability note: While multiple defense-focused outlets agree on the initiative and its aims, none provide official DoD deployment confirmation as of early 2026. The narrative is consistent across independent trade and mainstream defense press, but the lack of a DoD-confirmed deployment date means the status remains provisional until an official update is published.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 02:05 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The piece asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple 2025 reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online “UAS and counter-UAS marketplace” to accompany a broader UAS marketplace, with goals to provide authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement for interagency customers (FBI, DHS, local law enforcement, etc.). A November 2025 briefing noted there was no launch date yet and emphasized building data, testing, and partnership structures (Breaking Defense; Elodie Collins, 2025). ExecutiveGov’s summary confirms plans but reiterates that a budget and schedule had not been set.
Current status: As of January 2026, public reporting suggests the marketplace remains in planning and development phases, with no deployed platform or confirmed deployment date. The emphasis remains on establishing data sharing, performance assessment, and procurement pathways rather than a fully operational storefront. No authoritative post-2025 deployment milestone has been publicly announced by DoD or JIATF 401.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones reported include the November 2025 public discussion of a central marketplace and anticipated testing/summits to coordinate interagency testing, but explicit completion or deployment dates have not materialized. The primary sources describe intent, governance, and funding considerations rather than a delivered system.
Source reliability and incentives: The core claims originate from DoD-affiliated outlets and defense trade press (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov), which track interagency counter-UAS efforts and procurement reforms. These outlets focus on the strategic incentive to accelerate access to c-UAS capabilities for homeland security and defense, but they do not indicate a firm deployment date, suggesting cautious interpretation of progress and ongoing funding considerations.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 12:10 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence publicly available indicates the effort is in planning and development, not yet deployed. Multiple outlets describe an Army-led JIATF 401 initiative to create a centralized hub for testing data, performance information, and procurement options, with formal announcements and briefings in late 2025, but no public deployment date is reported.
Progress noted in reporting centers on design and governance, including the establishment of JIATF 401 in 2025 and the goal of a digital marketplace that will test and share information before acquisition. Independent coverage frames the marketplace as moving toward implementation rather than being live as of early 2026.
Reliability: Defense-focused outlets such as Breaking Defense and Military.com are credible for defense acquisition and policy updates; official defense.gov confirmation is not directly accessible in this instance. Taken together, sources converge on an in-progress status rather than completion.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 10:30 AMin_progress
Restating the claim: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from official and defense-press reporting indicates this marketplace is a key element of Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s efforts to streamline counter-drone capabilities across agencies. The January 2026 timeframe referenced in reporting suggests the marketplace is transitioning from planning to initial implementation, not full deployment yet.
Progress and evidence: Defense- and Army-linked reporting shows the counter-UAS effort is organized under JIATF-401, with a stated aim to build a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions and to support testing and procurement activities. Army Public Affairs notes that JIATF-401 has prioritized policy alignment, rapid capability delivery, and a digital marketplace as part of its “Line of Effort 2: Support Warfighter Lethality,” including ongoing testing events to drive procurement. A December 2025 Army article specifically highlights the marketplace as a vehicle for vetted solutions and notes an upcoming January 2026 delivery milestone of counter-sUAS capabilities to high-need sites.
Status and milestones: As of late December 2025, JIATF-401 was actively transitioning from a concept to initial operational delivery, with an announced plan to deliver approximately $18 million in counter-sUAS capabilities to the southern border in January 2026 and to continue expanding the marketplace’s access and functionality. Defense press coverage (July 2025) described the creation of a joint interagency task force led by the Army to unify counter-drone solutions, while later Army reporting confirms the marketplace component is a central feature of ongoing interagency testing and procurement coordination. The claim is therefore progressing, with concrete milestones focused on initial capability deliveries and continued marketplace development, but not yet fully deployed or universally accessible across all partners.
Reliability and sourcing notes: Core details come from U.S. Army Public Affairs reporting on JIATF-401’s 100-day operations and the 2025-2026 procurement trajectory, along with Defense-focused coverage of the interagency task force and its marketplace initiative. These sources are official or mission-focused defense outlets and provide corroborating details about the marketplace’s role, key milestones, and the pace of progress. Given the interagency nature and evolving authorities, timing and scope may adjust as operations mature.
Overall assessment: The claim is best characterized as in_progress. A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed and piloted within JIATF-401 with planned initial data-driven access for partner agencies and a defined procurement pathway, but full deployment to all interagency partners and complete data/feedback access is not yet evidenced as completed as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 08:12 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The intended function is to provide a single hub for DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options accessible to interagency actors.
Public reporting indicates that a centralized counter-UAS marketplace is in the planning and development phase under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), led by the Army. November 2025 coverage describes the marketplace as a planned online hub intended to consolidate performance data, testing information, and procurement options, with no fixed launch date announced (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025).
Subsequent outlets describe ongoing development and the broader framework for a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace, but do not confirm a live, fully deployed portal with universal interagency access as of January 2026. Military outlets reiterate the concept and potential funding paths, while noting that actual deployment timelines and system availability remain uncertain (Military.com, Dec 2025; ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
The Defense Department and Army leaders have described a staged approach: establishing governance, testing, and data-sharing mechanisms first, followed by a procurement-focused marketplace. The primary evidence suggests progress in planning, with interagency coordination and data-forensics work advancing, but a concrete deployed marketplace with full interagency access has not been publicly confirmed.
Reliability assessment: The sources center on policy announcements and interviews from defense- and defense-adjacent outlets (Breaking Defense, Military.com). They consistently frame the marketplace as an upcoming capability rather than a currently live, fully accessible portal, and none provide an official DoD deployment confirmation at this time. Given the available reporting, the claim is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 04:10 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence to date shows the effort is in the planning and early implementation phase, not a fully deployed system. Multiple credible outlets describe an Army-led, Joint Interagency Task Force 401 initiative to stand up a digital marketplace and common procurement/data-sharing mechanisms for counter-UAS tech.
Progress and key actors: In 2025, reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing a digital marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance, test results, and procurement options for interagency partners (FBI, DHS, local law enforcement) and military customers. Defense-focused outlets describe plans to establish an online marketplace and a common counter-UAS C2/operational data framework, with milestones announced in late 2025.
Evidence of status: The most concrete signals are announcements and planning articles from November–December 2025 describing a marketplace and a shared data/procurement framework. There is no published confirmation of full deployment or nationwide interagency access by early 2026, suggesting the marketplace remains under development or pilot phases rather than complete deployment.
Dates and milestones: Key dated milestones include November 2025 announcements about standing up the digital marketplace under JIATF 401 and December 2025- January 2026 reporting on ongoing efforts to implement a common counter-UAS data and C2 network. These indicate progress toward a centralized access point, but not final completion as of early 2026.
Reliability and sourcing: Sources include Breaking Defense, Defense One, Defense News, and related defense-focused outlets, which are reputable within defense journalism. The original DoD article cited in the prompt is inaccessible to verify directly, but mirrored reporting from multiple outlets provides a consistent picture of ongoing marketplace development rather than a finished product. Given potential shifts in defense programs, continued monitoring is warranted.
Follow-up note: If progress continues as projected, a concrete deployment or broader access could be expected in the near term. Consider scheduling a follow-up review around mid-2026 to confirm deployment status and user adoption.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 02:11 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple public briefings and reports describe an Army-led effort to create a digital hub where agencies can test, evaluate, and compare counter-UAS tools before purchasing. The goal is to provide centralized data, authoritative testing results, and streamlined procurement for interagency use. There is no official, publicly announced completion date for full deployment.
Evidence of progress exists in official-leaning statements and reporting from late 2024 through 2025. Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) quotes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing the marketplace as being stood up, with launch date undetermined and ongoing policy, testing, and evaluation development (JIATF 401 context). Defense One (Nov 2025) similarly describes plans for an online marketplace to centralize testing data, vendor access, and procurement considerations, without signaling a live rollout date. Overall coverage emphasizes ongoing interagency coordination, testing standards, and governance for counter-UAS acquisitions rather than a completed platform.
There are also reports suggesting movement toward launch or piloting phases. Military.com (Dec 2025) frames the marketplace as launched and described as a federal digital marketplace under JIATF 401 that sorts, tests, and shares information about counter-drone systems, but other outlets describe ongoing development without a firm go-live date. The variance among primary outlets underscores the status as in_progress and in need of formal official confirmation from the DoD or JIATF 401.
Given the lack of a uniformly corroborated go-live announcement from a single authoritative source, the status is best described as in_progress. The most reliable signal is ongoing leadership statements about governance, testing standards, and procurement pathways, with deployment details still forthcoming. A formal status update or live marketplace launch would provide a definitive completion assessment.
Reliability note: Breaking Defense and Defense One are reputable defense-focused outlets with access to senior DoD officials; Military.com offers broad defense coverage but may reflect timelines inconsistently. Cross-referencing with an official DoD or JIATF 401 update would strengthen validation of the current status.
Update · Jan 28, 2026, 12:38 AMin_progress
The claim asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a centralized system to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The goal is to streamline data sharing and purchasing across multiple agencies and partners.
Evidence publicly available as of late 2025 shows active planning and development work by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401). Reports indicate that the marketplace is intended to sit alongside a broader UAS marketplace and will provide an authoritative data suite and test/evaluation findings for users selecting counter-UAS solutions (Nov 2025). Officials have described ongoing efforts to test, evaluate, and standardize performance attributes to enable comparative decisions (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Nov 2025).
There is no public evidence that the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed or that interagency and law enforcement partners have universal access yet. Multiple articles state that a launch date is “to be determined” and that planning includes a summit and policy development, rather than a live, fully functional procurement portal at this time (Nov–Dec 2025). The evidence collectively suggests progress is in the design, evaluation, and planning phase, with no firm completion milestone announced.
Milestones reported include a planned c-UAS summit and ongoing policy/guidance development, along with demonstrations and testing to inform the marketplace’s structure and data standards. The coverage consistently notes that procurement funds and governance are still being organized, and that the marketplace remains contingent on further budget and policy decisions (Nov 2025). Given the absence of a deployed system or confirmed access for agencies, the status remains best described as in_progress. Reliability is highest for sources from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Military.com, which quote official briefings and task force leadership about near-term plans and limitations.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 11:51 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reporting in Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and follow-on coverage indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and streamline procurement, but no launch date or deployment details have been announced. Coverage notes the effort lacks a defined budget or completion timeline at that time.
Current status: As of early 2026, there is no public confirmation of a deployed, operational marketplace. Available reporting describes planning, data-sharing aims, and procurement facilitation concepts without a concrete completion milestone.
Milestones and dates: The cited milestones are planning announcements and the intent to host a counter-UAS summit to coordinate testing and evaluation; no official launch date or deployment has been published. The project is described as developing rather than finished.
Source reliability note: The strongest corroboration comes from defense-policy trade press (Breaking Defense) and federal-tech outlets (Executive Gov), both quoting briefing remarks by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross. While credible, the absence of a DoD press release or portal confirmation limits formal status verification.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 08:42 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple 2025 reports describe early-stage work on a centralized digital marketplace for counter-UAS tech led by JIATF 401, with emphasis on authoritative data, testing results, and procurement access across agencies.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 06:46 PMin_progress
The claim refers to a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting indicates the effort is in the planning and development stage, not yet deployed. Evidence points to an Army-led initiative under JIATF 401, with officials describing a marketplace that would provide authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement, but no launch date has been announced (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Additional coverage reinforces that the marketplace is intended to accompany a broader UAS marketplace and to be tested and evaluated with interagency cooperation before deployment (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18; Defense One, 2025-12-19).
Milestones cited include planning for a c-UAS summit and ongoing tests/evaluations to determine which systems would be added to the marketplace, with the aim of enabling centralized purchasing for DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement alongside military partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11 to 2025-12).
No firm completion date or deployment date has been reported, and the initiative remains an ongoing development rather than a finished product.
Source reliability is high, with multiple reputable outlets detailing the planning and testing phases and the absence of a defined launch schedule.
Follow-up note: A 2026 update from DoD communications or JIATF 401 announcements would confirm whether a launch date or initial deployment has occurred.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 04:02 PMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is a centralized mechanism that provides access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for relevant agencies.
Progress and evidence show that the effort is underway but not yet deployed. Defense One reported in November 2025 that an Army-led task force was building an online marketplace to streamline purchasing of counter-UAS gear for installations and federal agencies, with a launch date still to be determined. MeriTalk described ongoing partnerships and the marketplace as a core component, with efforts to convert grant funding into deployable counter-UAS capacity.
Additional context from late 2025 notes the interagency integration aims to pair operational testing with policy development, including testing components and providing feedback to vendors to accelerate fielding. The Defense Department and Joint Interagency Task Force 401 are emphasizing domestic deployment policy and informed procurement to support military and homeland-security missions.
Current status as of January 2026 remains that the marketplace has not been deployed nationwide or publicly launched. Multiple reports describe the marketplace as a planned, ongoing capability with testing, evaluations, and policy development in progress, but no firm deployment date has been announced.
Reliability note: sources include Defense One and MeriTalk, which cover defense policy and government technology programs with quotes from JIATF 401 leadership. While these outlets provide contemporary milestones, formal DoD press releases or official dashboards are not publicly accessible for independent verification.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 02:05 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting since late 2025 shows the concept as an active initiative led by JIATF 401, with officials describing plans to establish a digital marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace and to provide authoritative performance data and procurement pathways. There is no indication, as of early 2026, that the marketplace has been deployed or fully operational. Multiple outlets note that leadership has not announced a launch date or a defined vendor count, underscoring that the project remains in planning and development phases (Breaking Defense, 2025; ExecutiveGov, 2025).
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 12:05 PMin_progress
Restatement: The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence since late 2025 shows progress toward an online marketplace component as part of JIATF-401’s Replicator 2 efforts, with initial testing and procurement activity tied to counter-UAS systems and a plan to include user feedback and test data on a central platform.
Progress indicators include: (1) DoD and defense-press reporting that JIATF-401 is pursuing an Amazon-like marketplace for counter-UAS tech and has begun pilot acquisitions (e.g., DroneHunter under Replicator 2) with claims the marketplace will host feedback and procurement data (Air & Space Forces Magazine, Jan 2026); (2) MeriTalk reporting Dec 2025 describing a central C-UAS marketplace as a core feature to enable data sharing and rapid deployment with DLA logistics support. There is no public indication of full deployment or formal completion as of 2026-01-27.
Current status: The marketplace is being developed and tested as part of Replicator 2 with initial data-sharing and user feedback elements anticipated to populate the platform, and initial acquisitions guiding early usage. The completion condition—deployment and full access for all interagency and law enforcement partners—has not been publicly fulfilled yet, and timelines remain tied to testing outcomes and procurement cycles.
Source reliability note: Reports originate from defense press (Air & Space Forces Magazine), DoD-affiliated outlets, and policy-focused defense outlets (MeriTalk). Access to defense.gov pages has at times been restricted, so corroboration from multiple outlets strengthens credibility. Overall, evidence supports ongoing development and near-term rollout milestones rather than a fully deployed, organization-wide marketplace at this time.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 10:10 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to data, feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities.
Evidence of progress: Nov 2025 reporting from Breaking Defense indicates JIATF 401 is building an online marketplace to streamline procurement and enable testing/evaluation of counter-UAS gear, with data on system performance to guide purchases. Defense One similarly describes a centralized hub for purchasing tested counter-UAS components and coordinating deployment policy. ExecutiveGov summarizes the plan as an online marketplace aligned with the Army’s broader UAS marketplace, including data and feedback.
Current status: Multiple outlets describe ongoing planning, testing, and policy development rather than a launched, deployed marketplace. A counter-UAS summit and related evaluation activities are noted as prerequisites to launch, with no firm deployment date announced.
Milestones and dates: The key milestones are planning, testing, and policy coordination in late 2025; no concrete rollout date has been published as of early 2026. Fundraising and budgeting steps are mentioned as needed to support procurement and marketplace operations.
Source reliability and caveats: The cited outlets are reputable defense-press sources with direct attention to DoD counter-UAS efforts and interagency procurement; the storylines reflect ongoing program maturation rather than a completed deployment. Given the evolving nature of interagency acquisition and sensitive data handling, continued updates should be expected as milestones materialize.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 07:57 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The verbatim description emphasizes access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Multiple 2025 reports describe an Army-led effort to stand up a digital, centralized marketplace. The objective is to enable interagency partners, DHS and FBI, and local law enforcement to test, evaluate, and purchase counter-UAS capabilities through a single portal.
News coverage from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) confirms the marketplace is in development with no firm launch date, while outlining planned testing, policy, and procurement governance.
Military.com (Dec 8, 2025) adds that the marketplace is part of a broader initiative announced with JIATF 401, focusing on standardization, evaluation, and faster access to counter-UAS solutions.
War.gov reporting (Dec 18, 2025) frames the effort as an integrated, ongoing program, including testing, data access, and interagency collaboration, but without a deployed platform yet.
Overall, evidence supports that the marketplace is being developed and is in_progress, with milestones like summits and policy development, but no deployed system or completion date has been reported to date.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 04:16 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting indicates an Army-led, joint interagency effort to create such a digital marketplace, with a focus on testing, data access, and streamlined procurement across federal partners. The effort is described as ongoing, with no firm launch date announced and multiple milestones to be determined. Overall, the marketplace appears to be in the design and pilot planning stage rather than fully deployed.
Evidence from late 2025 shows leadership from JIATF 401 describing an online marketplace intended to deliver authoritative performance data, testing feedback, and vetted procurement options to users including military installations and interagency partners. Officials emphasize the need for a centralized mechanism to introduce capabilities, test them, gather feedback, and align vendors with measurable requirements. However, they also note that execution hinges on funding, policy alignment, and coordinated testing across agencies, with no firm go-live date.
Defense-focused reporting highlights that the marketplace will run alongside a broader UAS/UAV data ecosystem, with plans to integrate testing results and deployment guidelines. The articles stress that buy-in from multiple agencies (e.g., FBI, DHS, local law enforcement) is essential, and that the marketplace should enable relative comparisons of competing solutions. Yet the coverage consistently states the project is still awaiting established budgets and a concrete rollout schedule.
Milestones cited include the forthcoming counter-UAS summit to align policy, science, and operations, and the ongoing development of testing standards to ensure comparable measurements across vendors. These elements suggest progress in governance, evaluation criteria, and interagency coordination, rather than a completed procurement platform. The stated aim is to accelerate access to appropriate counter-UAS capabilities while managing risk and collateral effects stateside.
Reliability notes: the strongest publicly available signals come from industry-coverage outlets with quotes from JIATF 401 leaders. While these sources are reputable, they describe planning and near-term steps rather than a finished product. When assessing status, it remains prudent to treat the marketplace as in development, contingent on funding, testing outcomes, and interagency policy alignment.
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 03:08 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The aim is to provide a single platform for DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: In late 2025, the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) announced plans to establish an online marketplace for counter-UAS and related UAS solutions, intended to serve military and interagency customers (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025). Multiple outlets reported a broader effort to create a centralized procurement and data-sharing mechanism as part of JIATF 401’s activities (CUASHUB, Nov 2025).
Status of deployment: As of the available reporting, the marketplace had not yet launched or deployed; officials described ongoing planning, testing, and procurement considerations, with no firm launch date provided (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025). The Defense Department piece cited in the claim is not accessible here due to access restrictions, but contemporaneous reporting indicates the initiative was in an early development phase rather than complete deployment (various sources, Nov–Dec 2025).
Evidence of milestones and timeline: Reported milestones include setting up a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace alongside a broader data-and-testing framework, and planning a c-UAS summit to define testing, evaluation, and interagency collaboration (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025). No concrete completion date or deployment milestone is detailed in the public reporting to date.
Reliability and incentives note: The sources cited are trade press and defense-focused outlets with direct quotes from task force leadership, suggesting credible reporting on intent and planning. As with defense procurement initiatives, incentives include centralizing procurement to accelerate fielding and ensuring interoperability across agencies, which supports the claim’s objective but also means progress depends on budget, policy, and interagency coordination.
Follow-up: A targeted update should be sought around mid-2026 to confirm whether the marketplace has launched, gained interagency access, and began providing data, feedback, and procurement options (follow-up date: 2026-06-30).
Update · Jan 27, 2026, 12:46 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. Evidence from multiple reputable outlets confirms an Army-led effort to stand up an online marketplace that would consolidate data and procurement for counter-UAS solutions, but with no fixed launch date announced as of early 2026 (Nov–Dec 2025 reporting). The objective appears to be a centralized platform aligned with JIATF 401’s broader c-UAS modernization efforts.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 10:26 PMin_progress
The claim refers to the development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It rests on the idea that a centralized online platform will host tested data, user feedback, and vetted purchasing options for c-UAS capabilities.
Public reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiated plans to stand up such a marketplace, pairing it with an overarching UAS marketplace. BRIG. GEN. Matt Ross described the concept as providing authoritative performance data and a range of vendor options while enabling testing and evaluation before deployment.
As of late 2025, multiple outlets reported that the marketplace had not yet launched and that a firm deployment date had not been established. Defense coverage noted the initiative was to be tested and evaluated through interagency policy development and planning efforts, with a summit to align stakeholders foreseen in the near term. The absence of a confirmed launch date strongly suggests progress remains ongoing rather than complete.
Reliable sources agree on the intent and structure of the marketplace, and detail that funding would come from a mix of operations and maintenance, R&D, and procurement pools, rather than a dedicated budget yet. The evidence points to continued development, testing, and policy work rather than final deployment by early 2026. Overall, the claim appears to reflect an ongoing process with measurable milestones but no completion to date.
Source reliability: Defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) and ExecutiveGov summarize statements from JIATF 401 leadership and provide contemporaneous reporting of progress and milestones. While official defense websites were blocked from direct access in this review, cross-verification across multiple reputable outlets supports the reported status and timeline. The balance of sources reduces the likelihood of significant bias on the core development claim.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 08:09 PMin_progress
The claim refers to a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting indicates the effort is led by JIATF 401 (the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401) and is positioning a digital marketplace to streamline testing data, performance feedback, and vendor procurement for counter-UAS tools.
Evidence of progress shows active planning and development discussions beginning in late 2025, with multiple outlets reporting that the marketplace is being established but has not yet launched. Breaking Defense quoted Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing the marketplace as in the works and noting there is no launch date set as of November 2025, while ExecutiveGov summarizes similar plans and timelines from the same period.
Additional reporting in December 2025 corroborates a broader push toward a shared, enterprise-wide approach to counter-UAS data and procurement, including aims to integrate testing data and performance data into a common framework and to enable data sharing across installations. Defense One highlights the Pentagon’s interest in a common network to support counter-UAS systems, signaling alignment with the marketplace concept.
The reliability of sources is high for the claim’s status, with multiple defense-focused outlets reporting consistent details about ongoing development, planned data sharing, and procurement integration. While these outlets indicate clear momentum, none show a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of late 2025 or January 2026.
Overall, the marketplace project remains in the development phase, with concrete milestones and launch dates still to be determined. The initiative appears to be progressing within the JIATF 401 framework, but completion and deployment have not yet occurred.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 06:21 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting indicates active development and a centralized hub concept, but no concrete deployment date has been announced. Coverage describes the marketplace as a centralized resource for vetted testing data, performance feedback, and procurement guidance across federal partners.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 03:57 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a centralized mechanism to access test data and operational user feedback alongside validated procurement options. The claim aligns with reported efforts by
U.S. defense authorities to create an integrated digital marketplace for counter-drone technologies.
Recent reporting confirms Army-led and interagency efforts to stand up a digital marketplace to sort, test, share information about counter-UAS tech, and streamline purchasing. Defense-focused outlets describe the marketplace as a central hub for testing, evaluation feedback, and vendor access.
As of late 2025 and early 2026, the marketplace had not yet launched; officials indicated a launch date was still to be determined and planning activities, policy work, and a summit were underway to refine the approach and testing framework.
Overall, there is progress toward creating the marketplace, but no public deployment or completion was reported by January 26, 2026. Sources note ongoing testing, policy development, and vendor engagement as part of an iterative rollout.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 02:08 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms initial design and planning activities, but no deployment has been announced as completed. Evidence indicates progress in concept and coordination, not final delivery, with ongoing testing and interagency coordination described in late 2025 sources. Launch timing and the exact contents of the marketplace remain unsettled, aligning with an in-progress assessment as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 12:10 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports from November 2025 describe Army-led JIATF 401 planning an online marketplace to consolidate testing data, performance feedback, and vetted procurement options for counter-UAS gear, with a related UAS marketplace also under development. Leadership ( Brig. Gen. Matt Ross) indicated the effort includes establishing data-driven comparisons of system performance and a structured procurement path, though launch timing remained undetermined. Coverage from Defense One and Breaking Defense corroborates the existence of the marketplace concept and ongoing testing/evaluation activities.
Current status: As of January 2026, there was no published launch date or confirmed deployment of the marketplace. Several outlets framed the marketplace as being in the planning/development phase with upcoming summits or demonstrations to outline policy, testing, and acquisition approaches. Independent outlets similarly describe the effort as ongoing, with procurement and policy alignment aspects still in progress.
Key milestones and dates: Initial reporting cites a November 2025 timeline for announcements and a later November 2025–January 2026 window for summits, demonstrations, and policy development, but no definitive deployment date is presented. The core completion condition—marketplace developed, deployed, and accessible to interagency partners—remains unfulfilled based on current reporting.
Source reliability note: The primary current sources are defense-focused trade outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense) and a federal government-adjacent consolidation site (ExecutiveGov), all reporting contemporaneously on the planning status. While Defense.gov/DoD primary materials are referenced in the claim, access to the original DoD article was blocked here; the corroborating reporting from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and ExecutiveGov provides a consistent, albeit interim, view of progress and timing. The coverage points to an in-progress state pending a formal launch.
Follow-up: Given the lack of a concrete deployment date, monitor for a published launch announcement, a formal marketplace portal rollout, or a DoD-hosted briefing. A targeted follow-up date of 2026-06-01 is suggested to assess whether deployment or a firm launch timeline has been announced.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 10:32 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from reputable defense reporting indicates an Army-led effort (JIATF 401) to establish an online marketplace for counter-UAS and related UAS data, intended to speed procurement and provide authoritative performance data to interagency customers (Breaking Defense). The plan was publicly described in November 2025 as part of broader moves to create a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace ecosystem, with emphasis on data access and vendor options for federal, state, and local partners (Breaking Defense).
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 07:57 AMin_progress
Claim restated: a centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is in planning and development phases, with no deployed marketplace as of early 2026. Milestones cited include plans for an online marketplace tied to a broader UAS marketplace and an upcoming c-UAS summit to coordinate testing and evaluation; funding and launch dates have not been publicly announced. Overall, sources describe ongoing planning and coordination rather than a completed deployment, leaving the status as in_progress.
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 03:55 AMin_progress
The claim describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace to facilitate procurement and data access for counter-drone technologies, but no launch date has been announced (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Evidence indicates the effort is moving forward but not yet deployed. Breakthroughs cited include plans to provide authoritative data on system performance and to aggregate procurement options, with leadership emphasizing a need for a centralized system to speed decision-making across federal and interagency partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Progress includes collaboration activities and near-term milestones such as hosting a counter-UAS summit to test and evaluate potential marketplace entries, as well as formalizing partnerships with federal procurement and logistics entities to convert grant funding into deployable capacity (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22). These developments align with the claimed goal of a centralized marketplace, but they stop short of announcing a deployed, fully functional platform.
Reliability note: reporting comes from defense-focused outlets and government-tech coverage (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; MeriTalk). While these sources consistently describe ongoing planning and collaboration, none show a completed, publicly accessible marketplace as of early 2026, supporting an assessment that the initiative remains in_progress rather than complete or failed. If you need a specific milestone or date, follow-up should track an official marketplace launch announcement or a DoD-verified deployment update (e.g., a formal JIATF 401 briefing).
Update · Jan 26, 2026, 01:51 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms initial planning and coordination efforts by JIATF 401 and the U.S. Army to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS capabilities. Key elements cited include access to authoritative performance data, test/evaluation datasets, and streamlined procurement avenues for interagency users (
Army.mil; ExecutiveGov).
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 11:58 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense-focused outlets report the Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS tech and a data/evaluation framework, with work on a common network and testing across agencies (Dec 2025). Breaking Defense notes the marketplace is planned but no launch date has been set, and emphasizes ongoing testing, data standardization, and interagency coordination (Nov 2025).
Current status: There is no public indication of a launched marketplace or broad procurement access as of January 2026; sources describe ongoing development, planning, and milestones rather than deployment.
Key milestones and dates: November–December 2025 coverage cites initial planning, marketplace concepts, and joint testing; no firm launch date is announced. The discussion centers on enterprise-wide licenses, data access, and interagency integration as prerequisites to deployment.
Source reliability: Reports come from defense-specialized outlets with access to DoD leadership (Defense One, Breaking Defense). They consistently describe an ongoing process and acknowledge the absence of a fixed deployment date, supporting a cautious in-progress assessment.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 09:57 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense One reported on Nov 14, 2025 that a joint Army-led effort (JIATF 401) was building an online marketplace to centralize testing data, vendor information, and procurement guidance for federal partners. Military.com followed on Dec 8, 2025 noting that the Army-led marketplace was being launched to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information and to streamline acquisition across agencies. Both pieces describe the marketplace as a developing, central hub rather than a fully deployed system at that time.
Current status: As of Jan 2026, reporting indicates ongoing development with planning and testing activities, but no publicly disclosed live deployment date or full interagency access achieved. The sources describe ongoing design, testing, and policy work rather than a finished product.
Milestones and dates: Notable public milestones include the Nov 2025 interagency summit and Dec 2025 reporting that the marketplace is in development under JIATF 401. No completion date has been published.
Reliability of sources: Coverage from Defense One and Military.com is policy- and deployment-oriented and consistent with official task-force framing of the marketplace as an evolving initiative, supporting a cautious reading that the project remains in progress.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 07:48 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms an Army-led effort to create an online marketplace intended to unify procurement and testing of counter-UAS capabilities for multiple agencies, including DHS, the FBI, and local law enforcement. A key milestone cited is the planned marketplace, with activities such as a counter-UAS summit and testing/evaluation shaping its design, rather than a completed rollout. These outlets note that the marketplace is still in development with no fixed launch date and ongoing work on policy, governance, and funding. Overall, reporting indicates progress toward the marketplace concept, but the project remains in the development stage as of late 2025.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 06:24 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize data access, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401 announced plans to establish an online UAS and counter-UAS marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and to streamline purchasing for interagency partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Current status: As of January 2026, there is no publicly documented launch date or deployed version of the marketplace. Reporting describes ongoing planning, testing, and interagency coordination, with no deployment confirmation (Breaking Defense; Executive Gov, 2025-11-18).
Evidence of milestones: Milestones cited include the creation of JIATF 401, the decision to pursue a centralized marketplace, and planned counter-UAS summit to test and evaluate candidates before inclusion in the marketplace. No concrete deployment date or system counts are documented in the sources (Breaking Defense; Executive Gov).
Reliability note: The coverage reflects announced intent and planning from defense-focused outlets; no deployed marketplace or agency access has been publicly confirmed to date (Breaking Defense; Executive Gov).
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 03:53 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates this marketplace is in the planning and development stage, with emphasis on providing data-driven tooling and centralized purchasing pathways rather than a fully deployed system (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Evidence of progress shows the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) publicly outlining an online marketplace intended to aggregate authoritative performance data, user feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS solutions, to be used by military, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement customers (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Key milestones reported include a planned c-UAS marketplace that will exist alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with assurances that the platform will host detectors and non-kinetic options and provide data on system performance under varying conditions (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). A counter-UAS summit was also referenced as a step to test and evaluate platforms before potential inclusion in the marketplace (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
As of the latest public reporting, there is no announced launch date or fixed procurement roster for the marketplace, and funding for the effort remains unsettled, with indications that financial support may derive from multiple DoD and interagency sources rather than a dedicated, established budget (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). This suggests the completion condition—deployed marketplace with open access to data, feedback, and procurement options—has not yet been met, and remains contingent on further development and funding decisions (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Overall, the sources describe a promising but interim phase: a defined objective and ongoing steps toward a centralized c-UAS marketplace, but no firm deployment date or complete access for interagency partners yet. Given incentives across military, DHS, and law enforcement to accelerate procurement of counter-UAS capabilities, progress may accelerate if funding and governance are clarified, but independent verification from DoD or JIATF 401 is limited to public briefings and press coverage (2025 reports). Follow-up assessments should monitor official DoD updates or JIATF 401 announcements for a concrete deployment timeline.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 01:54 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being coordinated by JIATF 401 and the Army, with multiple outlets describing an online or digital marketplace intended to centralize testing data, vendor evaluations, and approved procurement pathways. Key statements emphasize providing authoritative performance data, feedback loops, and streamlined purchasing for interagency users (DOD-related briefings and defense press coverage).
Evidence of progress shows the concept moving from planning to early implementation discussions between late 2024 and late 2025, including a dedicated c-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace. Notable public notes from November 2025 describe plans to stand up the marketplace, test and evaluate components, and host a counter-UAS summit to align policy, science, and procurement considerations. No public source to date confirms a deployed, fully functional marketplace or a launch date.
What the sources suggest about completion status: the marketplace is described as “in development” or “in the works,” not deployed as of January 2026. Multiple articles quote Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and describe ongoing testing, policy development, and a future launch timeline that remains undetermined. The strongest signal is continued work and planned milestones (summit, testing, evaluation) rather than a completed system.
Reliability note: reporting from Defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) and corroborating coverage from related
U.S. defense channels indicate a credible, official effort, albeit with typical drip publication of milestones and no firm launch date. These outlets emphasize procurement policy, testing standards, and interagency collaboration, which aligns with the stated goal but stops short of confirming deployment. Follow-up with official JIATF 401 announcements or a
DOD procurement release would improve verification.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 12:00 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In 2025, multiple reputable outlets reported the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planning and outlining an online, centralized marketplace for tested counter-UAS components, including data sharing, testing feedback, and procurement pathways. Defense One and Breaking Defense cited officials describing a launcher timeline and policy work, with a marketplace concept and related testing/evaluation frameworks in development (Nov–Dec 2025). Army and DoD press coverage corroborates a structured effort around capability testing, data standardization, and supplier engagement, but notes there was no firm launch date.
Completion status: The marketplace as a deployable, fully accessible system has not been completed or deployed by January 2026. Reports from Nov–Dec 2025 emphasize planning, policy development, and testing/evaluation scaffolding, plus a forthcoming counter-UAS summit, rather than a live, centralized purchasing hub. Jurisdictional coordination and budgetary arrangements remain active but unsettled, with timelines described as contingent on testing outcomes and policy finalization.
Key milestones and dates: November 14–18, 2025 coverage highlights the concept, an online marketplace framework, and a planned counter-UAS summit. November 17–18, 2025 reporting emphasizes testing and evaluation standardization and policy development as prerequisites to deployment. December 2025 reporting continues to position the marketplace as in-progress rather than live, with no published deployment date.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Defense One, Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, and Army-facing outlets is consistent in describing a centralized marketplace concept, its intended data/evaluation/integration functions, and the lack of a firm deployment date. Cross-checks with multiple outlets reduce the likelihood of a biased or single-source portrayal. Overall, sources indicate ongoing development rather than completion by early 2026.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 10:13 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing a digital marketplace concept to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement of counter-UAS capabilities for multiple agencies, with a focus on providing authoritative performance data and vetted procurement avenues (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Nov 2025).
There is no evidence of a deployed, fully functional marketplace as of late January 2026, and sources indicate the effort is still in planning and development stages. Specific launch dates or deployment milestones have not been announced.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 07:53 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, multiple outlets reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online marketplace to streamline procurement and testing of counter-UAS solutions for military, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement use. Statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross framed the marketplace as part of an integrated UAS/counter-UAS ecosystem, with data sharing and testing feedback mechanisms described (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One).
Current status and milestones: By December 2025, Defense.gov-linked reporting described the marketplace as a cornerstone of the interagency effort, with a timeline indicating planning and testing activities but no firm launch date. Reports emphasize that the marketplace was still in development, with policy work, testing, and a summit planned to align stakeholders; there is no public record of a deployed, fully functional platform as of January 2026.
Progress indicators and reliability: The primary sources are defense-focused publications and official-leaning outlets noting a development trajectory rather than a completed product. The most concrete details concern governance, testing, and interagency coordination rather than a completed deployment. This pattern is consistent with a multi-agency procurement platform that requires cross-agency funding, policy alignment, and vendor onboarding before launch.
Reliability of sources: The cited outlets are reputable defense-focused publications and official Defense Department communications. They consistently describe ongoing development, with no evidence of a formal rollout by January 2026. Given the incentives of the agencies involved, incremental milestones (policy decisions, testing, summits) are plausible interim steps toward a deployed marketplace.
Notes on completeness: If the claim’s completion condition is “marketplace developed and deployed with access for interagency partners,” the current evidence indicates progress toward development but not full deployment as of the current date. Ambiguities remain about the timeline and exact scope, making the status best characterized as in_progress.
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 03:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from late-2025 reports indicates the marketplace is being planned and developed under JIATF 401, intended to centralize testing data, performance information, and purchasing options for counter-UAS gear. (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14; Executive Gov 2025-11-18; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Update · Jan 25, 2026, 01:47 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for counter-drone capabilities.
Progress evidence: November 2025 reporting described an online marketplace for tested and vetted counter-UAS data, procurement options, and user feedback to streamline interagency purchases (Defense One; Breaking Defense). By January 2026, coverage pointed to near-term activation and an associated procurement effort (DroneHunter/Replicator 2) with an expected marketplace IOA timeline.
Current status: The marketplace has not been announced as fully deployed as of late January 2026, but public reporting indicates an initial operating capability target around March 1, 2026 and ongoing testing/evaluation of components prior to broader deployment.
Milestones and dates: November 2025 articles cited plans for a centralized hub and testing/summation schedule; January 2026 reporting referenced an IOA target of March 1, 2026 and the DroneHunter acquisition under Replicator 2. These items collectively map progress toward deployment, not a completed rollout.
Reliability note: The most concrete time-bound details come from reputable defense outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Air & Space Forces Magazine). Defense.gov content was not directly accessible for verification in this session, so coverage from secondary outlets informs the status.
Follow-up context: Completion depends on full deployment and interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options. The current trajectory and IOA target justify an in_progress assessment with a concrete follow-up date to confirm deployment milestones.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 11:58 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public briefings indicate the initiative aims to consolidate testing data, performance metrics, and vendor submissions to streamline procurement across agencies (ExecutiveGov 2025-11; CuAS Hub 2025-11).
Evidence of progress shows the concept has moved from discussion to planning within JIATF 401, with leadership outlining near-term steps such as testing and evaluation frameworks and a planned interagency summit to align policy, technology, and procurement needs (Unmanned Airspace 2025-11; ExecutiveGov 2025-11).
However, there is no publicly announced launch date or confirmed deployment of a fully operational marketplace as of early 2026. Reports describe the marketplace as a work-in-progress intended to harmonize performance metrics and provide a centralized testing/evaluation channel, not a released, live procurement hub (CuAS Hub 2025-11; Unmanned Airspace 2025-11).
reliability note: sources include trade press and industry outlets rather than formal Defense Department press releases, and descriptions emphasize planning and testing phases rather than a completed system. The objective remains clear, but a formal deployment date or completion has not been publicly confirmed (ExecutiveGov 2025-11; CuAS Hub 2025-11; Unmanned Airspace 2025-11).
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 09:56 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reports describe an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 pursuing an online marketplace to provide authoritative performance data, test results, user feedback, and streamlined procurement for interagency partners. Coverage notes that the marketplace is in development with testing, policy coordination, and stakeholder engagement underway, not a live deployment.
Status assessment: As of late 2025, sources indicate ongoing development and planning, with a launch date for deployment yet to be determined. There is no public record of a fully operational platform accessible to all intended partners.
Milestones and dates: November 2025 reporting cites a counter-UAS marketplace under development and a forthcoming summit; December 2025 coverage reiterates ongoing development without announcing completion.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Defense One and ExecutiveGov provides corroboration of the marketplace concept and development stage; both are reputable outlets within defense and government-technology reporting. The primary Defense.gov article is inaccessible here, but corroborating reporting aligns with the same progression.
Follow-up: A dedicated update should be issued if a concrete deployment date or formal partner onboarding milestones are announced.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 07:47 PMin_progress
Summary of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, with a focus on DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: Public reporting from late 2025 describes the effort as underway, with emphasis on planning and development rather than a live deployment. Sources cite the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 shaping a digital marketplace to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information among interagency partners and DoD components.
Current status against completion condition: There is no publicly announced completion or deployment date for the marketplace. Several outlets state that the marketplace is being stood up or planned, with no firm launch window or procurement catalog size disclosed.
Milestones and dates: Reported milestones include formal identification of the marketplace concept within the interagency counter-UAS effort and ongoing planning in late 2025. No firm launch date is published, indicating the project remains in development or pilot stages.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Military.com, Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, GlobalSecurity republishing DoD material). While some outlets variably frame the project, the core point—progress toward a marketplace without a fixed launch date—is consistently reported.
Overall assessment: Based on available reporting, the counter-UAS marketplace is in progress but not completed as of the current date.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 06:14 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The effort is described as a centralized mechanism to access test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting in late-2025 indicates active planning and development led by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), with discussions of a centralized marketplace and related procurement functionality. Coverage notes aims to consolidate data access, feedback, and procurement options for interagency partners.
Current status and milestones: No publicly confirmed deployment date exists as of January 2026. Reports suggest the marketplace is in planning or pilot phases, with a launch date yet to be determined and a focus on data-sharing and procurement modules rather than a deployed portal.
Evidence of completion, progress, or setbacks: Available reporting points to ongoing development rather than a finished product. A 100-day operations mark for JIATF 401 in December 2025 highlights rapid counter-UAS activity but does not confirm marketplace deployment or partner access.
Dates and reliability notes: Key references span August–December 2025, establishing the task force and discussing the marketplace, but concrete deployment milestones remain unverified. Coverage from defense-focused outlets is credible, though some details rely on press summaries or speculative timelines.
Follow-up note: A formal deployment announcement from official defense channels would be needed to confirm deployment and partner access, given the current reporting status.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 03:52 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms that an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is driving an online marketplace intended to centralize testing data, vendor capabilities, and procurement guidance for federal partners (e.g., FBI, DHS, FAA, installations). Key messaging from officials describes it as a single hub to compare systems, view testing information, and streamline buying decisions (Defense One, Nov 14, 2025).
Progress to date includes ongoing development efforts, including testing components, establishing evaluation standards, and creating policy guidelines for domestic deployment. Reports note that the marketplace launch date had not been set as of late 2025, with planning activity continuing and a counter-UAS summit anticipated to discuss policy, science, and logistics (Defense One, Nov 2025). A separate Army-driven update indicated an online federal digital marketplace was being pursued as part of counter-drone modernization efforts (Military.com, Dec 8, 2025).
Evidence suggests the project is in the design and pilot phase rather than fully deployed. Analysts and outlets describe the marketplace as a centralized data library and procurement conduit, but explicit deployment and access milestones for interagency partners remain unclear and unscheduled as of January 2026. The absence of a fixed go-live date indicates the completion condition—deployed marketplace with broad access—has not yet been met (Defense One, Military.com, Nov–Dec 2025).
Reliability note: sources are primarily defense-focused trade outlets reporting on official statements and task-force briefings. Defense One and Military.com are reputable within defense journalism, but official Pentagon confirmation of a live, all-partner marketplace remains limited in public view due to access restrictions on some DoD materials (Defense One, Military.com, Nov–Dec 2025). The reporting reflects ongoing work and planning rather than a proven, deployed system at this time.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 01:54 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple reputable outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is building a central online hub to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information, including performance data and procurement options. Defense One described the marketplace concept and a planned launch framework in November 2025, with a focus on coordinating testing, policy, and deployment guidance. Military.com echoed that the portal is in planning, with no announced live date as of December 2025.
Milestones and status: The effort was formalized with the establishment of JIATF 401 in August 2025, and subsequent reporting in late 2025 indicates ongoing development of the marketplace and related testing frameworks. Executive coverage notes that a launch date had not been set and a counter-UAS summit was planned to coordinate testing, policy, and procurement approaches. The absence of a published go-live date as of January 2026 suggests the marketplace remains in development rather than deployed.
Dates and concrete milestones: August 2025 (JIATF 401 establishment); November 2025 (public reporting on the marketplace concept and policy/testing framework); December 2025 (press about a central online hub with planned procurement and data-sharing capabilities). Defense-linked reporting emphasizes testing, evaluation, and data-standardization aims rather than a finished product. No definitive deployment date has been announced publicly.
Source reliability and caveats: Coverage from Defense One, Military.com, and ExecutiveGov provides contemporaneous reporting on the program, citing official briefings by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and DoD/agency partners. While these sources reliably describe the intent and progress, they do not confirm a live, fully deployed marketplace as of early 2026. Given the nature of defense acquisitions, continued monitoring of official DoD statements and briefings is warranted for a definitive status update.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 12:11 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: Multiple late-2025 reports describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 building an online marketplace to consolidate testing data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options, with officials noting ongoing development and testing rather than a deployed system. Milestones and activity: Reports reference planned policy work, testing, and a counter-UAS summit; officials stated that a launch date for the marketplace had not yet been set, indicating ongoing development through late 2025. Current status: There is documented progress and planning, but no official deployment or completion announced as of early 2026, suggesting the project remains in development and evaluation stages. Source reliability and incentives: Coverage from Defense One, Military.com, and ExecutiveGov cites official briefings and statements; sources appear to track a genuine, multi-agency effort with incentives to standardize procurement and accelerate fielding while ensuring testing across agencies.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 10:11 AMcomplete
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress exists from late 2025 reporting that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is building an online marketplace intended to centralize testing data, vendor information, and procurement options for federal partners (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Progress indicators include the task force outlining a central hub to compare systems, access government testing information, and guide purchases, with a launch timeline to be determined but with ongoing planning and policy work (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
A substantive milestone appeared with reporting in early December 2025 that the marketplace was launched or near-launch, serving as a centralized portal to sort, test, share information, and enable faster acquisition for counter-UAS capabilities (Military.com, 2025-12-08).
By January 2026, coverage from credible defense media indicates the marketplace was being deployed and populated as part of the broader JIATF 401 effort, aligning with the stated goal of providing interagency and law enforcement partners access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options (Military.com, 2025-12-08; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Source reliability: Defense One and Military.com are established defense journalism outlets; their reporting on JIATF 401 is consistent with DoD-led efforts discussed in August 2025 and later. While initial timelines for a hard go-live date varied, the described milestones align with the claimed marketplace being operational by end-2025 and continuing into 2026.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 07:48 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing development efforts by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, including policy work, testing, and planning for a centralized procurement platform, with no announced deployment date yet. Evidence indicates measurable progress toward integrating data access, vendor feedback, and streamlined procurement, but the marketplace has not been deployed as of now.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 04:20 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: DoD reporting in late 2025 describes the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 pursuing an online marketplace to streamline procurement, testing, and feedback across interagency partners. A December 2025 Defense.gov piece references the marketplace as a cornerstone of layered counter-drone efforts.
Current status: The marketplace concept has been publicly announced and is under active development, but no firm deployment date has been announced; efforts focus on testing, policy development, and procurement pathways rather than a finished product.
Milestones and reliability: Key milestones include establishing JIATF 401 to centralize C-UAS efforts and planning a counter-UAS summit to discuss policy, science, and testing. Reporting from Defense One and Defense.gov is consistent about ongoing development, but does not show a deployed system as of January 2026.
Follow-up note: I can monitor for a formal deployment announcement or concrete milestones (vendor onboarding, live tests, installation access) and report on a chosen follow-up date.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 02:38 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Current reporting describes the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning an online marketplace to provide authoritative performance data, vendor options, and vetted procurement pathways for counter-UAS systems, but no public deployment date is announced. Coverage from Defense One and ExecutiveGov frames the marketplace as an ongoing initiative rather than a completed product as of late 2025 and early 2026.
Evidence of progress includes statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and reports that the marketplace will offer testing data and evaluation benchmarks to streamline purchasing across agencies, with policy development for domestic deployment. A launch date has not been disclosed, though officials describe a plan for a later rollout and related counter-UAS summit to coordinate among interagency partners (Nov 2025).
Analyses note the initiative is in design and testing phases, with funding drawn from multiple DoD accounts (operations/maintenance, R&D, procurement) rather than a dedicated budget. The project is described as integrating data on system performance and feedback to guide procurement decisions, rather than delivering a ready-to-use platform today.
Reliability of sources is solid for defense-focused coverage (Defense One, ExecutiveGov). They cite official briefings and task-force statements, but confirm that deployment and access to the marketplace for interagency users are not yet public, making completion uncertain. The follow-up should confirm a formal rollout and measurable adoption metrics when available.
Update · Jan 24, 2026, 12:25 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Dozens of federal agencies are coordinating through JIATF 401 with a focus on data-sharing, policy alignment, and procurement pathways, signaling movement toward a centralized marketplace construct (Inside Unmanned Systems;
Army.mil).
Evidence of progress: Army-led efforts describe a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions, including access to test data and operational feedback to support procurement decisions (Army.mil; Military.com summaries).
Evidence of milestones: 2025–2026 activity highlights include rapid assessment of capability gaps, integration of sensors and command systems, and planned initial deliveries of counter-sUAS capability to priority sites around January 2026 as part of JIATF 401 efforts (Army.mil; Army Public Affairs reporting).
Current status: The marketplace concept exists as an ongoing, multi-agency initiative rather than a fully deployed, single-access portal; multiple components (data sharing, testing, procurement pathways) are being implemented in parallel across agencies (Inside Unmanned Systems; related reporting).
Reliability note: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and official Army releases; while the Defense Department page was inaccessible in this session, corroborating sources strengthen plausibility of an active marketplace initiative, though exact deployment and access details may vary by agency.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 10:33 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting indicates a centralized marketplace is in planning under an Army-led joint interagency effort (JIATF 401), with emphasis on testing, data sharing, and procurement pathways for installations and agencies.
As of early 2026, there is no clearly documented deployment or full rollout; coverage focuses on planning milestones, architecture, and anticipated capabilities rather than a live system with active user access.
Sources describe near-term development and expected functionality, but do not confirm a completed, deployed marketplace or established access for all interagency partners yet.
Credible trade and defense-focused outlets (ExecutiveGov, cuashub, Defense One) provide the most substantive framing, while coverage from Inside Unmanned Systems and Military.com reiterates the planned marketplace and its scope without asserting definitive deployment dates.
Given the absence of a fixed deployment date or user-access metrics, the status should be treated as in_progress pending official DoD/JIATF 401 updates.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 08:09 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from public sources indicates ongoing work on creating a centralized marketplace component as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 counter-UAS effort, with explicit references to a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions.
In December 2025, Army leadership described efforts to foster a digital marketplace that would allow installations and interagency partners (e.g., FBI, DHS) to access tested components, provide feedback, and streamline procurement. The piece noted that the marketplace launch date had not yet been determined, but outlined a path toward integrated procurement and testing across the department.
Further corroborating momentum, JIATF-401 marked its 100th day of operations in December 2025, highlighting rapid integration across agencies and the testing and deployment of counter-sUAS capabilities, as well as planning to deliver approximately $18 million in counter-sUAS capacity to the southern border in January 2026. The narrative emphasizes policy consolidation and a broader enterprise marketplace initiative as part of its efforts.
The reporting collectively shows progress toward a centralized marketplace concept, with documented plans, testing, and near-term procurement actions tied to the broader counter-UAS program. However, there is no public evidence that the marketplace is fully deployed or that interagency partners have complete access to data, feedback, and procurement options as of January 2026. The completion condition appears not yet met based on available reporting.
Reliability notes: reporting comes from DoD-affiliated outlets and defense press (Defense One,
Army.mil, defense.gov metadata) and describes ongoing efforts and milestones rather than a final deployment. Cross-checks with additional official DoD releases would help confirm deployment status.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 06:21 PMcomplete
Brief restatement of the claim: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) framed the marketplace as an Army-led online hub for federal agencies to access tested components and performance data to inform purchasing and deployment. Military.com (Dec 8, 2025) reports the Army-led effort progressing toward a federal digital marketplace to sort, test, share information, and enable streamlined acquisition for counter-UAS capabilities, with a launch anticipated in late 2025 or 2026.
Current status: By January 2026, coverage described the marketplace as deployed or near deployment, designed to centralize data, testing results, and procurement options for interagency users. While formal official statements were limited in accessible sources, reporting indicates movement from concept to implementation in line with the completion condition.
Reliability note: The assessment relies on Defense One and Military.com reporting, which are reputable defense outlets; no conflicting official DOE/DoD press release was publicly accessible here, but the chronology aligns across sources.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 03:57 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public briefings and reporting describe the marketplace as a core element of JIATF 401’s approach to countering small UAS threats, aimed at providing authoritative performance data and procurement pathways to interagency users (Defense One, Army Roundtable coverage, Nov 2025).
Progress indicators show planning for a marketplace with plug-and-play data standards and an emphasis on integrating diverse counter-UAS components rather than mandating a single system. Leadership discussions describe streaming data on system performance, vendor participation, and evaluation frameworks intended to enable rapid acquisition and informed choices for users (Defense One, MeriTalk,
Army.mil, Nov–Dec 2025).
There is no public confirmation that the marketplace is fully deployed or that interagency and law enforcement partners have established, ongoing access as of January 2026. Reporting characterizes the marketplace as an evolving capability with milestones around testing, data sharing, and procurement vehicles still in progress rather than a completed rollout (MeriTalk; Army.mil; Defense One, Nov–Dec 2025).
Key milestones cited include deploying procurement avenues for counter-UAS tech, a planned interagency counter-UAS summit, and synchronized testing/evaluation to standardize performance metrics across agencies. These reflect substantial progress toward the concept but stop short of confirming full deployment or universal access at this time (Army.mil, Defense One, MeriTalk; Nov–Dec 2025).
Reliability and limitations of sources: coverage comes from military and defense press outlets that emphasize interoperability, data sharing, and vendor participation. The materials consistently frame the marketplace as an evolving program with ongoing demonstrations and governance work, supporting an in-progress assessment rather than a completed deployment. See the cited outlets for the most recent developments (Defense One; Army.mil; MeriTalk; Nov–Dec 2025).
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 02:07 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing Army-led efforts to create an online hub for testing, evaluating, and sharing information about counter-drone systems, with procurement guidance attached to vetted options.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 12:08 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Late-2025 reporting describes the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 building a central online marketplace to sort, test, and share counter-UAS data and procurement information for federal partners (Defense One; Military.com). Officials indicate the marketplace aims to integrate performance data, testing results, and vendor feedback to streamline acquisition and fielding (Defense One, Military.com).
Current status: The marketplace is framed as a planned capability with no firm launch date; ongoing work focuses on testing standards, governance, and policy to enable a centralized hub for vetted counter-UAS systems (Defense One; Military.com).
Milestones and dates: An interagency summit in November 2025 and subsequent December 2025 reporting outline foundational steps; no firm deployment date has been announced (Defense One; Military.com).
Source reliability and incentives: Coverage from Defense One and Military.com reflects DoD- and Army-led efforts, with emphasis on integration, testing, and governance to deliver a centralized procurement and data-access tool for federal partners. The incentives cited include faster evaluation, standardized data, and safer procurement for critical infrastructure and events.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 10:30 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reports in 2025 described an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS and UAS-related data, intended to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing for federal agencies and installations. This indicates initial planning and design activities rather than a finished product.
Progress evidence centers on the marketplace concept and accompanying data-sharing and procurement capabilities, with November 2025 coverage noting launch alongside broader UAS marketplace efforts and related testing, policy development, and interagency coordination. While officials described data on system performance and validated procurement options, no deployment date was announced. The material confirms movement toward a centralized procurement hub, but not completion.
The completion condition—deployment and active access for interagency partners—has not been met as of early 2026. The available reporting emphasizes planning, testing frameworks, and policy work rather than a live, user-ready platform. Budgeting and funding for the marketplace also remain an open issue, suggesting ongoing progress rather than finalization.
Dates and milestones cited include November 2025 reporting and subsequent coverage noting testing and policy development in support of the marketplace. Reputable defense-focused outlets provided analysis based on statements from JIATF 401 leadership, indicating strategic intent and measurable progress, albeit without a concrete launch schedule. The reliability of these sources is high for signaling intent and progress, though exact deployment timelines remain uncertain.
Overall, the claim reflects a legitimate government initiative with tangible steps toward data sharing and procurement integration, but the system is not yet deployed. Readers should monitor official DoD statements and agency briefings for a definitive deployment date and access milestones. The coverage range used here relies on established defense-media outlets, which supports balanced reporting of progress and remaining gaps.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 07:56 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The reporting describes an online marketplace intended to consolidate testing, evaluation, and procurement processes across DoD and interagency partners. The core idea is to provide a centralized hub for data on system performance, vendor feedback, and vetted procurement options. Multiple outlets have framed the marketplace as a planned initiative under the Army-led JIATF 401.
Evidence of progress: Reports in November 2025 indicate the task force is actively planning the marketplace and convening a counter-UAS summit to coordinate policy, science and technology, operations, and intelligence needs. Defense One summarized that a launch date has not been set and a summit was planned in the near term. ExecutiveGov echoed the planning phase and noted efforts to test and evaluate components for inclusion in the marketplace.
Current status vs completion: There is no firm deployment date announced, and formal budgeting for the marketplace has not been publicly disclosed. The initiatives are described as in planning, testing, and policy-development stages rather than fully deployed and accessible to partners. The consensus from the cited reporting is that the marketplace remains in progress rather than complete.
Milestones and dates: Reported milestones include a scheduled counter-UAS summit in late 2025 and ongoing testing/evaluation to harmonize performance metrics across demonstrations. No official DoD press release with a final deployment date has been found in the sources consulted. These milestones signal ongoing momentum without a publicly disclosed completion date.
Reliability note: The sources cited (Defense One, ExecutiveGov, CUAS Hub) are trade/defense outlets; none are primary DoD press releases due to access issues for the Defense.gov article. Taken together, they consistently describe an active planning and early development phase, though with no confirmed deployment date. The reporting aligns on the marketplace concept and its intended role as a centralized procurement and data-sharing tool.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 04:28 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the marketplace as a core element of JIATF-401 efforts to integrate testing, feedback, and procurement pathways. Defense One described the marketplace as a key objective with a launch date still to be determined, indicating ongoing development rather than a completed rollout. Subsequent reporting from MeriTalk notes that the marketplace aims to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options to speed deployment, reinforcing that the project remains active and evolving.
Progress evidence includes Defense One's November 2025 coverage detailing the marketplace concept and its role in coordinating counter-UAS acquisitions across agencies, and MeriTalk's December 2025 report describing concrete data-sharing and procurement access goals. Both sources frame the marketplace as a work-in-progress component of a broader national counter-UAS effort rather than a fully deployed system. There is no publicly available, verifiable statement confirming full deployment or completion as of early 2026.
Available sources corroborate ongoing work but stop short of declaring completion. The two cited outlets emphasize integration, testing, policy development, and funding alignment to support a future deployment, not a finished product. Users should monitor official DoD or JIATF-401 releases for concrete milestones or a launch date.
Reliability note: Defense One and MeriTalk are reputable outlets for defense technology and policy; neither source provides an official DoD deployment date, so the assessment relies on reporting of ongoing efforts rather than completed implementation.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 02:25 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Available reporting from late 2025 describes an Army-led effort to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS technologies to support interagency customers and installation commanders. However, no publicly accessible DoD source confirms that the marketplace has been developed, deployed, or that partners have access to data and procurement options as of January 22, 2026.
Progress evidence: Several defense-press items from November–December 2025 discuss planning, a planned counter-UAS summit, and the intent to create a centralized procurement portal. They describe milestones such as testing plans, vendor coordination, and governance, but do not provide concrete deployment dates or evidence of live interagency access. Independent verification from
DoD or JCIDS releases remains unavailable due to access barriers to the referenced defense.gov article.
Completion status assessment: The claim appears to be in planning or early implementation rather than completed. The absence of a deployed, publicly accessible marketplace and demonstrable interagency access suggests the project has not yet reached final deployment. Given public signals, the classification remains in_progress pending verifiable milestones or a formal DoD/public release confirming deployment.
Source reliability note: DoD-hosted material could not be accessed directly due to access restrictions, and summaries come from secondary outlets with varying reliability. Where possible, outlets with defense reporting track records were prioritized, but independent verification of deployment remains elusive. Caution is warranted about equating planning narratives with completed functionality.
Update · Jan 23, 2026, 01:06 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates this marketplace is being built under Joint Interagency Task Force 401, with Army leadership coordinating testing data, vendor information, and procurement pathways for federal partners. Key statements from late 2025 describe the marketplace as a centralized hub intended to streamline evaluation and acquisition rather than as a ready-to-use deployment. In sum, the project is actively under development, with a timeline and deployment details still to be determined.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 10:24 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: DoD and JIATF 401 have articulated a plan that includes a marketplace-like capability as part of the Replicator 2 effort. Public briefings and reporting in 2025 described creating an online portal to streamline access to data, feedback, and procurement for federal partners and local law enforcement.
Progress toward completion: In January 2026, JIATF 401 announced its first Replicator 2 acquisition (two DroneHunter F700 systems) with delivery expected by April 2026, marking a concrete deployment milestone linked to the broader marketplace initiative.
Milestones and dates: August 2025 — establishment of JIATF 401 to lead cross-agency counter-UAS efforts. November–December 2025 — public discussion of an online marketplace concept. January 11, 2026 — first Replicator 2 purchase; delivery anticipated by April 2026. These steps show movement toward centralizing data and procurement, but the full marketplace deployment is not yet confirmed as completed.
Source reliability and incentives: Reporting comes from official Army and defense-focused outlets, which emphasize homeland defense objectives and rapid acquisition. The incentives center on reducing procurement risk, speeding fielding, and leveraging commercial innovation. While evidence shows progress, a full deployment date for the marketplace remains unresolved.
Follow-up note: A concrete update on marketplace deployment should be sought around the April 2026 delivery window, when broader data-access and procurement pathways may be publicly confirmed.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 08:09 PMin_progress
The claim states a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms an Army-led effort to stand up an online marketplace that would provide authoritative data on how systems perform and help users select appropriate counter-UAS tools. The effort appears to be in planning and development stages rather than deployed.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 06:29 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The articles describe an online marketplace intended to streamline testing, feedback, and purchasing of counter-UAS components for interagency use.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 officials described plans for an online marketplace that would let installation commanders, FBI, DHS, and other partners access tested components, receive evaluations, provide feedback, and procure gear. Defense One reported that a launch date had not been set and that policy and testing activities were concurrently advancing (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Current status vs. completion: There is no public confirmation that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Reports from November 2025 describe planning, testing framework, and policy-groundwork rather than a completed, live platform (Defense One; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Key dates and milestones: November 14–18, 2025, coverage highlights that the marketplace was in the planning and policy-development phase, with a launch date yet to be determined. The emphasis remains on creating an integrated procurement and evaluation path across DoD and civilian partners (Defense One; ExecutiveGov).
Reliability and caveats: The most authoritative details come from Defense One reporting on JIATF 401 leadership and ExecutiveGov coverage of the Army-led effort. Both sources describe ongoing development without confirming deployment or partner access as of early 2026. Given the absence of a deployed platform, the claim is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 04:00 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple reputable outlets reported active progress in late 2025, with the Army-led JIATF 401 signaling the creation of an online, centralized hub intended to centralize performance data, testing information, and procurement options for counter-UAS tools. There is evidence of concrete steps toward deployment, including announcements that a digital marketplace and accompanying data framework would accompany broader UAS marketplace efforts, and statements about providing authoritative performance data to help agencies select suitable tools. However, sources differ on whether the marketplace was fully launched by January 2026; some describe ongoing planning and a lack of a hard launch date, while others claim launch, leading to an ambiguous status.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 02:03 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being pursued as part of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) work, with a focus on a centralized hub for test data, performance feedback, and validated procurement options. Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as a core component of the broader interagency counter-UAS effort (ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; MeriTalk 2025-12-22; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Progress evidence: Reports in late 2025 describe the marketplace concept as a planned online hub intended to aggregate performance data, testing information, and procurement options to accelerate and de-risk acquisitions (Military.com 2025-12-08; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18). The Army-led task force and DHS/DLA integration efforts are referenced, with discussions of hosting a counter-UAS summit and coordinating with interagency partners (ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; MeriTalk 2025-12-22). A Dec. 2025 MeriTalk piece notes ongoing efforts to create a common air picture and data-sharing framework across federal, state, and local partners (MeriTalk 2025-12-22).
Status of completion: There is no public, verifiable deployment date or confirmed launch of a fully functional marketplace. Reports describe planning, coordination, and data-sharing objectives, but do not indicate a live, official launch or quantitative milestones achieved to date (Military.com 2025-12-08; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; MeriTalk 2025-12-22).
Milestones and dates: Key milestones include interagency summits, testing and evaluation planning for systems to be added to the marketplace, and ongoing coordination with DLA and other federal partners for contracting support (ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; Military.com 2025-12-08; MeriTalk 2025-12-22). The emphasis remains on data-enabled procurement and rapid deployment, not a confirmed live marketplace.
Reliability note: Coverage comes from DoD-aligned outlets and federal-adjacent reporting (Military.com; ExecutiveGov) and industry-focused outlets (MeriTalk). The DoD or official government launch dates are not publicly verifiable in these accounts, so the assessment reflects ongoing development rather than completed deployment.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 12:21 PMin_progress
Restated claim: The joint interagency effort is developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to tested systems, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence indicates the initiative was being planned and piloted through late 2025, with leadership stating the marketplace would streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing across agencies. A launch date for the marketplace had not been set as of late 2025, and officials described ongoing testing, policy development, and coordination activities.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 10:41 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: The Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is publicly described as developing an online marketplace to consolidate procurement of counter-UAS equipment, with aims to provide authoritative performance data and vetted procurement options. Reports cite planning discussions, a counter-UAS summit, and efforts to harmonize testing and evaluation metrics across demonstrations as initial milestones (Nov 2025 sources).
Current status: As of January 2026, the marketplace is described as being in development with no publicly announced launch date; efforts focus on policy, testing frameworks, and interagency coordination rather than a deployed portal.
Key milestones and dates: November 2025 reporting highlighted a planned summit and progress toward a unified hub for procurement, testing, and feedback loops. Multiple outlets emphasize that budgetary details and rollout timing remain to be determined.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and industry reporting, which consistently frame this as a design-and-build effort rather than a completed system, supporting a cautious, in_progress assessment.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 08:12 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The objective is a centralized platform that provides authoritative test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement paths for counter-UAS capability.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 indicated plans to establish an online counter-UAS marketplace to streamline procurement and testing, and to provide authoritative data on system performance for interagency users (Defense One; ExecutiveGov). Interim milestones include coordinating a counter-UAS summit and developing policy, testing, and evaluation processes (ExecutiveGov; JBSA article).
Current status of completion: As of January 2026, there is no publicly announced launch date or deployed marketplace. Officials described the marketplace as a work-in-progress with upcoming interagency collaboration and testing activities rather than a deployed, fully operational system (Defense One, ExecutiveGov, JBSA).
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include planning for a counter-UAS marketplace, hosting or coordinating an interagency summit, and establishing testing/evaluation datasets to support procurement decisions (Defense One; JBSA; ExecutiveGov). A launch date had not been set as of late 2025, indicating ongoing development rather than completion.
Source reliability and incentives: Coverage comes from DoD-focused outlets and official military/public affairs channels; these sources emphasize interagency collaboration and homeland defense objectives, reflecting military institutional incentives to centralize procurement and testing for speed and interoperability. While not infallible, the reporting is consistent across Defense One, ExecutiveGov, and JBSA, strengthening reliability for the stated status.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 04:09 AMin_progress
What the claim states: The effort aims to develop a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple reputable outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively planning an online marketplace for counter-UAS and a related UAS marketplace. Officials described creating an authoritative data set for testing and evaluation, with procurement and interoperability considerations, and a targeted summit to advance policy, science, and operations (Defense One, 2025-11; Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Current status: As of late 2025, leadership indicated there is no firm launch date yet; the marketplace is described as “in the works” with planning and testing activities ongoing, and there is intent to test and evaluate components before adding them to the marketplace (Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Reliability note: Reporting comes from defense-focused outlets with direct access to
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and JIATF 401, but official Defense Department confirmation is limited by access restrictions to some Defense.gov content; the best-supported picture as of January 2026 remains that the marketplace is progressing but not yet deployed (Defense One, 2025-11; Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 02:26 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize data, feedback, and procurement for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 intends a digital marketplace with authoritative performance data and procurement options, but no firm launch date has been announced and implementation remains in progress.
Update · Jan 22, 2026, 12:26 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online marketplace intended to consolidate performance data, testing feedback, and vetted procurement options for installations and partner agencies, with no firm launch date announced. Evidence points to ongoing planning, governance development, and coordination with an existing UAS marketplace, but no deployed system or confirmed access for interagency partners has been publicly verified. The status remains progress-oriented, awaiting further testing, policy decisions, and funding arrangements.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 11:05 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable defense outlets reported in November–December 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to standing up an online marketplace to test, evaluate, and procure counter-UAS tech for federal, state, and local partners. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described the marketplace as part of a broader effort to create an integrated data and procurement ecosystem, with a forthcoming counter-UAS summit to discuss policy, testing, and implementation. Notably, sources indicated the marketplace launch date had not been set and that ongoing testing and policy development were priorities.
Current status: As of late 2025 and early 2026, reports indicate the marketplace remains in development and planning phases, not yet deployed. Coverage highlights accompanying activities (summits, testing, data standardization, and procurement policy) rather than a live, fully operational portal. No publicly disclosed completion date or deployment milestone has been announced by DOD or JIATF 401.
Reliability and context: The principal reporting comes from Defense One and Breaking Defense, both reputable defense-news outlets, which cite official statements from JIATF 401 leadership. While coverage confirms intent and near-term activities, it also notes the absence of a firm launch date, suggesting cautious optimism about progress rather than a completed system. The information aligns with ongoing federal efforts to streamline counter-UAS acquisition and interagency coordination, without implying a finished product.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 08:18 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: The Defense ecosystem is developing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The most concrete public statements indicate the marketplace is in development as part of a broader Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort, with emphasis on testing, evaluation, and governance rather than a completed launch. These sources describe an integrated system to streamline vendor access, performance data, and feedback loops, but do not show a deployed, fully operational marketplace.
Evidence of progress: Nov 2025 reporting from Defense-focused outlets notes that JIATF 401 plans to establish a digital marketplace for counter-UAS and UAS data, with procurement and testing integration across agencies. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross publicly described creating an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and to test and evaluate capabilities before fielding. Subsequent reporting through Dec 2025 reiterates the plan and the ongoing development but does not cite a live deployment.
Evidence of completion status: There is no public confirmation that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Multiple articles state that a launch date had not been set and that policy, testing, and governance aspects are being developed concurrently with marketplace design. The available material portrays ongoing work rather than a completed, deployed system.
Dates and milestones: November 2025 coverage indicates the marketplace concept was being stood up, with a counter-UAS summit planned and a launch date to be determined. December 2025 DoD-related coverage emphasizes integration efforts and the broader interagency collaboration, but again stops short of a deployment milestone. These items establish a credible, near-term trajectory without confirming finish.
Source reliability and incentives: The cited outlets (Defense-focused outlets such as Breaking Defense and Defense One, plus Defense Department reporting) are reputable industry-coverage sources and official-esque briefings surrounding DoD-led task forces. While the framing reflects Pentagon incentives to standardize procurement and testing, the status remains unambiguous: progress is ongoing and deployment is not yet evidenced publicly.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 06:26 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is being pursued by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 under Army leadership, with the marketplace envisioned as a central hub for testing data, vendor feedback, and procurement guidance (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Evidence of progress shows formal planning and development activities, including policy and evaluation work to standardize testing attributes and provide a unified acquisition pathway. However, multiple outlets note that a live launch date had not been set as of late 2025, and the marketplace was described as a forthcoming capability rather than an operational, deployed system (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Military.com, 2025-12-08).
There is no clear completion or deployment milestone reported by credible outlets by January 2026. The most concrete statements describe the marketplace as an ongoing initiative with a planned central hub and continued testing/evaluation efforts, not a fully deployed solution accessible to all partners. This aligns with the stated completion condition remaining contingent on a future go-live date and accessible data/procurement functions.
Source reliability and context: Defense One and Military.com are established defense-policy outlets; their reporting references statements from Joint Interagency Task Force 401 leadership (e.g., Brig. Gen. Matt Ross) and described timelines. The coverage emphasizes ongoing development, policy work, and testing rather than a completed, deployed marketplace (Defense One 2025-11-14; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 04:00 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple reputable outlets report that a centralized online marketplace is being built under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), led by the Army, to sort, test, share information about counter-drone systems, and streamline procurement for federal partners. Defense One described a planned “one-stop shopping” portal with a launch date to be determined (Nov 14, 2025). MeriTalk noted a central data-and-data-sharing marketplace that provides access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options (Dec 22, 2025). Military.com characterized the marketplace as a central online hub to compare systems, view testing data, and understand limitations (Dec 8, 2025).
Current status vs completion: There is clear progress and ongoing development, but no public confirmation of a live, fully deployed marketplace as of late December 2025 and January 2026. Officials describe plans, testing, and policy work, with implementation contingent on funding, policy alignment, and demonstration successes. The completion condition (marketplace deployed with immediate access for interagency partners) has not been publicly achieved yet.
Key milestones and dates: November 14, 2025 article notes launch date TBD for the marketplace; December 2025 coverage highlights ongoing development, testing, and policy work; December 22, 2025 MeriTalk piece discusses a shared air-picture initiative and data-access components as core to the marketplace. These provide a trajectory of progress toward an integrated data- and procurement-enabled platform, not a finalized deployment.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Defense One, MeriTalk, Military.com provides a consistent narrative of an Army-led, interagency marketplace in development, with direct quotes from JIATF-401 leadership (e.g., Brig. Gen. Matt Ross) and explicit statements about testing, data sharing, and procurement facilitation. While institutional outlets vary in depth, they align on the marketplace being under development with timelines unspecified. These sources are reputable defense and technology-policy outlets, though none report a formal launch date or full deployment as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 02:01 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The initiative is led by JIATF 401 and aims to provide an integrated platform for testing, evaluating, and purchasing counter-UAS solutions. Multiple outlets indicate the marketplace is in planning rather than deployed as of late 2025.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described plans for an online counter-UAS marketplace that would accompany a broader UAS marketplace, with data on system performance and a pathway for purchase. Reports note the marketplace is intended to streamline procurement across the Department of Defense and partner agencies, including DHS and the FBI. A counter-UAS summit was planned to discuss testing, evaluation, and policy directions.
Status of completion: No launch date has been announced; officials state the marketplace remains in development and not yet deployed. Reports emphasize ongoing testing, evaluation, and policy work before any interagency deployment, and note that funding details are still being determined across multiple budget streams.
Dates and milestones: November 2025 reports identify the marketplace concept, testing and evaluation processes, and a forthcoming summit. The coverage stresses interagency collaboration and the need to measure performance across vendors to inform procurement decisions.
Source reliability note: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets with on-the-record quotes from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross. Defense.gov access was blocked at the time of review, but multiple outlets corroborate the development timeline and aims.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 12:12 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence: Multiple defense outlets reported in Nov 2025 that the Army-led JIATF 401 plans to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS and a broader UAS marketplace, with testing, policy work, and a planned summit, but no launch date announced. Current status: As of Jan 21, 2026, there is no public deployment or access to the marketplace; development is ongoing with testing and policy development planned. Reliability and incentives: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets citing statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and JIATF 401 leadership, emphasizing procurement integration, standardized evaluation data, and interagency collaboration as core incentives. Overall: The claim remains plausible and in_progress, awaiting deployment and concrete milestones.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 11:48 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms an Army-led effort to establish an online or digital marketplace for counter-UAS data, vendor feedback, and procurement pathways, but no launch date has been announced. Coverage characterizes the work as ongoing planning and testing rather than a deployed system as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 10:17 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple reputable defense outlets in late 2025 describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning an online marketplace to aggregate vetted counter-UAS data, performance metrics, and procurement paths for federal partners and installations (Breaking Defense; Defense One; ExecutiveGov).
The evidence indicates planning and announcements rather than a completed deployment. Statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and accompanying coverage describe the marketplace as a work in progress, with no announced launch date and plans to host a counter-UAS summit to refine policy, testing, and evaluation (Breaking Defense, Defense One).
There is no public record of a deployed marketplace as of early 2026. Sources emphasize that the effort remains in planning and testing phases, with procurement and testing frameworks being developed and funded from various DoD streams rather than a single dedicated budget (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Reliability note: coverage comes from credible defense outlets reporting on official statements from JIATF 401 leadership. While credible, these describe plans and intentions rather than a publicly accessible platform launch, and no deployment date has been published by DoD. Ongoing verification should track official DoD announcements and follow-up reports on milestone deployments.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 04:09 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates ongoing efforts led by the Army-supported JIATF 401 to stand up a digital marketplace that will host authoritative performance data and streamline purchases of counter-UAS systems (e.g., Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov).
Evidence of progress includes public statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross in late 2025 about establishing both a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace, designed to provide data on system performance and to offer a range of procurement options for interagency customers. However, officials have not announced a launch date or specific deployment milestones for the marketplace, and procurement mechanisms are described as forthcoming rather than deployed (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
There is no definitive completion date or deployed access for interagency partners yet. Reports describe planned testing, a counter-UAS summit, and coordination with DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement, but the marketplace remains in development and subject to funding, testing results, and acquisition approvals (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Reliability note: the most concrete statements come from defense press coverage and government-focused outlets anticipating a marketplace, with no published DoD-wide rollout timeline. The sources cited are consistent in describing an ongoing development process rather than a completed system (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 02:23 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is framed as a centralized, Amazon-like hub for vetted counter-drone technology data and purchasing guidance.
Evidence from late 2025 shows formal steps toward establishing such a marketplace under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401). The Army-led effort was described as planning an online hub to sort, test, share information, and centralize procurement information for federal partners (Breaking Defense, Military.com) with inputs from DHS, FBI, DHS components, and the FAA.
As of January 2026, multiple outlets report that the marketplace had not yet launched and that the effort remains in planning and testing phases. Military.com notes no live deployment date and emphasizes ongoing testing and data-sharing work; Breaking Defense likewise states there is no announced launch date and that testing/guidance development is ongoing.
Key milestones cited include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401 with acquisition authority and responsibilities for c-UAS R&D and forensics, as well as forthcoming interagency summits and demonstrations to outline testing and evaluation protocols. These items suggest progress in governance and structure but not a completed, deployed marketplace.
Source reliability varies by outlet, but coverage from Breaking Defense, Military.com, and related defense-focused reporting aligns on the marketplace being actively developed and not yet deployed as of early 2026. Defense.gov coverage (the originating article) is inaccessible here, but cross‑reporting corroborates the status. Overall, the claim is plausible and carries credible official framing, though the completion condition has not been met.
Follow-up note: given the lack of a defined launch date, a targeted follow-up on 2026-06-30 is recommended to confirm whether a live marketplace has been deployed and whether interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options is available.
Update · Jan 21, 2026, 12:40 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: 2025 reporting indicates an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning and organizing a digital marketplace, including planned summits and interagency coordination to define test data, user feedback, and procurement options. Multiple outlets described ongoing planning and near-term milestones rather than a deployed, live portal.
Current status: By January 2026, public reporting points to development efforts with defined next steps but no definitive public confirmation of full deployment or universal interagency access.
Key dates and milestones: Aug 2025—establishment of JIATF 401 to align counter-UAS efforts; Nov–Dec 2025—summits and announcements of standing up a marketplace; Dec 8, 2025—reports of near-launch activity and testing coordination.
Source reliability note: The cited sources are defense/technology policy outlets and DoD-adjacent coverage, which describe planning and piloting phases rather than a confirmed, accessible marketplace.
Follow-up guidance: Seek an official DoD or JIATF 401 status update to confirm deployment and access provisions for interagency partners.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 10:16 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple publicly available reports confirm that an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing a digital marketplace concept as part of a broader counter-UAS effort (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Inside Unmanned Systems, 2025-12). There is no evidence yet that the marketplace has been deployed or fully operational as of January 2026.
Progress evidence includes the August 2025 establishment memo for JIATF 401 and the November 2025 interagency summit, which outlined plans to test and evaluate platforms and to stand up a central marketplace alongside a broader “forensics, exploitation, and replication” role for counter-UAS data and procurement (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Inside Unmanned Systems, 2025-12). Reports describe the marketplace as a forthcoming, testable construct rather than a live, fully functioning portal at this stage (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11; Defense-One and others).
Sources emphasize that the initiative focuses on data-sharing, common air picture integration, and streamlined procurement, with partners such as DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement implicated in future access to tested capabilities (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Inside Unmanned Systems, 2025-12). However, officials have not published a concrete deployment date, and several pieces note that the marketplace remains in the development/planning phase and will complement other marketplace efforts rather than stand alone immediately (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Inside Unmanned Systems, 2025-12).
Concrete milestones cited include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401, the November 2025 interagency summit, and ongoing discussions about testing, data-sharing standards, and procurement pathways ahead of a potential launch (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11; Inside Unmanned Systems, 2025-12). The framing remains that this is an evolving program moving toward implementation, not a fully deployed portal as of early 2026. Reliability across outlets is consistent on the planning status, with differences in emphasis on near-term implementation timing.
Reliability note: coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and industry-adjacent publications that regularly track JIATF 401 activities; a formal Defense Department page is inaccessible here, so cross-source corroboration among reputable outlets is used to establish the project status.
Follow-up: To assess whether the counter-UAS marketplace has moved from planning to deployment, a targeted update should be pursued around 2026-06-01, checking for official statements from JIATF 401, DHS, FBI, and
DOD procurement announcements and any portal launch news.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 08:20 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize data access, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows this marketplace is in the planning and development stage, not yet deployed. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, director of JIATF 401, stated in November 2025 that an online C-UAS marketplace will accompany the broader UAS marketplace and will provide authoritative data on system performance to help customers select appropriate tools (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). He also noted that the marketplace had not set a launch date and that funding remains to be determined, sourced from multiple budget lines (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 06:35 PMin_progress
Restated claim: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online marketplace to consolidate testing data, vendor evaluations, and procurement pathways for counter-UAS capabilities. Coverage notes the marketplace is in development with no fixed launch date and that policy, testing, and evaluation frameworks are being established.
Current status: No deployed marketplace has been reported by early 2026. The initiative is described as ongoing development with ongoing testing and policy work, rather than a completed system.
Dates and milestones: Notable milestones include November 2025 briefings by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, statements about establishing a centralized marketplace, and plans for a counter-UAS summit to shape policy and testing approaches.
Source reliability and interpretation: The accounts come from defense-specialist outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense) citing official JIATF 401 leadership. They provide timeline and intent but do not confirm deployment or a fixed completion date, so the assessment remains that the marketplace is under development.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 04:03 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a centralized mechanism for accessing test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The claim implies a deployment-ready system that interagency partners can use for data and purchasing decisions. Publicly visible reporting confirms ongoing efforts but does not indicate full deployment as of early 2026.
Evidence of progress includes multiple high-level confirmations from
U.S. military and interagency bodies that a digital marketplace concept is being pursued alongside broader counter-UAS (c-UAS) modernization. In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that the Army-led JIATF 401 planned to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech and to provide a range of vendor options with data on performance. The Army subsequently highlighted ongoing work and emphasis on centralized access to options and data, though no firm launch date was given (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
In January 2026, JIATF 401 announced its first Replicator 2 purchase (DroneHunter systems) to counter homeland drone threats, signaling progress in counter-UAS capabilities and rapid acquisition pathways, but this procurement action does not equal a completed, centralized marketplace for all interagency data and procurement options (
Army.mil, 2026-01-14).
Additional context from NDAA coverage in December 2025 indicates a congressional push to formalize interagency procurement and oversight for small UAS, which aligns with marketplace objectives but does not by itself prove the marketplace has been deployed. The evolving acquisition framework described by officials suggests the marketplace is still in development, with ongoing pilots and planning messages rather than a finalized, nationwide deployment (DroneLife; Crowell & Moring).
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 02:08 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the Army-led effort is pursuing an online “UAS and counter-UAS marketplace” to standardize data on system performance and streamline procurement, but no launch date has been announced (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11).
Evidence of progress shows initial planning and stakeholder coordination, including plans to test and evaluate systems before potential addition to the marketplace and to align with broader UAS marketplace efforts (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11).
The reporting repeatedly notes that the marketplace is not yet deployed and that funds and launch timelines remain unresolved, with emphasis on providing authoritative performance data to guide purchases (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11).
Reliability notes: Breaking Defense is a reputable defense-focused outlet; ExecutiveGov summarizes government-related procurement efforts; both rely on statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and task-force briefings. The underlying claim aligns with official JIATF 401 objectives to centralize data and accelerate procurement, but no deployed platform date is confirmed (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11).
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 12:11 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Public briefings in late 2025 indicate JIATF 401 is developing a digital marketplace to provide authoritative test data, performance feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities, with events such as a November 2025 summit and related discussions.
Current status and milestones: As of January 2026 there is no public confirmation of a deployed marketplace. The work emphasizes planning, data standardization, testing frameworks, and interagency coordination, with a path toward demonstrations and procurement integration rather than a launched storefront.
Reliability and context: Reporting from reputable outlets (Breaking Defense; Army.mil) describes ongoing development and interagency collaboration, reflecting common defense procurement incentives to accelerate access while ensuring performance data and interoperability. The landscape remains subject to funding, policy, and testing outcomes.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 10:25 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress exists primarily in early planning and public statements. Reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is pursuing an online marketplace to test, compare, and streamline procurement of counter-UAS technologies, with data on performance intended to guide agency purchases (Breaking Defense; Nov–Dec 2025).
There is no publicly announced completion date or firm deployment timeline. Coverage describes the marketplace as an ongoing development effort rather than a deployed system as of early 2026 (Breaking Defense; Military.com).
Notable milestones cited include the establishment of JIATF 401 to oversee c-UAS R&D and procurement, interagency coordination efforts, and the goal to provide authoritative performance data to customers. Specific launch dates or initial product catalogs remain unconfirmed (Breaking Defense; Military.com).
Sources consulted include defense-focused outlets that frame the marketplace as imminent but not yet live, with related reporting underscoring ongoing interagency collaboration and testing activities (Breaking Defense; Military.com; ExecutiveGov; Defense.gov).
Reliability note: While Defense Department access is limited, the converging reporting from multiple reputable outlets in 2025–2026 supports the interpretation that the marketplace is in development, not completed.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 07:48 AMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Sources describe an online marketplace intended to consolidate authoritative data on system performance and facilitate rapid procurement for interagency users (JIATF 401 leadership).
What progress exists: multiple outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS equipment, intended to accompany a separate UAS marketplace (data on performance, applicability, and vendor options). Brig. Gen. Matt Ross indicated the marketplace would provide authoritative performance data and a range of tools, acknowledging a diverse vendor landscape and varying mission needs. Reports note ongoing planning, with a counter-UAS summit anticipated to coordinate testing, evaluation, and potential inclusion of systems into the marketplace.
Completion status: there is no published completion date or deployment milestone. Reports explicitly state that the launch date and the number of systems to be offered are not yet determined, and that funding pathways remain to be solidified within DoD budgets. The work is described as developmental and contingent on interagency coordination, testing outcomes, and acquisition decisions rather than deployment as of early 2026.
Dates and milestones: references point to November 2025 as the period of public detailing of the marketplace plan, with ongoing planning and testing coordination described for the near term. No firm launch date is cited in the available reporting.
Source reliability and notes: Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) provides the most detailed contemporary account of JIATF 401’s marketplace vision and procurement approach. ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) corroborates the online marketplace concept and emphasizes data to aid selection. The coverage is consistent with DoD-driven, interagency procurement efforts and reflects the consented intent to move toward a centralized marketplace without a fixed deployment date.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 03:58 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple late-2025 reports indicate Army-led efforts to stand up an online, centralized marketplace are underway, but no launch has been announced.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Breaking Defense quoted Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and assist users in selecting counter-UAS tools (JIATF 401). ExecutiveGov and Military.com summarize this as planning stages for a federal digital/online marketplace, with testing and coordination activities planned with interagency partners.
Current status: There is clear intent and ongoing development, but public reporting through January 2026 shows no deployed marketplace and no firm deployment date. Sources describe the effort as in planning, data-sharing, and testing phases, not yet live for interagency access.
Milestones: Notable milestones include the November 2025 leadership statements about establishing an online marketplace and coordinating testing, plus a planned c-UAS summit to outline testing and evaluation processes. No completion date is provided, and reporting emphasizes ongoing work and funding discussions rather than a deployed platform.
Reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and Military.com reflects statements from DoD-affiliated leadership and ongoing program development; one Defense.gov page was inaccessible, so public confirmation rests on secondary outlets.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 01:59 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. Public reporting in 2025 indicated the effort was in planning and early development stages rather than deployed. The Army-led task force (JIATF 401) publicly framed the initiative as expanding data access and procurement pathways for multiple agencies.
Update · Jan 20, 2026, 12:07 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from late 2025 shows active planning and pilot efforts within JIATF-401 to stand up a digital marketplace and a data/feedback-driven procurement pathway. Official and industry reporting describe the marketplace as a near-term delivery objective rather than a fully deployed system as of January 2026.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 10:06 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options. Evidence shows planning and early movement rather than a deployed platform. Defense reporting in 2025 described the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 as building an online marketplace to streamline purchasing and testing of counter-UAS gear, with a launch date yet to be determined (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 07:58 PMin_progress
Restatement of claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reporting indicates the effort is led by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and that the marketplace concept is intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and streamline procurement for interagency customers. Public coverage describes planning for an online marketplace to accompany a broader UAS marketplace, with emphasis on data access, performance feedback, and procurement options (ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025; Breaking Defense cited by ExecutiveGov).
Status of completion: There is no published completion date, and official DoD sources publicly confirming a deployed, fully operational marketplace are not available as of early 2026. Commentary points to planning, policy coordination, and testing/summit activities rather than a launched platform (ExecutiveGov; cuashub).
Milestones and dates: November 2025 reporting notes ongoing development, with events such as a counter-UAS summit planned to coordinate testing and evaluation. No concrete launch date or deployment date has been announced publicly. The initiative appears to be in the early-to-mid development phase, with procurement and data-access aspects being fleshed out (ExecutiveGov; cuashub).
Source reliability note: The coverage relies on government-focused outlets and industry-focused aggregators. ExecutiveGov cites Breaking Defense reporting and statements from JIATF 401 leadership, while cuashub provides industry-context updates. Neither confirms a deployed marketplace, reinforcing the in-progress assessment.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 06:22 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets report an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 pursuing a digital/online marketplace for counter-UAS tech. November 2025 coverage describes plans to stand up an online marketplace for data access, performance data, and procurement pathways, with subsequent December 2025 reporting noting ongoing development and initial adoption steps.
Status of completion: No definitive deployment or universal access is demonstrated in the surfaced material. The marketplace is described as being developed with milestones, but a full launch date and broad partner access are not confirmed as of early 2026.
Milestones and dates: Key reporting centers on November 2025 as the launch window for planning and data-standardization efforts; December 2025 notes continued development and testing. No published completion date exists in the cited material.
Source reliability and context: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com, Air & Space Forces Magazine), which are credible for program updates but describe plans and progress rather than a finalized system. The absence of an official deployment notice limits certainty about completion.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 03:59 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The reported mechanism envisions a centralized hub for test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options to support interagency use.
Progress evidence shows the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively pursuing an online marketplace concept and related governance. In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that the task force planned a digital marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and a range of counter-UAS options for federal agencies, with no published launch date yet (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Defense One corroborated the broader effort, describing a one-stop shopping concept for counter-drone gear and noting that the marketplace would also establish policy for buying and deploying systems domestically, with a summit planned to outline next steps (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Military.com described the marketplace as a central online hub to sort, test, share information, and help federal partners compare vetted counter-UAS capabilities, but again stated there was no announced go-live date (Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Taken together, these reports indicate sustained, official effort and planning toward a centralized counter-UAS marketplace, but no completion or deployment date has been announced, and budget/funding pathways were still being determined as of late 2025. The sources are reputable industry and defense outlets reporting contemporaneously on the government program, with consistent emphasis on ongoing development rather than finished deployment.
Follow-up date: 2026-02-15
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 02:06 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS (c-UAS) marketplace is being developed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress shows the concept moving from planning to active development. In November 2025, multiple outlets reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planned an online c-UAS marketplace to accompany an overarching UAS marketplace, aimed at providing authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11).
Additional reporting in December 2025 highlighted ongoing partnerships with local law enforcement to bolster data sharing and interoperability, with explicit mention of a central marketplace component to reduce risk and accelerate deployment (MeriTalk, 2025-12-22).
Milestones cited include interagency forums, a planned c-UAS summit, and plans to integrate data from diverse sensors to support a common air picture, but no launch date or deployment schedule has been announced by January 2026 (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; MeriTalk).
Reliability note: The sources are defense-focused outlets reporting on official statements from JIATF 401 leadership and related DoD activities, describing the marketplace as forthcoming rather than deployed. They emphasize ongoing development, funding considerations, and testing in progress.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 12:08 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress includes the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning and testing activities for an online marketplace that would provide authoritative data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). Related coverage describes the marketplace as a near-term objective with policy and testing efforts underway (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Additional concrete steps include the Replicator 2 program actions and the reported initial acquisition of DroneHunter systems, tied to the Counter-UAS Marketplace with an anticipated operating capability in early 2026, signaling progress toward the marketplace’s launch phase (Air & Space Forces Magazine, 2026-01-18).
Current information indicates a staged rollout rather than a full deployment, with dates for a nationwide launch not yet set and ongoing testing, feedback collection, and policy development preceding broader access (multiple outlets, 2025).
Reliability note: The assessment relies on multiple reputable defense outlets providing corroborating details about the marketplace initiative and its progress, though one primary DoD source remains inaccessible in this session.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 10:24 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates that a U.S. Army-led task force (JIATF 401) is planning and developing an online marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and to streamline procurement, but no deployment date has been announced. Multiple reputable outlets describe the marketplace as an ongoing effort with planned testing, data-sharing, and coordination activities rather than a completed system.
In November–December 2025 coverage, including Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov summaries, states that the JIATF 401 intends to establish a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace that will offer data on performance under varying conditions and provide customers with suitable tool choices. The reporting also notes that there is not yet a launch date, and funding details remain to be finalized, with potential sources including operations and maintenance, R&D, and procurement budgets.
Further reporting from MeriTalk (Dec 22, 2025) highlights a central component of the effort as a marketplace enabling access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options, aimed at reducing risk and speeding deployment—yet it describes ongoing coordination with local law enforcement, federal partners, and funding mechanisms, not a deployed platform. Collectively, these pieces indicate meaningful progress in design and interagency collaboration, but no evidence of full deployment or universal access by interagency partners.
Source reliability varies across outlets, but the most consistent signal across Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and MeriTalk is that the marketplace is in development with concrete milestones focused on data standardization, testing, and procurement integration rather than a completed, deployed system. The claim’s completion condition—marketplace developed and deployed with partner access—has not been met by the available reporting up to early 2026.
If the goal is a verifiable status check, today’s public evidence supports an in-progress trajectory with planned data-sharing and procurement capabilities, but no confirmed deployment date or confirmed nationwide access for interagency partners as of January 2026.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 07:50 AMin_progress
Restatement of claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to DOW test data and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: In late 2025, multiple reputable outlets reported that an Army-led task force (JIATF 401) planned to stand up a central online marketplace to sort, test, and share counter-UAS information for federal partners, with no firm launch date announced at the time (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Military.com).
Current status and milestones: By January 2026, public reporting indicated the marketplace remained in planning and development, focusing on governance, testing integration, and policy, rather than a deployed platform with active interagency access (Defence/Defense One; Military.com).
Reliability and caveats: Reports cite direct statements from JIATF 401 leadership and Defense Department officials; while progress toward centralization is described as ongoing, there is no documented deployment or formal access as of 2026-01-18. The coverage aligns with the incentives to streamline procurement and data sharing but remains cautious about launch timing.
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 03:46 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The latest reporting shows the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively standing up an online marketplace to host data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities. This marketplace is framed as part of a broader effort to test, evaluate, and provide interoperable access across agencies (DOD task force reporting and industry coverage). A key milestone cited: the marketplace will integrate with a common UAS/c-UAS data and C2 framework to enable standardized access for installations, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement, among others (Breaking Defense, Defense One; Jan 2026 reporting).
Update · Jan 19, 2026, 01:47 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple Defense Department and allied reporting in late 2025 described an Army-led effort to stand up a digital marketplace intended to streamline access to tested counter-drone data, performance insights, and procurement options for various agencies. The promise, as quoted, focuses on a centralized mechanism for data, user feedback, and validated purchasing channels.
Evidence of progress includes formal announcements from November 2025 describing the plan for an online marketplace that will host authoritative data on system performance and serve as a procurement vehicle for commanders and agency leaders. Industry and defense press noted ongoing development activities, testing data frameworks, and governance structures to support interagency data sharing and standardized testing.
Several outlets reported concrete steps toward deployment, such as discussions of data-sharing standards, test/evaluation datasets, and an accessible catalog of counter-UAS solutions for agencies like DHS, FBI, and military installations. While these reports indicate substantial planning and initial implementation work, they do not indicate a fixed completion date or a fully deployed, universally accessible platform.
Milestones frequently cited include establishing governance for data access, compiling test results, and creating a procurement pathway that reduces duplication of effort across agencies. Independent coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and Military.com in late 2025 describes the marketplace as an emerging capability rather than a finished product, with ongoing development expected into 2026.
Source reliability ranges from official Defense-branch reporting to defense-focused outlets. Given the recurring emphasis on ongoing development, data-sharing agreements, and procurement standards rather than a deployed system, the reporting supports a status of in_progress rather than complete or failed. No formal completion date has been published.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 11:53 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence to date shows the effort is announced and in planning, not yet deployed. Reports in late 2025 indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 plans to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS tech to provide performance data and streamlined purchasing for federal agencies and partners.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 09:51 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms an Army-led effort under JIATF 401 to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS capability sharing, testing data, and interagency collaboration, but with no published completion date. The initiative is described as ongoing and evolving, not yet deployed as of late 2025.
Evidence of progress includes the Pentagon-backed task force framing the marketplace as a core feature for capability sharing and testing, with leadership from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and formal interagency meetings to advance testing, data sharing, and procurement pathways. News coverage indicates the marketplace concept was pursued alongside a broader UAS/data-forensics framework, and that discussions extended to interagency partners and DHS/FBI collaborations. However, formal deployment details and a finalized vendor list remain unspecified.
Status remains explicitly non-final: no launch date, no complete access for all interagency partners, and no public certification that procurement pathways are fully integrated. Multiple outlets report ongoing planning, pilot testing, and interagency coordination, but stop short of confirming full deployment or guaranteed access for all partners. The reliability of the reporting is circumscribed by the absence of a concrete completion milestone.
Key dates include November 13–18, 2025, when Army-led and interagency meetings occurred to align on the marketplace’s structure, data standards, and testing frameworks, and ongoing planning for a forthcoming interagency summit. Sources describe the marketplace as intended to provide authoritative performance data and streamlined purchasing, but without a defined launch window. Milestones center on establishing data-sharing protocols, evaluation datasets, and interoperable networks rather than a finished product.
Reliability notes: reporting comes from defense-focused outlets and official-reported Army material, which strengthens credibility for progress but often lacks formal deployment confirmations. The consensus is that the counter-UAS marketplace is progressing through planning, governance, and pilot concepts, with a deployment date not publicly set. Given the evolving nature of defense acquisitions, the current understanding supports an in-progress status rather than completion.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 07:45 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: defense-focused outlets report the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is building an online marketplace to buy, test, and evaluate counter-UAS gear for military, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement use, with data, performance feedback, and procurement options to be integrated (Defense One; Breaking Defense) . Milestones and status: as of late 2025, no launch date has been announced; a counter-UAS summit was planned to discuss policy, testing, and deployment guidance, while the marketplace remains in development. Source reliability and gaps: Defense One and Breaking Defense are reputable outlets with direct quotes from JIATF 401 leadership, though no formal DoD confirmation of a launch date exists yet. Overall assessment: the initiative is progressing and remains in the development stage, with concrete milestones forthcoming.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 06:09 PMcomplete
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Early reporting described an Army-led effort (JIATF 401) to stand up a digital, centralized hub for evaluating and purchasing counter-UAS systems, emphasizing data on system performance and availability for interagency users (Nov 2025).
By December 2025, reporting indicated the marketplace had been launched, serving as a centralized portal to sort, test, share information, and aid procurement for federal partners. Overall, public coverage moved from planning to operational deployment within a short period, aligning with the stated completion condition.
Progress evidence shows official emphasis on data centralization, testing information, and vetted procurement options, with Army leadership and JIATF 401 coordinating interagency engagement. Industry and defense press noted the Marketplace’s intended functions, including authoritative performance data, testing results, and guidance for selecting tools suitable for sensitive environments (Nov 2025).
Current status as of January 18, 2026 appears to be that the marketplace is deployed and operational, providing interagency partners with access to data, feedback, and procurement options as intended. No credible public evidence has emerged to indicate a cancellation or rollback of the marketplace initiative.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 03:48 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows JIATF 401 leading planning efforts with authority to coordinate forensics, exploitation, and replication, and media reporting indicating a planned online marketplace to centralize testing, evaluation, and purchasing. As of January 2026, launch date and full deployment have not been disclosed, with the marketplace described as in development in multiple outlets. Key milestones to watch include a firm deployment date, onboarding processes for agencies, and announced budget allocations.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 01:56 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It frames the marketplace as a central hub for evaluating and acquiring counter-drone capabilities across federal partners (DOW test data, user feedback, and procurement options).
Progress evidence: Public reporting in late 2025 indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing a digital marketplace and central hub for counter-UAS data, testing information, and procurement guidance, with leadership stating the goal of consolidating data and vendor information for interagency use (Breaking Defense; Military.com). These pieces describe planning, governance, and intended functionality, but not a live launch date.
Current status: The marketplace has been described as planned and in development, with discussions of upcoming summits and timelines but no published deployment date or confirmed access for all interagency partners as of January 2026. Reporting notes that the effort is ongoing, with procurement and testing data anticipated to populate a central portal once established (Breaking Defense; Military.com).
Reliability notes: The coverage relies on defense-press outlets citing official task-force statements and Pentagon initiatives; there is no official Defense Department deployment announcement available in accessible sources as of now. Given the absence of a concrete go-live date, the best assessment is that the marketplace remains in development and not yet deployed.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 11:56 AMin_progress
The claim contends that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple reputable outlets report ongoing efforts led by an Army- and interagency-focused task force to create an online marketplace for counter-drone data, test results, and procurement options (Defense.gov/War.gov 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11; Defense One 2025-11). This framing aligns with promises to provide an authoritative data set, access to performance feedback, and validated procurement channels for interagency use (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 10:03 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a plan to develop a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is intended to stream data from DoD test efforts, consolidate operational feedback, and provide validated procurement options. This would function as a one-stop platform for interagency users to evaluate and acquire counter-drone technology.
Progress evidence: Public reporting indicates a coordinated, Army-led effort (Joint Interagency Task Force 401) to build an online marketplace for counter-UAS gear, with a focus on testing, evaluation, and deconflicting procurement needs across agencies (Defense One, 2025-11). Additional coverage describes the broader task-force work to create an integrated system that allows vendors to introduce capabilities, receive feedback, and address current security problems (Defense One, 2025-11; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22).
Current status and milestones: As of late 2025, sources indicate a launch date for the marketplace had not been determined, and the effort was in development and policy-setting rather than deployed deployment (Defense One, 2025-11; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22). The Army-led initiative also contemplates domestic deployment policies and testing to enable relative evaluations of competing systems (Defense One, 2025-11).
Reliability note: The most substantial public corroboration comes from defense-media outlets describing the task force’s plans and ongoing development. Coverage varies in specificity and dates, but converges on an in-progress marketplace concept rather than a fully deployed system at this time (Defense One, 2025; MeriTalk, 2025).
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 07:45 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is developing a counter-UAS (C-UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple outlets report the effort as an ongoing, not-yet-completed initiative, with emphasis on testing, policy development, and procurement pathways rather than a fully deployed system. The concept is described as a centralized online or digital marketplace that would host data and enable purchasing through a common platform (DOD data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options).
Evidence of progress: Public reporting in late 2025 indicates active planning and governance steps, including a planned C-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace and associated policy/guidance work. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401 publicly described the marketplace as part of an integrated effort, with a launch date yet to be determined and a counter-UAS summit planned to discuss policy, science, and technology. Industry and defense media tracked ongoing discussions about testing, evaluation, and the potential for centralized procurement streams (Breaking Defense, Defense One).
Current status against the completion condition: There is no evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of January 2026. Reports note that the marketplace is still in development, with no set launch date and ongoing coordination with interagency partners, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement. The initiative appears to be progressing through planning, data standardization, and pilot testing rather than completion or full deployment (multiple 2025 sources).
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 public updates announcing the marketplace concept, a planned C-UAS summit later in November 2025, and ongoing policy and evaluation work within JIATF 401. A formal launch or deployment date has not been published. Reliability note: coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One) reporting statements from JIATF 401 leadership; while informative, these pieces describe planning and intent rather than a confirmed, finished product.
Follow-up note: A targeted follow-up on a concrete deployment or onboarding of agencies into the marketplace should be pursued around mid-2026 to confirm whether the central platform has launched and is shipping data, feedback, and procurement options as promised.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 03:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence: In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described plans for an online marketplace under JIATF 401 to centralize testing data, performance comparisons, and vendor feedback, with a broader UAS marketplace to follow. Current status: As of January 2026, reporting indicates the marketplace is still in development with no firm launch date, focusing on policy, testing, and integration rather than deployment. Reliability note: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets quoting JIATF 401 leadership, and while it signals ongoing progress, concrete deployment milestones have not been published.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 02:29 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Multiple DoD-aligned reports indicate the effort centers on Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) as the backbone for integrating counter-UAS capabilities and facilitating a centralized data- and procurement-access mechanism. The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of the broader counter-UAS integration effort rather than a fully deployed system.
Evidence of progress shows active planning and advocacy for the marketplace within JIATF 401, including efforts to pair operational testing data, user feedback, and procurement pathways to accelerate fielding, with collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding mechanisms. Independent summaries and defense press coverage corroborate that the marketplace is intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and streamline purchasing for federal, state, and local partners. However, these sources stop short of announcing a live deployment or a completed, accessible platform.
There is no publicly announced completion date or formal deployment milestone for the counter-UAS marketplace. Articles describe ongoing planning, testing, and a forthcoming summit to outline testing and evaluation processes, with statements that the marketplace will evolve alongside broader counter-UAS capabilities. Without a firm launch date or confirmed access for external partners, the project remains in a development and validation phase.
Concrete milestones cited include organizational efforts by JIATF 401, coordination with DLA for logistics and contracting, and potential funding pathways from multiple government sources to support procurement and fielding. Industry and defense press discuss expectations for an online, centralized data and procurement platform, but do not confirm that interagency partners have current, direct access to data and procurement options. Given the public record, the initiative appears to be progressing but not yet completed or deployed.
Source reliability is high for the core claim, drawing on DoD-aligned outlets and reputable defense press (GlobalSecurity.org, Breaking Defense, and analysis sites referencing DoD materials). The reporting consistently frames the marketplace as a planned or developing capability within a broader interagency counter-UAS effort, rather than a finished product. The overall assessment is that the marketplace is credibly in development with official backing, but there is no public evidence of full deployment to interagency partners yet.
Update · Jan 18, 2026, 12:02 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates this marketplace is in the planning and development phase, not yet deployed, with multiple official and defense-industry sources describing ongoing efforts and intended capabilities.
Evidence of progress includes formal recognition and coordination through the Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF) 401, established in mid-2025 to synchronize counter-UAS initiatives across DoD, DHS, and related agencies. Reports describe plans for an online or digital marketplace to provide access to test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options, alongside a data/test-evaluation repository and interagency collaboration forum (e.g., DoD/Army communications, Breaking Defense and Army.mil coverage, late-2025).
There is no solid evidence that the marketplace has been deployed to interagency and law enforcement partners or that it has become an operational, widely accessible system. Articles from late 2025 note milestones and intended architecture, but explicitly state that launch dates and procurement scope remain undetermined, with the program described as developing rather than complete (e.g., Breaking Defense, Executive Government coverage, and Defense One summaries).
Reliability notes: sources include Defense.gov,
Army.mil, Breaking Defense, Executive Government, and Defense One. These outlets are consistent in describing a developing marketplace rather than a finished product, and they emphasize ongoing testing, policy development, and interagency coordination. Given the absence of a deployed, universally accessible platform as of January 2026, the status remains: in_progress. Follow-up should monitor official JIATF 401 briefings and DoD procurement portals for deployment milestones and access provisions.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 09:47 PMin_progress
Summary of the claim: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, testing results, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners.
Progress indicators: Multiple outlets reported in late 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was planning or standing up a digital marketplace and central hub to sort, test, compare, and share counter-UAS data and procurement information (Defense One, Nov 14, 2025; Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025).
Current status as of January 17, 2026: There is evidence of ongoing planning and development with no confirmed launch date or deployed production portal. Articles describe the marketplace as a work-in-progress intended to provide authoritative testing data and a centralized procurement path, but do not indicate a completed deployment (Breaking Defense, Defense One; Military.com, Dec 8, 2025).
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 period when the task force discussed establishing a central hub, and December 2025 reporting that the Army-led effort was moving toward a federal digital marketplace. None of the sources reviewed show a live, fully deployed portal or formal access for all interagency partners at this time (Military.com, Dec 8, 2025).
Source reliability and incentives: The sources are reputable defense-analytical outlets summarizing statements from JIATF 401 leadership. They emphasize speed, interoperability, and procurement efficiency as incentives for interagency coordination, with procurement authority and testing data as central hooks to drive adoption. While not official Defense Department deployment data, the coverage aligns on an ongoing development trajectory rather than a finished program.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 07:44 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Early reporting indicates that work underway includes creating an integrated data and procurement framework as part of a broader counter-UAS effort led by JIATF 401 (Joint Interagency Task Force 401) and related partners. Evidence so far points to ongoing development rather than a fully deployed, end-to-end marketplace accessible to all intended partners (defense and industry coverage notes ongoing integration efforts).
Recent reporting highlights tangible progress, including the first acquisitions under the broader counter-UAS initiative (for example, JIATF 401 purchasing two
F700 DroneHunters as part of Replicator 2 deployments), signaling movement toward capability sharing and formalized procurement channels. Additional industry and defense outlets describe the marketplace as a foundational component—intended to host test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options—rather than a completed, universally accessible system. The balance of sources describes ongoing development with concrete milestones still forthcoming, rather than a fully realized marketplace as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 06:07 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reports in late 2025 describe an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort to create a federal digital marketplace that would centralize testing data, performance information, and procurement pathways for counter-UAS capabilities. Defense-focused outlets documented ongoing planning, testing, and policy work, with officials describing a centralized hub for vetted systems, data, and vendor feedback (Defense One, Military.com, Nov–Dec 2025).
Current status and milestones: There is no announced live deployment date. Sources indicate the marketplace is in the design, testing-integration, and policy-development phases, with plans for a counter-UAS summit and relative evaluations of competing systems to standardize data across agencies (Defense One, Military.com, Nov–Dec 2025).
Source reliability and caveats: Coverage comes from defense-focused trade outlets and government-adjacent press (Defense One, Military.com) and reflects the Pentagon/Army-led framing of the effort. Access to the underlying DoD/JIATF 401 program specifics is limited, and official deployment timing has not been publicly announced, limiting definitive status confirmation.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 03:45 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms active work under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), led by the Army, to create a federal digital marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement options, with the goal of unifying information for federal partners. Progress appears to be iterative, with ongoing planning and early implementation steps rather than a fully deployed, ready-to-use platform (JIATF 401 context; 2025 coverage).
Evidence of progress includes public statements that the marketplace is intended to serve as a central hub for comparing systems, accessing government testing data, and guiding procurement decisions, with the Army named as executive agent for counter-small UAS. Industry and defense press in late 2025 described the marketplace as in development, with leadership citing the need for a single source of vetted data and standardized information to accelerate acquisitions and operational decision-making (Breaking Defense; Military.com; executive briefings).
In December 2025, Defense and defense-technology outlets reported related efforts to converge counter-UAS data sharing onto a common network/C2 framework, including plans to plug the marketplace into an enterprise-wide C2 system within a 90-day horizon. This initiative is described as reducing data silos and enabling faster, more informed choices for federal installations, DHS components, and law enforcement partners, rather than constituting a finished, fully live portal at that moment (Defense One; Defense press coverage).
Milestones cited include: the stand-up of JIATF 401 (August 2025) and interagency summits (November 2025) to align testing, data, and procurement needs; a stated objective to implement a common C2/network interface within months; and public framing of the marketplace as a central data and procurement resource. While these reports demonstrate momentum, they also emphasize ongoing development, testing, and integration across multiple agencies rather than a singular, immediately deployed platform (Military.com; Defense One; Breaking Defense).
Reliability notes: sources show the narrative is driven by official task-force leadership and defense press, with evident incentives to streamline federal procurement and reduce risk to airspace and critical infrastructure. Given the lack of a single public launch date and explicit deployment confirmation, the claim is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete, pending further rollout and access expansion to interagency partners (Defense One; Military.com; Breaking Defense).
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 01:50 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: In late 2025, defense-focused outlets reported ongoing development under an Army-led, joint interagency effort, with plans to host a counter-UAS summit and coordinate with interagency partners on requirements and testing/evaluation for potential marketplace content. No firm launch date or deployment milestone was announced at that time.
Current status: As of January 2026, reporting described the marketplace as a planned capability rather than a deployed system. Public sources cite planning milestones and coordination activities but do not confirm a live platform accessible to interagency partners.
Reliability and sources: The most informative items come from reputable defense press (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) describing official intent and development progress; access to the Defense Department page could not be verified due to restrictions. Given the absence of a concrete deployment date, the completion claim remains uncertain.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 12:00 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The proposal envisions a centralized online platform where partners can access test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities.
Progress evidence: Multiple outlets reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is developing an online marketplace for counter-UAS tech, with aims to streamline procurement and access to capabilities and feedback for interagency partners. Reports note that no firm launch date or scope of vendors has been set as of late 2025 (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov). A Defense One piece (Dec 2025) ties the broader effort to a common network for counter-UAS systems, signaling continued momentum but not a finished product.
Milestones and current status: Public accounts describe planning and design activity, but no deployed marketplace or demonstrated access for interagency partners as of January 2026. The most concrete statements describe intentions and structure (an online marketplace with procurement options and user feedback) rather than a live, fully populated portal. The absence of a published completion date or deployment milestone supports a status of ongoing development rather than completion.
Source reliability note: Coverage predominantly comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Defense One) that track
U.S. military and interagency tech programs. While these outlets are reputable within defense journalism, official confirmation from the DoD or the JIATF 401 would strengthen certainty about deployment timelines.
Incentive context: The push to centralize procurement and feedback aligns with government needs to rapidly field counter-UAS capabilities while reducing duplicative purchases. If realized, the marketplace could alter vendor competition dynamics and interagency budgeting incentives, potentially prioritizing interoperable and well-vetted solutions. As of now, the incentive alignment appears to be driving planning and design rather than a completed platform.
Conclusion: Based on available reporting through January 2026, the counter-UAS marketplace remains in development with no deployed access for interagency partners yet. The claim is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed, given the absence of a deployed system or firm deployment date.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 09:53 AMcomplete
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is developing and launching a digital marketplace to test, compare, and acquire counter-UAS capabilities for federal partners (Military.com 2025-12-08; Breaking Defense 2025-11).
Progress evidence shows leadership statements and industry reporting that the marketplace will house authoritative performance data, testing results, and vetted procurement options to streamline interagency purchases (Breaking Defense 2025-11; ExecutiveGov 2025-11).
In terms of completion, multiple outlets report that the marketplace has moved from planning to actionable development, with the December 2025 article signaling a launch or near-launch state for a federal digital marketplace overseen by JIATF 401 (Military.com 2025-12-08; Breaking Defense 2025-11). The timeline cited by sources does not specify a fixed go-live date, but the existence of a formal marketplace appears to be realized by late 2025.
Concrete milestones cited include the establishment of a central hub to compare systems, the aggregation of testing data, and the ability to view procurement options in one place, aligned with the task force’s mandate to accelerate counter-UAS delivery to relevant agencies (Breaking Defense 2025-11; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Source reliability varies: Defense Department-origin reporting was blocked in this instance, so corroboration relies on reputable outlets covering Defense Department initiatives (Military.com, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov). Taken together, the reporting supports a status of completion or near-completion of the marketplace as of December 2025, with ongoing refinement and expansion anticipated in early 2026 (follow-up: monitor official DoD confirmations).
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 07:57 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It envisions a centralized online system for access to test data, operational feedback, and vetted procurement options. The completion condition is deployment of the marketplace with interagency access.
Independent reporting in late 2025 indicated that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to stand up a digital counter-UAS marketplace and a broader UAS marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement. Officials described the marketplace as a central system for authoritative data, performance comparisons, and a range of vendor options, but no firm launch date was set.
Public coverage from defense-focused outlets confirms ongoing planning, policy development, and testing activities, with a launch date still to be determined as of November 2025. Reports emphasize funding considerations, testing/evaluation frameworks, and policy guidelines rather than a deployed, user-ready portal.
As of January 2026, there is no publicly confirmed deployment of the marketplace, indicating the initiative remains in planning and pilot phases rather than completion. The available reporting supports progress toward the concept and piloting steps, but stops short of a deployed, accessible system.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 04:03 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, Breaking Defense reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online counter-UAS marketplace to provide authoritative data on system performance and streamline procurement for interagency users. By December 2025, Military.com described the marketplace as a federal digital hub under JIATF 401 intended to sort, test, and share information about counter-drone systems for agencies that need tools around aircraft and crowded public spaces.
Current status: There is no published completion date or launch date; multiple outlets describe the marketplace as being developed with planning, testing, and policy work ongoing and a summit planned to coordinate testing and evaluation.
Milestones and timeline notes: Reported elements include a central hub for vendor testing data, performance comparisons, and feedback loops; testing of systems before inclusion; and potential policy guidelines for domestic procurement and deployment.
Source reliability note: The reported information comes from defense-focused outlets including Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, Military.com, and related coverage of JIATF 401, which are credible for defense topics though sometimes reflect early-stage planning and official attribution dispersion.
Overall assessment: In_progress, with concrete planning and events (summit) but no deployed marketplace or firm completion date identified.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 02:19 AMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Current reporting indicates this marketplace is in the planning and development phase, with no firm launch date announced.
Evidence of progress: multiple reputable outlets reported in November 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online marketplace to consolidate procurement and testing for counter-UAS tech. Sources describe efforts to harmonize performance metrics, test and evaluate vendors, and provide a centralized mechanism for data and feedback, though details on a deployed portal remain limited (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, CUAS Hub).
Status of completion: as of January 2026, sources consistently state there is no announced launch date and that the marketplace is still in development, with activities like coordinating a counter-UAS summit and establishing testing/evaluation frameworks ongoing. Several reports emphasize integration with an overarching UAS marketplace and a phased approach rather than an immediate go-live.
Dates and milestones: key milestones cited include the November 2025 announcements about the marketplace concept, the plan for a counter-UAS summit to define requirements, and the ongoing work to standardize performance measurements across demonstrations. No concrete deployment date or number of available systems has been disclosed by official channels.
Source reliability and caveats: coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) and C-UAS industry tracking (CUAS Hub). While these are reputable within defense journalism and specialized industry circles, there remains a lack of official DoD-accessible documentation confirming a live, accessible portal. The claim’s completion condition (deployment with interagency access) has not been met yet based on current reporting.
Update · Jan 17, 2026, 01:18 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This frames the effort as a centralized, purchasable platform for testing data, user experiences, and vendor options across multiple agencies.
Evidence indicates the initiative is actively being planned and piloted, but as of early 2026 it has not been deployed. Breaking Defense reported in November 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was standing up an online marketplace to purchase counter-UAS equipment and to pair this with a broader UAS marketplace; the article describes ongoing development without a launch date (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). ExecutiveGov summarized these remarks, noting that the marketplace was still in development and that a counter-UAS summit was planned to coordinate testing and evaluation (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). These pieces indicate progress toward a centralized procurement and data-sharing mechanism, but no deployment milestone had been reached by January 2026.
A related public-facing promise hinges on providing authoritative performance data for each system and enabling interagency customers to select appropriate tools. The sources emphasize data on system performance and a catalog of options, rather than immediate access to a live, fully functional portal. This aligns with a development-phase status rather than a completed rollout (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Dates and milestones documented in the coverage include the initial announcements in November 2025 about the marketplace concept, and plans to hold a counter-UAS summit to shape testing and evaluation in the near term. There is no reporting of a completion date or of full interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options as of January 2026, suggesting the project remains in-progress and contingent on future funding and testing outcomes (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Reliability and context: the strongest signals come from defense-industry trade reporting and government-architecture outlets that focus on procurement and interagency coordination. While neither source indicates a formal DoD deployment date, they corroborate the existence of an anticipated centralized marketplace and ongoing activities to test and validate systems before inclusion (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Overall assessment: given the absence of a deployed marketplace by January 2026 and the presence of ongoing development and planning activities, the claim should be categorized as in_progress. Stakeholders should monitor upcoming JIATF 401 briefings and Defense Department announcements for evidence of a launch date or formal access provisions for interagency partners.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 10:19 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) has publicly described plans for an online marketplace to streamline evaluation, testing, and procurement of counter-UAS capabilities (Defense One, 2025-11; Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Current status: As of early 2026, reporting indicates development is underway with a launch date not yet determined and ongoing work on policy, testing, and domestically deployable guidelines (Defense One, Military.com, ExecutiveGov, 2025–2026).
Milestones: Establishment of JIATF 401 (2025) and subsequent coverage in November–December 2025 highlight ongoing marketplace development and related policy/testing activities; no firm deployment date confirmed publicly (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Military.com, ExecutiveGov).
Sources reliability: DoD-affiliated outlets and defense-press outlets form the basis of the reporting; while the intent and framework are clear, concrete deployment and access milestones remain unconfirmed in public announcements. Follow-up with official DoD/JIATF 401 communications is advised.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 07:51 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This would function as a centralized mechanism to share DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options across agencies, per the article’s wording.
Evidence of progress shows the effort is being organized under an Army-led, interagency framework. Reports from November 2025 describe plans to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone technology and to coordinate procurement, policy, and interoperability across agencies and bases (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov). These pieces indicate movement toward creating a marketplace, but do not show a deployed system with formal access for all partners.
Concrete milestones and completion status remain unclear. Several outlets noted that while the marketplace concept is advancing, there is no published launch date and no definitive list of vendors or data streams accessible through the platform (Breaking Defense, November 2025; Military.com, December 2025). Industry and government coverage emphasize planning and governance structures rather than a finished, publicly available product.
Dates and milestones cited include: mid-to-late November 2025 discussions about standing up the marketplace, and early December 2025 reporting that a centralized procurement pathway is being pursued. None of the sources confirm full deployment or partner access as of January 2026. The lack of a firm completion date suggests the project remains in development rather than completed.
Source reliability varies across outlets, but coverage from Breaking Defense, Military.com, and ExecutiveGov consistently frames the marketplace as an emergent, not-yet-complete initiative within an interagency counter-UAS effort. Taken together, these signals support a cautious assessment that progress exists but the completion condition—deployment with partner access—has not been publicly achieved by January 2026.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 06:14 PMin_progress
The claim describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize data access, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting as of late 2025 shows this marketplace concept is in early- to mid-stage planning and coordination, not a deployed system. There is no firm deployment date announced for the marketplace.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 03:51 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting indicates that a Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 401) is leading the effort and planning a centralized marketplace to share test data, operational user feedback, and procurement options, with a focus on interagency and law enforcement access. As of early 2026, there is no publicly announced deployment date or completion confirmation, and sources describe ongoing planning, policy alignment, and stakeholder coordination rather than a live, fully deployed marketplace. Independent industry coverage notes ongoing efforts to standardize testing, coordinate procurement channels, and hold summits to advance the concept, but concrete deployment milestones remain unreported in publicly verifiable sources.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 01:54 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Multiple late-2025 reports confirm the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively planning an online marketplace to centralize procurement of counter-UAS tech and to provide authoritative performance data on systems. Officials described the marketplace as coordinating with a broader UAS marketplace and highlighted intended data sharing on performance under varying conditions.
Current status and milestones: The marketplace had not launched by Nov–Dec 2025, with officials stating no launch date and ongoing work to define vendor participation, data standards, and funding. Reports note funding would come from multiple sources and a c-UAS summit was planned to align interagency testing and evaluation, signaling progress but not completion.
Completion assessment: While there are concrete planning milestones and planned events, there is no evidence of deployment or interagency access as of January 2026, so the completion condition remains unmet at this time.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Military.com) with direct quotes from JIATF 401 leadership, corroborating ongoing development rather than a finished marketplace. These sources are reputable within defense reporting, though formal DoD confirmation would strengthen verification.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 12:26 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners is being developed.
Progress evidence: The Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) has publicly outlined plans to stand up a digital counter-UAS marketplace intended to host authoritative performance data, user feedback, and validated procurement options; late-2025 reporting describes the initiative moving from concept to implementation steps (Breaking Defense; Defense One).
Status and milestones: Public reporting through late 2025 indicates ongoing development rather than a deployed system. Milestones include establishing an online platform, conducting testing/evaluation, and organizing a counter-UAS summit to coordinate with interagency partners (Executive Gov; Military.com).
Source reliability and incentives: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and official DoD communications; indicators point to ongoing development with incentives centered on rapid, joint deployment across agencies, though no firm deployment date is provided (Meritalk; War.gov; Defense One).
Conclusion: Based on available reporting through December 2025, the counter-UAS marketplace is in progress with plans and early activities underway but not yet deployed.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 10:05 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple defense-press outlets reported in late 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned an online marketplace to consolidate procurement of counter-UAS technologies and to provide authoritative performance data and feedback to customers (Breaking Defense). Reports indicate the marketplace concept was being developed alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with testing/evaluation frameworks and feedback loops for vendors (ExecutiveGov; cuashub).
Current status against completion condition: As of January 2026 there is no public evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace. Sources describe planning, governance, and testing activities without announcing a launch date or a live platform (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; cuashub).
Dates and milestones: Key milestones occurred in November 2025 with statements that a counter-UAS marketplace would be created and a counter-UAS summit planned to coordinate testing/evaluation. No fixed launch date or deployment has been announced (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; cuashub).
Source reliability note: The reporting relies on defense-focused outlets with direct quotes from JIATF 401 leadership, providing credible coverage. Defense.gov material is inaccessible in this instance, but corroborating secondary sources support progression but not deployment, consistent with cautious interpretation of progress.
Follow-up context: The initiative appears to remain in the planning/testing phase rather than deployed, with ongoing work on data standards and procurement processes expected to continue.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 07:42 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as a centralized mechanism providing authoritative data on performance, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Public statements from late 2024 through 2025 indicate formal planning under JIATF 401, including mentions of a UAS/counter-UAS marketplace and data standards. November 2025 briefings and interviews discuss establishing the marketplace, with emphasis on interoperability, plug‑and‑play components, and rapid access for interagency customers (Army public affairs roundtables; Breaking Defense coverage).
Status assessment: As of January 15, 2026, there is clear progression in planning and enabling activities, but no public deployment date or confirmed access for all interagency partners. Officials describe procurement vehicles in place and ongoing testing/evaluation efforts, yet a full deployment and data/procurement access for partners have not been publicly announced.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones include a November 2025 counter-UAS summit and multiple November 2025 briefings detailing data-sharing objectives, evaluation standards, and a roadmap for a marketplace that is component-based and interoperable across agencies. No firm launch date has been published.
Source reliability and caveats: Information derives from official Army/JIATF communications and defense media coverage, which are credible for policy announcements but do not confirm a final deployment. Details about exact data feeds, procurement entries, and access rules remain subject to interagency policy decisions and budgeting processes.
Overall assessment: The claim is best characterized as in_progress: active pursuit with formal planning and public messaging indicating progress, but without a publicly confirmed deployment or full access for interagency partners by the current date.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 04:15 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence to date shows ongoing planning and development rather than a deployed system. A November 2025 Breaking Defense report quotes JIATF 401 as planning to stand up a digital marketplace to provide authoritative data, testing results, and procurement options, with no launch date announced (Nov 17, 2025).
Further reporting in December 2025 indicates the marketplace is a core element of the JIATF-401 effort, with discussions, summits, and coordination with DHS, DHS components, the FBI, and local agencies, but still no deployed portal or confirmed go-live date (Military.com, Dec 8, 2025).
Additional coverage notes ongoing interagency collaboration and funding considerations, including leveraging grant programs and DLA contracting support to move from planning to deployable counter-UAS capabilities, rather than a finished marketplace (Meritalk, Dec 22, 2025).
Overall, the objective remains in development and not yet deployed as of the current date. The available sources describe progress, pending milestones, and coordination activities, with no concrete completion date.
Source reliability: The cited outlets are specialized defense and government-technology outlets (Breaking Defense, Military.com, Meritalk) with explicit quotes from JIATF 401 leadership and documented events; however, none provide a Defense Department confirmation of a live marketplace launch, and Defense.gov access to the original article is blocked in this environment, so public confirmation rests on reputable secondary reporting.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 02:12 AMcomplete
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, enabling access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 described plans to stand up a digital marketplace to centralize testing, data, and procurement for counter-UAS across federal partners (including DHS, FBI, and DHS components). A December 2025 report from Military.com indicated the marketplace was launched as a federal digital hub to sort, test, and share information about counter-drone systems, with the Army designated as executive agent for counter-small UAS.
Current status: The marketplace appears to have progressed from planning to deployment in late 2025, with outlets reporting a central online hub for interagency use that centralizes data and procurement options and provides vetted testing information.
Milestones: Key milestones include the November 2025 JIATF 401 briefing outlining the marketplace concept and the December 2025 coverage confirming its launch and role. No firm post-launch completion date was published, but deployment was framed as active by December 2025.
Reliability: Sources include Breaking Defense coverage of the marketplace plan and Military.com reporting on the marketplace launch. Defense.gov content was inaccessible in this instance, so cross-verification with secondary outlets was used.
Update · Jan 16, 2026, 12:03 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to DOW test data and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Late-2025 reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing a digital marketplace for counter-UAS and related data sharing, with plans for a c-UAS summit to coordinate testing and evaluation among interagency partners. Coverage notes management by JIATF 401 and ongoing data-forensics and interoperability efforts, without a firm deployment date.
Current status: By January 2026, sources describe continued development without a deployed marketplace. Public reporting points to related acquisitions and data-sharing initiatives as steps toward the marketplace, but no full deployment or user-access mechanism has been publicly confirmed.
Milestones and dates: Fall 2025 through January 2026 saw planning milestones (summits, interoperability discussions) and early c-UAS acquisitions tied to the broader marketplace concept. Reports also reference a Pentagon push for a common network to run counter-UAS systems, supporting the marketplace objective without detailing a launch.
Source reliability and caveats: Articles from Breaking Defense, Defense One, JANES, and ExecutiveGov consistently frame the marketplace as an emerging capability under JIATF 401, with incomplete deployment details. Given interagency complexity, the evidence supports ongoing development rather than completion.
Incentives and context: The initiative aligns with cross-agency procurement efficiency and standardized data sharing, reinforcing the drive to consolidate counter-UAS capabilities while preserving agency-specific authorities and funding paths.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 11:48 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) has moved from planning to active development of a digital marketplace for counter-UAS and related UAS data. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) quotes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross stating the marketplace will provide authoritative data on system performance and enable customers to select appropriate tools, with no launch date set. ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) and
MeriTalk (Dec 22, 2025) corroborate that the marketplace is being designed to centralize data access, testing feedback, and validated procurement options, and note ongoing coordination with interagency partners and DLA contracting support.
Status of completion: No evidence shows the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access yet. The sources consistently describe the marketplace as a planned/under-construction capability, with milestones such as testing coordination, data standardization, and procurement integration discussed but no deployment date identified. The November–December 2025 reporting also indicates additional related efforts (summits, data-sharing frameworks) are in progress rather than complete.
Dates and milestones: November 17, 2025 (Breaking Defense) centers on establishing the online marketplace and providing data on performance for c-UAS tools; November 18, 2025 (ExecutiveGov) reiterates the plan to stand up the marketplace; December 22, 2025 (MeriTalk) notes a concrete joint effort with law enforcement, a common air picture objective, and ongoing grant-based funding coordination to move from grants to deployable capability. These collectively indicate progress in planning, coordination, and pilot testing rather than final deployment.
Reliability of sources: The reporting comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense), government-adjacent publications (ExecutiveGov), and tech/government-coverage site MeriTalk. All sources describe the initiative as in-development with explicit statements about planning, data-sharing aims, and procurement integration; none provide a deployed, fully-accessible marketplace as of the latest dates. While coverage is consistent across outlets, direct official DoD public release or a named program office update would strengthen validation.
Overall assessment: The claim is best characterized as in_progress. The initiative has moved from concept to active development with documented intent to centralize data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, but a deployed marketplace accessible to those partners has not been demonstrated in the sources reviewed.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 07:52 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple credible reporting lines indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively planning and developing an online C-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) quotes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing a digital marketplace intended to provide authoritative performance data and a range of counter-UAS options for interagency and DHS/FBI/local partners. ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) and
MeriTalk (Dec 22, 2025) corroborate these plans, noting data access, testing feedback, and validated procurement options as core components, with no firm launch date announced.
Status of completion: As of late 2025, the marketplace has been announced and is in the planning/development phase, with organizers signaling intention to integrate testing data, performance data, and procurement workflows, but no deployed platform or user-access provisions have been publicly confirmed. Reports emphasize ongoing coordination with interagency partners, testing plans, and potential pilot engagements rather than a fully deployed marketplace.
Milestones and dates: Key public milestones include the November 2025 discussions and statements announcing the marketplace concept, and December 2025 reporting on ongoing interagency coordination, a planned counter-UAS summit, and related procurement/logistics work. A definitive launch or deployment date has not been provided in the sources reviewed.
Source reliability note: The assessment relies on mainstream defense journalism and government-adjacent outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Meritalk). Defense.gov content is blocked in this instance, but corroborating reporting from multiple independent outlets strengthens the credibility of the marketplace development claim. These outlets describe a high-level plan with data sharing and procurement centralization as core features, without claiming a completed deployment.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 06:17 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms active efforts to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS capabilities as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiatives, including data on system performance and procurement pathways (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Evidence indicates progress toward establishing a centralized mechanism, with leadership statements describing the marketplace as a companion to a broader UAS marketplace and intended to provide authoritative performance data and procurement options for interagency buyers (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025; ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
There is no publicly available completion date or evidence that the marketplace has been officially deployed to interagency partners as of January 15, 2026. Army and DoD-related reporting shows ongoing testing, interagency coordination, and planning activities rather than a finished procurement platform (Army News Service; Breaking Defense).
Milestones referenced in the coverage include planned demonstrations, testing with interagency partners, and a summit to outline testing and evaluation processes, rather than a launched marketplace with user access established (ExecutiveGov; Army News Service).
Reliability of sources is high for official and defense-focused outlets, which describe an active development program with no announced deployment date, supporting an in_progress assessment rather than complete.
The current status remains that the counter-UAS marketplace is being developed and is not yet deployed to interagency partners, with ongoing planning and testing phases expected to continue into 2026.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 03:53 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: 2025 reporting indicates the effort is being led by JIATF 401 and associated with an Army-led initiative to create an online marketplace for counter-UAS equipment, including testing, evaluation, and feedback processes (Nov–Dec 2025 coverage by Breaking Defense and Defense One). MeriTalk also described the core marketplace concept in late 2025, aligned with DHS/FBI participation.
Status of completion: There is no public evidence of a deployed marketplace as of early 2026. Reports consistently note the marketplace is in development with no firm launch date, and emphasis on testing, policy development, and stakeholder coordination.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones include a planned counter-UAS summit and ongoing testing/evaluation of systems; no confirmed launch date or vendor count has been published to date.
Reliability of sources: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and
MeriTalk is consistent and credible within defense journalism, and aligns with statements from JIATF 401 leadership; Defense.gov material referenced in the claim is not publicly accessible, but corroborating reporting supports the in_progress status.
Overall assessment: The claim remains in_progress; deployment and broad access to the marketplace have not yet occurred as of 2026-01-15.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 01:55 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms an Army-led effort to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-UAS solutions, data, and validated procurement options, targeting interagency use (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Evidence of progress includes the marketplace concept moving toward implementation, with plans to provide authoritative performance data on counter-UAS systems and facilitate procurement from multiple vendors for federal and local partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
According to official accounts, the initiative has entered an operational phase, with JIATF-401 highlighting rapid integration, policy improvements, and a path toward initial data and capability sharing for interagency customers; a formal deployment date has not been disclosed (
Army.mil, 2025-12-19).
In its 100-day review, the task force described concrete actions such as consolidating counter-UAS policies, delivering early capability deployments, and outlining a roadmap for a digital marketplace, suggesting substantial progress but not final completion (Army.mil, 2025-12-19).
Given the information available, the marketplace appears to be in development with ongoing testing and phased rollout planned; no final, fully deployed state is publicly documented yet. The sources used are official or reputable defense outlets, though they do not provide a definitive completion date.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 12:00 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) plans to establish an online marketplace for counter-drone technology and related data, with the goal of providing authoritative performance data and procurement options to federal, state, and local partners. A key note from November 2025 is that the marketplace is still in development and no launch date had been set, though a c-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace was being pursued. The available reporting emphasizes planning, data-sharing, and evaluation steps rather than a deployed, fully operational system as of late 2025.
Progress evidence thus far includes official statements from JIATF 401 leadership about creating a centralized purchasing and data-sharing platform, and media coverage describing an upcoming c-UAS marketplace event (summit) to outline testing, evaluation, and partner engagement. Specific milestones cited include the planned online marketplace, intended access to test data and user feedback, and an upcoming c-UAS summit to align interagency participation. There is no publicly documented completion date or deployment milestone indicating that the marketplace is live for interagency partners.
Evidence supporting ongoing work includes repeated emphasis on integrating data, testing results, and validated procurement options to reduce risk and accelerate deployment for interagency customers. The strongest public signal is that the marketplace remains in the planning and coordination phase, with leadership signaling future deployment contingent on testing, partner alignment, and funding. No authoritative source confirms full deployment or agency-wide access by January 2026.
Source reliability considerations: Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) is a reputable defense policy outlet and is consistent with other defense-sector reporting about JIATF 401’s marketplace plans. Defense.gov coverage of the broader program existed but was not accessible for direct verification due to access restrictions; secondary reporting aligns on the stated goals and current status. Taken together, the claim remains plausible but unfulfilled as of early 2026, pending launch and onboarding timelines announced by the task force.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 10:02 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting indicates that an Army-led interagency task force, JIATF 401, is actively planning and developing an online marketplace to purchase counter-UAS capabilities and to provide authoritative performance data and user feedback, rather than a fully deployed, ready-made system. Key coverage quotes that frame progress describe the marketplace as part of a broader digital ecosystem, intended to streamline procurement and data access for military and interagency customers (Defense One, Breaking Defense, November 2025). The completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; interagency partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not yet occurred as of January 2026, with officials signaling ongoing development and no firm launch date (Breaking Defense, Defense One, November 2025). Reliability is high for these outlets on defense-sector program status, though official Defense Department confirmation remains blocked by access restrictions to the primary Defense.gov page; cross-reporting from multiple industry and defense outlets supports a consistent progress narrative, albeit without a published deployment date.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 08:00 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is a centralized online platform compiling DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency use. The marketplace is intended to accelerate access to c-UAS capabilities across agencies and jurisdictions.
Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) publicly described plans to stand up an online c-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with data on system performance and a catalog of procurement options. Leading officials indicated the initiative would provide authoritative data on how systems perform under varying conditions to help customers select appropriate tools. Multiple outlets reported that the concept was moving from planning into early implementation phases and that a c-UAS summit was planned to refine testing, evaluation, and procurement integration.
Current status vs. completion: As of January 14, 2026, sources describe the marketplace as an active development effort rather than a deployed, fully operational system. No source indicates a hard launch date or a finalized procurement catalog; officials emphasize that the marketplace will require testing, interagency coordination, and budget alignment before deployment. The completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been publicly met yet, and the efforts remain in progress.
Dates and milestones: Reported milestones include the November 2025 announcements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross (JIATF 401) about establishing an online marketplace and plans to hold a c-UAS summit to outline testing and collaboration with interagency partners. The articles note that funding for the marketplace would come from a mix of operations and maintenance, RDT&E, and procurement funds, with no disclosed launch date. The coverage indicates movement from concept to near-term implementation, but no confirmed deployment as of January 2026.
Source reliability and context: Reporting comes from defense-focused outlets such as Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov, which summarize statements from JIATF 401 leadership and corroborating coverage like GlobalSecurity and
MeriTalk. While access to the original DoD article is restricted, these outlets consistently describe a legitimate interagency effort with formal oversight and budget considerations. Given the absence of a published deployment date and explicit completion confirmation, the sources collectively support a status of ongoing development rather than completed deployment.
Scheduled follow-up · Jan 15, 2026
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 04:35 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: In November 2025, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross announced that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online counter-UAS marketplace, to run alongside a broader UAS marketplace, to provide authoritative performance data and streamline procurement (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov). Follow-on reporting reinforced that the marketplace is intended to facilitate testing, evaluation, and rapid purchasing, with policy and funding arrangements still under development (Defense One; ExecutiveGov). Completion status: Publicly available information as of January 2026 does not show a launched or deployed marketplace or confirmed interagency access; sources describe planning, testing frameworks, and expected deployment timelines, not a finished system. Notable milestones: planned counter-UAS summit, ongoing testing/evaluation processes, and the expectation of vendor testing data feeding the marketplace; no fixed launch date has been publicly announced. Source reliability: Coverage comes from reputable defense outlets citing official statements from JIATF 401 leadership; while not a formal Defense Department release, the reporting is consistent across multiple independent defense-news outlets.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 02:19 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, via a centralized platform linked to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Public briefings in late 2025 confirm the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is pursuing an online marketplace for capability sharing, testing data, and procurement. DoD and Army outlets describe ongoing planning and testing activities and interagency coordination in 2025.
Status of completion: As of January 2026, there is a clear intent and planning toward a digital marketplace, but no published launch date or deployment milestone exists. Sources describe ongoing development rather than a deployed system.
Milestones and dates: Notable milestones include interagency meetings (Nov 2025) and statements about establishing both a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace, with plans for an interagency summit to outline testing and evaluation. No firm completion date is reported.
Reliability of sources: Information comes from
Army.mil, Breaking Defense, and Defense-related outlets reporting on JIATF 401 initiatives; they describe development and planning rather than a completed deployment. These sources are considered reliable within defense reporting contexts.
Update · Jan 15, 2026, 12:28 AMin_progress
Restatement of claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The sources describe an Army-led effort to stand up an online, centralized marketplace for vetted counter-UAS data, user feedback, and procurement pathways.
Evidence of progress exists in late-2025 reporting and official Army statements. Defense One and Breaking Defense describe plans for an online marketplace to streamline purchasing, testing, and interagency feedback, with a launch date not yet determined. Army statements emphasize policy alignment, testing events, and procurement readiness toward a marketplace deployment.
Additional progress is highlighted by the U.S. Army, noting rapid development of a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions and ongoing policy development. The material cites near-term procurement activity and border/ homeland-defense focus, indicating an advancing program rather than a completed system by early 2026.
Notable milestones include the 100-day mark for JIATF-401 on December 19, 2025, and anticipated initial capability deliveries around January 2026. While these items show substantial movement toward a centralized marketplace, no source confirms full deployment to all interagency and law-enforcement partners by the date in question.
Reliability: The sources include official Army communications and defense-industry reporting, which collectively provide a coherent narrative of ongoing development, testing, and policy work supporting the marketplace initiative.
Scheduled follow-up · Jan 15, 2026overdue
Completion due · Jan 15, 2026
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 10:19 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms that an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and purchasing of counter-UAS components, with interagency engagement and policy work ongoing.
Evidence of progress includes detailed briefings and subsequent coverage in late 2025 noting that the marketplace aims to host tested and vetted components and provide a channel for feedback to vendors. Reports also indicate planning for a counter-UAS summit to discuss policy, science and technology, operations, and intelligence work, signaling ongoing development rather than a completed deployment.
There is no firm completion date or deployable milestone announced. Defense reporting in 2025 described the marketplace as an evolving capability rather than a finished system, with a launch date “to be determined.” The Defense Department and JIATF 401 appear to be building the framework, not a deployed portal.
Concrete milestones cited include the establishment of JIATF 401 (mid-2025) and a planned counter-UAS summit, along with efforts to test components and create policy and guidelines for domestically deploying systems. The reporting suggests progress in data sharing, user feedback mechanisms, and procurement pathways, but no final deployment.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 08:51 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In late 2025, reports from Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning an online UAS/counter-UAS marketplace to provide authoritative performance data and procurement options, but no launch date was announced and the platform remained in planning and testing phases.
Status of completion: The marketplace has not been deployed as of early 2026. Public coverage indicates ongoing development, with coordination events such as planned counter-UAS summits to test and evaluate potential additions to the marketplace.
Reliability note: Coverage from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) consistently frames the marketplace as an upcoming capability rather than a deployed system, and official DoD confirmation of deployment is not present in the cited material.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 06:27 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms an Army-led effort to create an online marketplace intended to consolidate testing data, performance feedback, and procurement options for c-UAS systems. As of early 2026, no firm launch date has been announced, and officials describe the marketplace as a work in progress with ongoing policy development and testing coordination.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 03:53 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting through early 2026 indicates ongoing work to create an online marketplace and related governance, rather than a fully deployed system used across agencies.
In November 2025, Breaking Defense described the Army-led JIATF 401 planning a digital marketplace for counter-UAS tech, with no firm launch date announced at that time.
By December 2025, U.S. Army reporting emphasized ongoing progress toward a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions and associated testing events to drive procurement, signaling advancement but not completion.
Overall, sources show active development and near-term procurement milestones, but no evidence of a fully deployed, universally accessible marketplace as of January 2026.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 01:59 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Recent reporting confirms that Army-led and interagency efforts are actively planning and building an online marketplace to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement of counter-UAS capabilities for multiple agencies.
Evidence of progress includes public statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross (JIATF 401) describing the marketplace concept, its alignment with a broader UAS marketplace, and plans to provide authoritative performance data and vetted procurement options. Articles from
Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) note that the marketplace is in development, with a launch date not yet determined and a policy/testing framework being developed in parallel. ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) corroborates the intent to stand up an online marketplace and associated testing/evaluation processes.
There is no evidence in the cited reporting that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have universal access as of mid-January 2026. The completion condition—deployment and active access for interagency partners—has not been reported as achieved.
Key dates and milestones reported include discussions and statements from November 2025 about the marketplace’s existence and launch timeline, plus planned events (e.g., a summit) to advance testing and policy. However, no procurement catalog, access mechanism, or operational data portal has been publicly confirmed as launched. The reliability of sources is high for mainstream defense outlets, all of which rely on direct briefings from JIATF 401 leadership and defense officials.
Reliability note: Coverage comes from veteran defense reporters referencing official briefings from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and JIATF 401 leadership. While the sources are reputable and consistently describe an in-progress initiative, none indicate full deployment or interagency access as of the current date. Accordingly, status remains in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 12:12 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting indicates a digital marketplace initiative under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to test, share information, and procure counter-UAS solutions for interagency use, described as a cornerstone of layered counter-drone capability.
As of early 2026, sources describe ongoing development rather than a deployed, fully operational system, with milestones like planning, testing events, and interagency coordination referenced but not yet completed.
Multiple outlets in late 2025 cited concrete progress toward a centralized digital marketplace, including announced plans to stand up the marketplace and host testing to evaluate solutions for interagency partners.
The effort is framed as an active development project with procurement and policy work in progress, rather than a fully deployed portal accessible to all partners at this time.
Overall, the claim is best described as in_progress: development is proceeding, but deployment and full access are not yet realized as of January 14, 2026.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 10:15 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) confirms an Army-led initiative to stand up an online marketplace that would provide authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement for counter-UAS equipment.
Evidence shows the effort is in the development stage rather than completed. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, head of JIATF 401, described the marketplace as aligning with a broader UAS marketplace and said there is no launch date yet, with the platform intended to offer data on system performance and a range of vendor options for interagency customers (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025; Executive Gov, Nov 2025).
As of the current date (2026-01-13), there is no publicly announced completion or deployment date. Multiple outlets consistently report planning and testing activities, including a counter-UAS summit to coordinate testing and evaluation with interagency partners, but no milestone indicating final rollout or access approval has been published.
Reliability assessment: the most solid publicly available information comes from defense and government-technology outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) reporting on the task force’s plans and ongoing development. The Defense Department’s own Defense.gov piece appears in the article metadata but has not been independently verified in accessible pages at this time; nonetheless, the covered outlets are credible for tracking procurement-focused military marketplace initiatives.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 07:59 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting in late 2025 described an Army-led effort by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-UAS capabilities, data sharing, and procurement pathways.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 06:02 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting indicates the effort is actively in development, with leadership detailing plans for a centralized online marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, but no launch date has been set (Nov–Dec 2025 reports).
Evidence of progress includes statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross (JIATF 401) describing the marketplace concept, the intent to consolidate procurement, testing, and evaluation, and to provide authoritative performance data to customers (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025; ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
A related summit and ongoing interagency coordination are noted as milestones toward shaping requirements and governance (Breaking Defense; CUAS Hub, Nov 2025).
There is no publicly announced deployment or operational access as of January 2026; the effort remains in planning and piloting, with no defined launch date or go-live, indicating ongoing development rather than completion.
Source material comes from defense-focused outlets and industry sites documenting plans and progress, which are credible for tracking intent and milestones but do not confirm a live marketplace yet.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 02:10 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting from late 2025 indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is planning and developing a digital marketplace that will host DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options, with no firm deployment date announced. The effort is framed as part of a broader, integrated c-UAS ecosystem involving data sharing, testing, and procurement pathways with interagency partners.
Update · Jan 14, 2026, 12:23 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows an Army-led initiative (JIATF 401) planning an online marketplace to consolidate data on system performance and enable procurement decisions, with emphasis on authoritative test data and user feedback (Nov 2025). No public evidence indicates the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have universal access yet; the projects are described as ongoing with no firm launch date. A related summit and testing activities were mentioned as part of the development process (Nov 2025). The reliability of sources is strong for defense-technology reporting, though official DoD confirmation of a launched marketplace remains unavailable in open sources. The current status is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 10:27 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports from defense outlets in Nov–Dec 2025 describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS gear, data testing, and vendor feedback, with planned testing, policy development, and a national rollout framework.
Status of completion: As of January 2026, the marketplace had not yet deployed; no firm launch date was announced, and the effort remains in development with upcoming summits and continued testing/evaluation.
Milestones and dates: Noted milestones include a counter-UAS summit, development of testing/evaluation processes, and domestic deployment policy, but no definitive deployment date.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense) citing JIATF 401 leadership; multiple independent outlets align on the ongoing development stage, with no DoD primary press release identified in the retrieved materials.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 08:04 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms Army-led JIATF 401 plans to establish an online marketplace to facilitate procurement of counter-UAS equipment and to provide authoritative data on system performance for interagency customers (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecGov, 2025-11-18).
Sources indicate that the marketplace is in the planning and development phase, with discussions of data access, performance data, and procurement pathways, but no firm deployment date or launch milestones have been announced (Breaking Defense; ExecGov).
A related briefing notes that the effort will accompany a broader UAS marketplace and will leverage funding from multiple budget lines, though the program does not yet have a dedicated, confirmed budget (Breaking Defense; ExecGov).
Reliability note: reporting from defense-focused outlets and DoD-related materials describe the marketplace as a planned capability under JIATF 401, with no published deployment date as of early 2026. These sources are high-quality for defense policy and procurement coverage, though exact timelines remain fluid given interagency coordination and funding uncertainties.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 06:23 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reports describe the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401's efforts and emphasize data access, performance information, and procurement pathways for interagency customers (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Army.mil 2025-11-14).
Evidence indicates progress toward establishing the marketplace concept, with officials talking about standardized data, interoperable components, and mechanisms to access counter-UAS data and tools. Public briefings describe a plug-and-play approach to mission command and a broadened procurement channel, rather than a fully deployed, universal platform (Army.mil 2025-11-14).
There is not yet public confirmation of a complete, end-to-end deployment accessible to all interagency and law enforcement partners. Sources describe ongoing development and incremental rollout, not a finalized nationwide marketplace (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Army.mil 2025-11-14).
Milestones cited include a November 2025 interagency counter-UAS summit and ongoing testing/evaluation to standardize performance metrics across demonstrations, signaling ongoing progress toward the marketplace framework (Army.mil 2025-11-14). The emphasis on modular, low-cost components suggests a gradual integration path rather than a single launch event.
Source quality is high, with information from DoD and U.S. Army public affairs providing contemporaneous, official updates. While the marketplace is clearly being pursued, the public record shows ongoing development and staged deployment rather than final completion as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 03:51 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple 2025-2026 reports describe an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 401) effort to stand up an online marketplace and related data-sharing mechanisms for counter-UAS data, test results, and procurement options, with involvement from DHS, the FBI, and other agencies. The material suggests the marketplace is intended to streamline data access, user feedback, and purchasing so agencies can rapidly acquire suitable counter-UAS capabilities.
Progress evidence appears in a sequence of public reporting: Breaking Defense described an online marketplace being stood up under JIATF 401 with a stated goal of enabling rapid acquisition and cross-agency data sharing (Nov 17, 2025); Defense One reported the Pentagon pursuing a common network/C2 integration for counter-UAS systems within the marketplace scope (Dec 19, 2025); Military.com noted an Army-led effort to sort, test, and share information about counter-UAS systems via a federal digital marketplace (Dec 8, 2025). These pieces collectively indicate ongoing development and near-term milestones rather than a fully deployed, universally accessible system as of early 2026.
Reliability note: sources are trade and defense-media outlets closely covering
U.S. military acquisitions and interagency coordination. They consistently point to an ongoing effort with concrete milestones (integration of a common C2 framework, enterprise licenses, and interagency data-sharing pilots) rather than a completed, fully deployed marketplace. The DoD source article is inaccessible from this channel, but corroborating reporting from multiple reputable outlets supports the in-progress status.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 01:57 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting as of late 2025 indicates the effort is in the planning and development stage, with emphasis on creating a centralized marketplace that provides authoritative performance data and procurement pathways (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18; Unmanned Airspace, 2025-11-17). There is no evidence that the marketplace has been deployed or interagency partners currently have broad access to a completed data/feedback/procurement platform. Reports describe near-term priorities, testing coordination, and interagency collaboration rather than a live marketplace in operation (JIATF-401 updates cited in coverage; Unmanned Airspace meeting notes). Related procurement and data-sharing initiatives exist, but they appear as separate efforts or early components rather than a single deployed marketplace. Overall, the status appears to be progressing toward a marketplace, with concrete deployment not yet evidenced in publicly available sources.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 01:03 PMin_progress
Restatement of claim: Interagency and law enforcement partners are to access a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes data, user feedback, and validated procurement options, as part of JIATF 401’s counter-UAS initiatives. The marketplace is described as a centralized, digital platform to accompany a broader UAS marketplace and enable informed procurement across multiple agencies. The claim remains a planning and development objective with no published deployment date.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is planning the online marketplace and intends to provide authoritative performance data on c-UAS systems to aid selection. Leadership and coverage note ongoing planning activities, coordination with interagency partners, and the hosting of summits to test and evaluate platforms before adding them to the marketplace (Breaking Defense, Nov 2025).
Current status: There is no firm launch date or deployed system documented publicly as of January 2026. Reports emphasize development, testing, and procurement considerations rather than a completed product or partner access, suggesting continued in-progress work.
Milestones and milestones status: Planned milestones include a counter-UAS marketplace concurrent with a UAS marketplace, a multi-agency summit, and data-driven procurement data for users. However, concrete, date-specific milestones or a deployed access phase have not been publicly published.
Source reliability and context: Reputable defense-technology outlets (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov) report on statements by JIATF 401 leadership, indicating credible coverage of an ongoing development effort. The information reflects planning and piloting stages, with no verifiable deployment completed to date.
Overall assessment: Given the absence of a deployed system or access, the claim is best characterized as in_progress, with credible reporting of ongoing development and planning activities.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 10:04 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple credible outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and partner agencies are pursuing a digital marketplace to centralize testing data, performance information, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities. Nov 2025 coverage indicates ongoing planning and a shift toward an authoritative data-driven marketplace (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025).
Current status: As of January 12, 2026, there is no publicly confirmed deployment date or live access for interagency partners. Sources describe ongoing development, with emphasis on data centralization, testing information, and procurement guidance rather than an active, fully operational portal.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include the establishment and mandate of JIATF 401 to manage department-wide counter-UAS R&D and the plan to create a centralized hub for data, testing results, and procurement options. However, concrete deployment or access milestones have not been publicly announced.
Source reliability and context: Coverage from Breaking Defense and Military.com is focused on defense policy and program development, noting the marketplace is in development and not yet live. Defense.gov initially reported on the marketplace, but the accessible page could not be retrieved; corroborating reporting from independent defense outlets supports the described trajectory. The reporting treats the marketplace as an upcoming capability rather than a completed deployment.
Follow-up note: Given the evolving nature of defense acquisition programs, a follow-up should monitor official DoD communications or JIATF 401 statements for a definitive launch date and partner access announcements.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 08:21 AMin_progress
Restatement of claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: November 2025 reporting from
Breaking Defense confirms the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online c-UAS marketplace intended to provide authoritative data on system performance and to streamline procurement for DoD, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). Multiple follow-up outlets (ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025;
Army.mil, Nov 2025) corroborate the same objective and describe ongoing planning, testing coordination, and a planned c-UAS marketplace that accompanies a broader UAS marketplace.
Current status: As of January 12, 2026, there is clear intent and active development toward a centralized platform, but no public launch date or deployment milestone has been announced. The sources emphasize that the marketplace is still being stood up, with timelines contingent on interagency coordination, testing, and funding decisions (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Army.mil 2025-11-13).
Milestones and dates: Key near-term events cited include planned interagency testing, a c-UAS marketplace data framework, and a summit to align partners (Army.mil 2025-11-13; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17). No completion date is provided, and officials note that funding and procurement processes are still being arranged (ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18).
Source reliability and balance: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Army.mil, and ExecutiveGov provides consistent, government-reported details on the marketplace concept and status. While all outlets acknowledge ongoing development and lacked a fixed deployment date, they collectively support the conclusion that the marketplace remains in development rather than completed.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 04:09 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, multiple outlets reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planned and began outlining a digital marketplace to sort, test, and share information on counter-drone systems, with Brig. Gen. Matt Ross characterizing it as a central, integrated procurement hub (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Current status: By January 2026, reporting describes ongoing development and planning rather than a fully deployed, nationwide live hub. Agencies are building data libraries, testing frameworks, and procurement pathways, with no confirmed launch date.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones include the November 2025 announcements of the marketplace concept and related policy/testing work, plus a December 2025 Military.com article detailing ongoing development and the absence of a firm launch date. These indicate meaningful progress but not completion.
Reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and Military.com is consistent about a developing program led by the Army/JIATF 401, though none of the sources confirm a final, universal deployment at this time.
Follow-up note: A check-in on deployment status and agency access in the coming quarter would verify whether the marketplace has achieved broad access and completed procurement integrations.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 02:25 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is in planning and development, with JIATF 401 outlining the concept and intent rather than a deployed product. Multiple reputable outlets note the marketplace is intended to coincide with a broader UAS marketplace and will provide authoritative data to help users select counter-UAS tools, but no launch date or completion milestone has been announced. Available sources describe ongoing coordination and testing rather than a finished, deployed system.
Update · Jan 13, 2026, 12:16 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Public DoD sources indicate ongoing efforts to strengthen counter-UAS capabilities through organizational realignments, notably the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) in 2025 to accelerate testing, integration, and fielding of C-sUAS capabilities. DoD documents from 2025 also reference centralized data and procurement considerations as part of broader counter-UAS initiatives, but do not provide a published, deployed marketplace.
Completion status: There is no publicly available evidence that a distinct counter-UAS marketplace has been developed and deployed as of January 12, 2026. What exists are organizational steps (JIATF 401) and strategy-level statements; a dedicated centralized marketplace remains unconfirmed in official public records.
Milestones and dates: August 28, 2025—Establishment of JIATF 401 per DoD documents; September 5, 2025—defense memo signaling transition to Army leadership for fast-tracking counter-UAS efforts. These items show progress in governance and acquisition pace but not the marketplace deployment itself.
Source reliability note: Core facts derive from Defense Department materials (e.g., PDFs and official announcements) and are considered authoritative for DoD organizational changes and strategy. Additional outlets cited in search results appear as secondary reporting and are not used as primary sources.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 10:21 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is planning an online UAS and counter-UAS marketplace designed to provide authoritative performance data and streamline procurement for interagency users (Breaking Defense, 2025-11).
Current status vs. completion: There is broad agreement that the marketplace is in development and coordination stages, with no announced launch date or deployed access yet, per multiple outlets (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-12).
Milestones and dates: The emphasis remains on testing, evaluation, and governance activities, including a planned c-UAS summit and work toward a common data and procurement framework rather than a live, user-accessible deployment (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; Defense One, 2025-12).
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 08:18 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reporting from November–December 2025 indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online counter-UAS marketplace and related testing/data-sharing framework, including a planned c-UAS summit and policy/guidance development; no launch date has been announced (Breaking Defense).
Current status: The marketplace concept is described as in development with ongoing testing, data standardization, and procurement-policy activities, but there is no public confirmation of deployment or user access being enabled as of early January 2026.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include a November 2025 interagency summit and ongoing demonstrations/tests of components; the defense press consistently notes that a launch date is undetermined and that the effort remains in planning and phased execution (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Source reliability note: The sources cited are defense-focused outlets that report on
U.S. government task forces and procurement efforts; they acknowledge the marketplace as a planned capability with no public deployment date, and do not rely on unverified or low-quality outlets.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 06:28 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms an Army-led effort to establish an online counter-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, intended to provide authoritative performance data and procurement access for government customers. As of late 2025, the initiative is described as in development with no firm launch date announced, indicating progress but not completion.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 03:53 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing development led by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS and related data, with emphasis on providing authoritative performance data and procurement options. No launch date or deployment has been announced, and multiple outlets describe the effort as underway rather than completed (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; Federal News Network). Progress is described as planning, data collection, and organizational setup, with future testing and potential pilot activities anticipated. The reliability of sources is high for defense policy coverage, though timelines remain unspecified, reflecting the early stage of implementation.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 01:56 PMin_progress
The claim asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting confirms that a digital marketplace component is a core objective of the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and that multiple outlets frame it as a planned, not-yet-launched capability (Breaking Defense, 2025; Defense One, 2025; MeriTalk, 2025).
Evidence describes the marketplace as part of an broader interagency effort to integrate testing, evaluation, procurement, and policy for counter-UAS (C-UAS). Brig. Gen. Matt Ross characterizes the marketplace as a central system to test and evaluate vendor capabilities, provide feedback, and streamline procurement, but no firm launch date has been announced (Breaking Defense, 2025; Defense One, 2025).
Independent reporting indicates the initiative includes data sharing among agencies, access to test results and operational feedback, and a centralized procurement pathway to accelerate fielding. MeriTalk notes the marketplace would allow interagency access to test data, feedback, and validated procurement options, while Defense One highlights plans to accompany a UAS marketplace with C-UAS policy and testing activities (MeriTalk, 2025; Defense One, 2025).
Overall, the current public record shows progress in planning and policy alignment for a counter-UAS marketplace, with leadership stating intent and milestones (summits, testing, policy development) but without a published deployment date. The reliability of sources is high, with coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and
MeriTalk, all citing the same programmatic thread and official statements (2025–2026). The initiative remains in planning and development phases, not a completed deployment as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 12:03 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting shows an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 401) initiative to stand up an online marketplace and a common data/procurement framework, but with no published deployment date.
Multiple outlets indicate the effort is in planning, testing, and standardization phases rather than completed implementation (e.g., Breaking Defense and Defense One coverage in November–December 2025).
The depicted milestones include aggregating test data and validated procurement options, and enabling interagency access, yet explicit deployment and operational access across agencies appear not yet realized as of early 2026.
Reliability notes: coverage from defense-focused outlets with access to military officials suggests ongoing work and no formal launch date has been announced; overall, sources describe progress toward a marketplace rather than a finalized, deployed system.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 10:12 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Reporting indicates that Army-led and interagency efforts are actively pursuing an online/digital marketplace to centralize data on C-UAS performance and provide procurement access for federal, state, and local partners. Multiple outlets describe this as a work in progress rather than a deployed system, with emphasis on coordinating data sharing and purchase pathways. The timeline remains undefined, with no publicly announced launch date as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 07:42 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms ongoing efforts led by JIATF 401 to create an online marketplace as part of a broader counter-UAS ecosystem, but no deployment has been announced and a firm launch date is not yet provided.
Evidence of progress includes multiple 2025 reports detailing the Army-led initiative and the task force’s planned milestones. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) describe the marketplace as in development, with statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross about providing authoritative data on system performance and enabling users to select appropriate tools.
The Army’s Nov 13, 2025 article reiterates three focus areas for JIATF-401, including a counter-UAS marketplace for capability sharing and testing data, and notes a future interagency summit to advance testing and evaluation.
Regarding completion status, the sources consistently indicate there is no launch date or fixed number of systems at the outset, and that funding would come from multiple budget sources, reinforcing a work-in-progress status.
Dates and milestones cited include November 2025 discussions about a digital marketplace and a planned counter-UAS summit to outline testing and evaluation plans. The reporting frames the marketplace as an evolving capability rather than a finished product.
Source reliability is solid for this topic, with Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and
Army.mil providing contemporaneous coverage of DoD counter-UAS efforts and interagency coordination.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 03:45 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public reporting confirms ongoing efforts to create an online, interoperable marketplace intended to provide authoritative test data, performance feedback, and procurement pathways for counter-UAS capabilities. The exact deployment date for the marketplace remains undisclosed, and no definitive launch milestone has been publicly announced.
Evidence of progress includes statements from
U.S. military and interagency leaders describing the marketplace concept and its intended role. November 2025 briefings reference establishing a marketplace to streamline access to counter-UAS capabilities and standardize data and evaluation for vendors. Subsequent defense-media coverage reiterates the concept without reporting a fully operational launch.
There is no public record of a completed deployment or a formal, fully functional access portal being available to all interagency partners. Sources emphasize that the effort is transition-focused rather than a finished system, with vehicles and processes in place to procure counter-UAS tools while the marketplace itself remains in development.
Key milestones cited include cross-agency alignment, planned testing and evaluation standards, and demonstrations aimed at ensuring plug-and-play interoperability of sensors and effectors. Concrete completion dates or rollout stages have not been disclosed publicly, signaling an ongoing development process.
Source reliability is moderate to high, drawing from official military briefings and defense-media coverage that track counter-UAS policy and marketplace concepts. Given the absence of a publicly announced deployment, readers should treat the marketplace as an ongoing program with phased development rather than a completed system.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 01:45 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Nov 2025 reports from Breaking Defense and Defense One describe the Army-led JIATF 401 planning an online marketplace and a broader UAS marketplace, including data sharing, test results, and procurement pathways. By December 2025,
MeriTalk notes ongoing interagency-law enforcement engagement and the inclusion of data access/validation components as part of the marketplace concept. These sources confirm intent and initial steps but do not indicate a deployed, operational platform.
Current status: There is no publicly disclosed deployment date or completed launch. The leadership statements emphasize planning, policy development, and testing/evaluation coordination, with a summit planned and procurement funding to be sourced from multiple pools. Completion condition remains unmet, as of the latest reporting in Nov–Dec 2025 and the current date.
Milestones and dates: November 14–17, 2025: task-force statements about a digital marketplace and centralized procurement; December 11–22, 2025: interagency/public safety partner discussions and continued progress on shared data and procurement pathways. These milestones establish intention and progress but stop short of a deployed platform.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and MeriTalk is consistent on the marketplace concept and progress updates; none of these sources show a live deployment. They are reputable defense and technology outlets, strengthening the neutrality and factual basis of the timeline while indicating ongoing development rather than completion.
Update · Jan 12, 2026, 12:09 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is led by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) and is focused on creating a centralized online marketplace and related data access for testing, evaluation, and procurement.
Progress evidence: Multiple reputable outlets in late 2025 reported on the initiative. November 17, 2025,
Breaking Defense cited Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing an online C-UAS marketplace intended to consolidate procurement and provide authoritative data on platform performance. December 19, 2025, Defense One highlighted efforts toward a common network/C2 framework to support interoperability across counter-UAS systems and marketplace data, indicating ongoing development and integration work.
Current status and milestones: Sources indicate the marketplace concept is being stood up and tested, with plans to host interagency summits and testing to evaluate platforms before inclusion. There is no published final deployment date; officials stress the marketplace remains under development and requires enterprise licensing and data integration across agencies.
Source reliability note: Coverage from Breaking Defense and Defense One relies on statements from JIATF 401 leadership and Defense Department reporting, which are credible within defense-technical journalism but should be read in the context of ongoing program development and related procurement considerations.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 09:50 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The interagency framework aims to develop a central counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Reporting from late 2025 indicates the effort is moving toward a digital marketplace rather than a fully deployed system. Sources describe Army-led and joint interagency efforts to stand up an online procurement and data-sharing portal, with plans for a summit and formal testing/assessment activities to define capabilities and governance (e.g., Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, CUAS Hub).
Current status: The marketplace appears to be in the planning and development phase, with milestones such as test data access, user feedback integration, and procurement pathways being defined rather than widely operational. No public source as of early 2026 confirms full deployment or interagency access across partners.
Reliability note: Coverage from defense-focused outlets and government-affiliated outlets supports a development trajectory rather than a completed product. While multiple reports cite the intended features (data access, feedback, procurement), none confirm final deployment; the trend is consistent with an ongoing program phase rather than completion.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 07:44 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes an effort to develop a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: In late 2025, multiple reputable defense outlets reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online marketplace for counter-UAS and related UAS data. Officials described integrating testing data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options as core components (
Breaking Defense; Defense One; Defense News Digest).
Status and completion assessment: As of January 11, 2026, no launch date has been announced and multiple sources indicate the marketplace remains in the planning and testing phase, with policy development and candidate demonstrations anticipated before deployment (Defense One; Defense News;
Breaking Defense). The claim’s completion condition—marketplace developed, deployed, and accessible to interagency partners—has not yet been met.
Dates and milestones: Public reporting highlights November 2025 as a period of announced intent to establish the marketplace, with upcoming counter-UAS summits and continued testing to shape procurement pathways (Breaking Defense; Defense One). No firm deployment date has been disclosed, and sources emphasize ongoing work to align evaluation metrics and vendor testing across agencies.
Reliability of sources: The reporting comes from established defense-facing outlets with contemporaneous coverage of JIATF 401 activities and marketplace planning. While the articles describe credible organizational intent and ongoing work, they do not show a ready-to-use deployment, reinforcing the conclusion that the effort is in progress rather than complete.
Overall assessment: The claim is currently best characterized as in_progress, with concrete plans and stakeholder alignment underway but no deployed, accessible marketplace as of the date.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 06:08 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Status: Public reporting in November 2025 described an online c-UAS marketplace as a planned central hub for data, testing results, and procurement guidance, with no launch date identified (BD, 2025-11-17 to 2025-11-18). Subsequent coverage noted ongoing development and coordination efforts, including a planned summit to test and evaluate candidate systems before adding them to the marketplace (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). In December 2025, Military.com reported that the Army-led marketplace had launched; this contrasts with earlier reporting that there was no launch date, suggesting possible partial or phased deployment or divergent interpretations of “launch.” (Military.com, 2025-12-08; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 03:46 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. DoD and Army‑led reporting from late 2025 indicates ongoing efforts to create an online marketplace and related data/forensics sharing mechanisms, with a focus on capability sharing, testing data, and procurement access (JIATF 401 briefings; Army/DoD coverage). Evidence shows momentum and planning rather than a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of early 2026 (Nov 2025 reporting).
Key progress is framed around leadership public statements that the marketplace would accelerate procurement and testing, with planned interagency summits to outline implementation. Reports describe the marketplace as accompanying a broader UAS marketplace and hosting authoritative test data and user feedback to guide purchases.
Status indicates no definitive deployment date has been announced. Communications from the Army and DoD emphasize ongoing development, testing coordination, and interagency collaboration, but stop short of confirming a live, end‑to‑end marketplace accessible to all partners (
Army.mil;
Breaking Defense).
Milestones and dates show activity in November 2025, including announcements of a digital marketplace concept, testing and evaluation frameworks, and planning for interagency summits. There is no disclosed completion date or deployment milestone.
Reliability note: reporting derives from DoD‑oriented outlets and defense trade press (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Army.mil) with consistent descriptions of objectives and timelines. These sources document progress and planning but do not confirm full deployment as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 01:49 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting confirms the effort is led by the Army with JIATF 401 and involves plans to create a centralized digital marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement options. There is no published deployment date or confirmed full deployment as of early 2026, so progress is ongoing and incomplete. Reported milestones include plans for data sharing, evaluation results, and interagency collaboration forums, but a definitive launch remains unscheduled.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 11:56 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Current evidence indicates the marketplace is being planned and piloted under JIATF 401, with statements that an online marketplace will facilitate testing, evaluation, and procurement, but no deployment date has been announced. Reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) confirms ongoing work, a planned counter-UAS summit, and policy/guidance development; there is no indication of a completed or deployed portal yet. Available coverage notes the marketplace is part of broader efforts to test components and standardize acquisition across agencies, rather than a finished, universally accessible system.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 10:04 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence indicates the effort is led by JIATF 401 and framed as an online marketplace to purchase tested counter-UAS gear, provide authoritative data, and collect user feedback. Public reporting from late 2025 describes ongoing planning and no firm launch date.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 07:46 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting around December 2025 described a broader interagency effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities and to create a centralized mechanism for data, user feedback, and procurement options as part of a layered defense strategy. As of 2026-01-10, there is no independently verifiable confirmation of a deployed marketplace or a published launch milestone accessible through widely trusted public channels. Available materials are sparse and originate from sources with limited reliability or access to the original DoD article; a direct Defense Department page could not be loaded for confirmation. The best-supported assessment is that the marketplace concept appears to be in-progress or in early development, with no corroborated deployment date or access details available in high-quality, citable sources at this time.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 03:45 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is underway, led by an Army-led joint task force and positioned as a centralized online marketplace for tested, vetted counter-UAS components and data.
Evidence of progress includes public briefings and coverage describing the marketplace as a work in progress, with officials signaling plans to stand up a central procurement and data-access platform for multiple agencies. Defense One reported in November 2025 that the Joint Interagency Task Force is pursuing an online marketplace for installation commanders and federal partners to purchase tested counter-UAS gear.
There is no public confirmation of a final deployment or full access for interagency and law enforcement partners as of early 2026. Multiple pieces note the initiative’s intent to enable data access, user feedback, and procurement options, but completion dates were not published and official rollout timelines were not publicly announced.
Additional reporting through late 2025 emphasizes ongoing development rather than completion, including planning milestones and anticipated governance by a centralized marketplace. While some outlets described a near-term summit or demonstrations, none cited a formal launch or full partner access as completed.
Source reliability: Defense One and established defense-trade outlets provide consistent descriptions of the marketplace concept and development status; no publicly accessible DoD press release confirming deployment was found, suggesting the status remains in_progress.
Update · Jan 11, 2026, 01:46 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. After reviewing public reporting, the effort is clearly underway but has not been definitively deployed across the interagency network as of early January 2026.
Official defense communications describe the marketplace as a planned, central hub being built by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) with a focus on testing, data sharing, and streamlined procurement, but without a firm live date. Recent reporting indicates the effort has moved from planning to active development, with multiple outlets noting that a launch date had not yet been set as of late 2025.
Some outlets, such as Military.com, suggested a marketplace launch or near-term rollout, but there is inconsistency among reputable sources on whether the marketplace was actually live for interagency access by January 2026. The strongest, corroborated framing remains that the marketplace is in progress and awaiting deployment.
Reliability note: Defense Department-affiliated outlets (Defense.gov, Breaking Defense, Defense One) describe ongoing development without asserting a firm go-live date. The public record as of 2026-01-10 supports an in-progress status with a future deployment timeline.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 11:53 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is architecting an online, centralized marketplace to facilitate purchasing counter-UAS capabilities and host authoritative performance data, with interagency access described as a core goal. Public defense press coverage in late 2025 framed the marketplace as an ongoing development rather than a deployed system.
Current status and milestones: As of early 2026, there is no public confirmation of a deployed marketplace or a firm launch date. Coverage notes ongoing planning, testing, and interagency coordination, with funding and procurement decisions pending and no finalized deployment milestone announced.
Reliability and scope of sources: The most concrete public statements come from defense-press reporting; no definitive Defense Department release confirming deployment has been located due to access limits to the source article. The coverage consistently characterizes the marketplace as a staged capability under development rather than an active, fully deployed system.
Follow-up: 2026-06-01
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 09:54 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is in the design and planning phase, with the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) pursuing an online marketplace to streamline procurement and data access. There is no evidence yet of a deployed, fully operational marketplace.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 07:44 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The initiative is described as a centralized online marketplace intended to host authoritative performance data, test results, and validated procurement options for counter-UAS (C-UAS) solutions.
Evidence of progress: Multiple reputable defense press outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS and for UAS, with the goal of enabling interagency access to tested capabilities and procurement pathways. Breaking Defense notes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross stating the marketplace will provide authoritative data on system performance and will allow users to select appropriate tools, though no launch date was announced (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). Defense One similarly describes the objective as an online marketplace to purchase tested and vetted counter-drone components (Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Current status and milestones: As of November–December 2025 reporting, the marketplace existed as a planned capability with no fixed deployment date. Reports emphasize policy development, testing and evaluation integration, and a later summit to outline implementation rather than a completed, deployed system (Defense One; Breaking Defense). Executive Gov and Defense One summarize ongoing work to stand up the marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with procurement and testing governance to be established, rather than a finished product (Executive Gov, Defense One).
Reliability of sources: The most substantive coverage comes from industry-centric defense outlets that quote military leadership and describe the initiative’s intent, governance, and timelines. The Defense Department’s own article is inaccessible here, but the corroborating reporting from these outlets provides a consistent narrative of an in-progress marketplace project with no explicit deployment date (Breaking Defense; Defense One).
Conclusion: The counter-UAS marketplace described in the article remains in the development phase with no deployed, fully accessible platform as of early 2026. Progress is attested by leadership statements and near-term planning, including testing, evaluation, and a forthcoming governance framework, but the completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access”—has not yet been achieved.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 06:08 PMin_progress
The claim concerns a counter-UAS marketplace that would centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple outlets report the marketplace is planned and under development, not yet deployed. The goal is to provide authoritative performance data and a streamlined procurement path for interagency customers (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 03:45 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace was being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Aug 2025 established Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) to lead counter-UAS efforts and stand up an interagency marketplace framework. By late 2025, multiple outlets reported plans and early deployment of a digital, centralized marketplace under JIATF 401 intended to sort, test, share information, and provide procurement access to interagency partners.
Current status: As of January 2026, sources indicate the marketplace capability has been stood up and deployed with initial access and data-sharing provisions, with ongoing expansion, data standardization, and procurement workflows described as continuing work.
Reliability note: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and trade press (Breaking Defense, Military.com, ExecutiveGov, War.gov, Defense One). One DoD link was inaccessible, but the corroborating reporting supports a deployment and ongoing maturation rather than a completed, static product.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 01:49 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 has publicly described plans for an online marketplace to consolidate access to tested counter-UAS components, data, and procurement options for interagency partners. DoD communications and multiple defense press reports in late 2024–2025 framed the marketplace as a work-in-progress rather than a deployed product, noting ongoing development and the absence of a firm launch date.
Status against completion: There is no public evidence of deployment or formal access by interagency partners to a live portal. Reports through November–December 2025 characterize the effort as ongoing with milestones to be defined, not completed. The completion condition (fully deployed marketplace with active interagency access) has not been met as of the current date.
Dates and milestones: Initial concept and planning were documented in 2024–2025 with recurring mentions of 2025 coverage confirming ongoing development; no concrete launch date has been announced by officials. The most reliable updates indicate continued build rather than completion.
Reliability note: Sources include Defense One and Breaking Defense reporting, along with Globalsecurity.org and a DoD article summary. These outlets are considered reputable for defense topics, though they describe ongoing development rather than a finished deployment; corroboration with official DoD/JIATF 401 updates would strengthen certainty.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 12:02 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple outlets report that JIATF 401 is pursuing a central online marketplace to streamline access to counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement pathways. GlobalSecurity’s Dec 18, 2025 article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort, while
Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) notes planning and lack of a fixed launch date for the digital marketplace. The reporting indicates ongoing development and coordination with DLA and law enforcement partners.
Completion status: There is no published completion or deployment date. The sources describe planning, data integration concepts, and procurement pathways, but do not indicate that the marketplace is deployed or publicly accessible. In Breaking Defense and GlobalSecurity wording, officials talk about the intent and structure without a concrete launch milestone.
Dates and milestones: Key public mentions include a December 11–18, 2025 window highlighting interagency coordination and the marketplace concept during a law enforcement symposium, and November 17, 2025 statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross about establishing the marketplace. These establish momentum but not final completion.
Source reliability: The assessment relies on defense-focused outlets (GlobalSecurity, Breaking Defense) and industry coverage. GlobalSecurity provides detailed official-leaning narrative of JIATF 401’s role; Breaking Defense offers direct quotes from the task force leadership. Neither source appears to be low-quality; cross-reporting helps corroborate the marketplace concept, though neither confirms deployment.
Overall assessment: The claim is best described as in_progress, reflecting active development and planning with no deployed, interagency-accessible marketplace reported to date.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 09:57 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Multiple defense and defense-media outlets report that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) is actively pursuing an online digital marketplace for counter-UAS, intended to consolidate data on system performance, user feedback, and procurement options. Reports mention a dedicated marketplace to accompany an Army UAS marketplace, with leadership describing plans to provide authoritative data and a range of vendor options. Notably, official and industry reporting point to ongoing testing, policy alignment, and scheduled events to shape requirements before potential deployment.
Current status: As of December 2025, the marketplace remains in the planning and development phase, with no publicly announced launch date. Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 2025) describe the marketplace as planned but not yet launched, and indicate coordination with interagency partners and testing events prior to deployment. The Army’s December 2025 update highlights progress on rapid integration and a 100-day operational period, but does not confirm full deployment of the marketplace.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include: (1) creation and stand-up of JIATF-401 in 2025 to consolidate counter-sUAS efforts; (2) announcements in November 2025 about an online marketplace; (3) a December 2025 Army report noting a 100-day operational period and ongoing capability deliveries to the homeland and border areas. A future deployment date or procurement timescale is not specified in the sources reviewed.
Source reliability note: Primary details derive from Army- and DoD-linked outlets and reputable defense outlets. These sources consistently describe ongoing development, planning, and testing rather than a completed deployment.
Follow-up plan: Monitor for an official update announcing a marketplace launch, user access expansions, or formal procurement pilot programs. If available, track statements on deployment dates, participating agencies, and demonstrated data curation capabilities.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 07:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, operational user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple outlets reported in November 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online marketplace for counter-UAS technology to support interagency and DHS/FBI/local law enforcement procurement. Statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross indicated the marketplace and a related UAS marketplace would provide authoritative data, performance insights, and procurement pathways, with no fixed launch date announced at the time. Follow-up coverage noted a planned c-UAS summit to refine testing, evaluation, and inclusion criteria for the marketplace.
Current status and milestones: As of early January 2026, reporting confirms the initiative remained in the planning and development phase, with no deployed system and no publicly disclosed deployment date. Key milestones referenced include the November 2025 announcements, the concurrent UAS marketplace effort, and a forthcoming c-UAS summit to advance testing and partner coordination. Independent coverage emphasizes ongoing policy discussions and potential acquisition authorities under JIATF 401, rather than a completed marketplace.
Source reliability and context: Reports from Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, Defense One, and CUASHub consistently frame the marketplace as a work in progress tied to JIATF 401’s broader counter-UAS governance. These sources are considered reputable within defense journalism, though formal DoD confirmation or a live portal launch had not been published by January 2026. The overall picture suggests a structured, in-progress initiative rather than a finished, deployed product.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 05:10 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple public reports confirm the initiative is real and led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, with a focus on testing, evaluation, and centralized purchasing for counter-UAS capabilities. As of December 2025 and January 2026, no deployed marketplace has been announced; leaders described a marketplace concept and ongoing efforts rather than a live, fully functional platform.
Evidence indicates progress toward concrete steps rather than completion. November 2025 reporting notes that a counter-UAS summit and policy/testing framework were being organized, with a launch date for the marketplace still to be determined (and no public deployment yet). Defense-focused outlets and government-affiliated coverage describe ongoing testing, vendor feedback loops, and a synchronized evaluation model across agencies as prerequisites before any deployment.
Official defense reporting highlights the marketplace as part of broader efforts to standardize procurement, testing, and interoperability across federal agencies and the military. Articles from Defense One and Military.com describe the initiative as an “online marketplace” under JIATF 401, with a plan to integrate vendor capabilities, feedback, and current problem sets, but stop short of announcing actual deployment. A November 2025 summit and subsequent 100-day milestones suggest momentum without a completed product.
Reliability note: coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Military.com) and official DoD press material referencing JIATF 401 and related activities. While these sources are reputable within defense reporting, they frame the marketplace as an ongoing program with tentative timelines and a still-to-be-determined launch date, rather than a finished, deployed system. The current status aligns with an in_progress assessment given the absence of a deployed platform as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 02:00 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options. Current reporting indicates this marketplace is a foundational element of a broader counter-drone effort led by JIATF 401 and partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense.gov (Dec 18, 2025) describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort and notes ongoing integration work with interagency partners, including data access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and procurement options. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) confirms the Army-led task force plans to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech, emphasizing data on system performance and a range of vendor options.
Status assessment: There is no published completion date and officials have not announced a launch or deployment milestone. Sources describe planning, data interoperability objectives, and procurement pathways, but indicate the marketplace is not yet deployed and remains in development or early implementation stages.
Dates and milestones: December 2025 Defense release highlights a centralized marketplace and interagency data access as its core aim. November 2025 reporting notes there is no hard launch date and that testing/evaluation pathways are being established before adding platforms to the marketplace.
Source reliability note: Official Defense.gov publication provides primary confirmation of the marketplace concept and its strategic role. Independent outlets such as Breaking Defense corroborate the planning timeline and lack of a fixed deployment date, offering contextual support while aligning with official statements.
Update · Jan 10, 2026, 12:12 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In late 2025, reports described the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 planning an online marketplace to streamline procurement of counter-UAS equipment and to provide performance data and user feedback. Coverage indicates planning and coordination, with no published deployment date.
Current status: There is no verified public deployment or active access for interagency partners as of early 2026. Analyses consistently describe an ongoing development effort rather than a live, operational portal.
Milestones and reliability: Key reporting from November–December 2025 highlights announced intentions and coordination activities, but lacks a firm launch timeline or completion confirmation. The sources cited are defense-focused outlets and government-affiliated reporting, which generally track progress without endorsing unverified claims.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 10:19 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD reporting from December 2025 describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the JIATF 401 effort, with efforts to integrate DOW test data, operational feedback, and procurement pathways into a centralized platform. Seapower Magazine notes a December 2025 summit where federal agencies advanced plans for a three-year counter-UAS collaboration and highlighted access to purchasing through FEMA/DLA pathways for
World Cup security preparations.
Current status: The marketplace appears to be in the planning and integration phase rather than deployed for broad interagency access as of early January 2026. Multiple outlets cite ongoing coordination, data-sharing goals, and procurement scaffolding, with emphasis on testing, interoperability, and policy/guidance development rather than a live, nationwide marketplace.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones include the December 2025 JIATF 401 symposium and related interagency meetings, plus ongoing coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to enable procurement channels for tested counter-UAS capabilities in support of 2026 events. There is no firm completion date or deployment rollout announced, only a multi-year, phased effort.
Source reliability: The Department of Defense’s official DoD News release provides primary, contemporaneous detail about the marketplace concept and its role within JIATF 401. Seapower Magazine and Breaking Defense contextualize the broader interagency coordination and procurement access efforts; all sources are defense-focused outlets with editorial standards that favor verifiable, policy-relevant information.
Follow-up: Monitor DoD News, Seapower Magazine, Breaking Defense, and Executive Government updates for a deployed marketplace and demonstrable interagency access milestones.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 07:51 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence and progress: The Defense Department article from December 18, 2025 states that the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is at the center of an effort to create a counter-UAS marketplace, described as a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) confirms the Army-led task force plans a digital marketplace and notes ongoing work, with no fixed launch date announced. The Defense Department piece also highlights collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage procurement pathways and a $250 million FEMA/agency funding approach to enable fielding, signaling pathway development rather than a ready-to-use deployment.
Status and milestones: As of late 2025, the marketplace was described as being developed and not yet deployed, with leadership emphasizing integration of data, sensors, and procurement processes rather than a completed product. The December symposium and related reporting indicate ongoing interagency coordination, testing, and planning for future fielding, rather than a finished, widely accessible platform. No completion date was provided, and sources note deployment depends on further testing, procurement pathways, and funding disbursement.
Reliability and sources: The primary source is a Defense Department news story (Dec. 18, 2025), which explicitly describes the marketplace as a cornerstone under development. Secondary coverage from Breaking Defense (Nov. 17, 2025) corroborates the plan without asserting a launch date. Cross-checks with additional defense-coverage outlets reinforce the interpretation that progress is underway but not complete as of early 2026. Given the stated aims and interagency collaboration, the reporting appears to reflect a work-in-progress rather than a finished system.
Context and interpretation: The marketplace concept is aligned with the broader JIATF 401 mission to integrate interagency capabilities for counter-UAS and to streamline data sharing and procurement for law enforcement partners. While promising, the project hinges on establishing data standards, interoperability, and funded procurement channels before a deployable platform exists for partners. Until a launch or deployment milestone is publicly announced, the status should be considered ongoing development rather than complete implementation.
Follow-up note: If new official deployment milestones or procurement awards are announced, update with concrete dates and user-access details.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 06:19 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting through late 2025 indicates planning and exploratory work led by the Army's Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) to stand up such a marketplace, rather than its full deployment (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Evidence to date shows ongoing efforts to define scope, test, and evaluate counter-UAS solutions before (and if) they are added to a marketplace, with events like a planned counter-UAS summit to coordinate interagency testing; no firm launch date has been disclosed (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
By December 2025, reports described the establishment of JIATF 401 and its broader mission to accelerate acquisition and interoperability of counter-UAS capabilities, but they did not confirm a deployed centralized marketplace or confirmed interagency access to data and procurement tools (Military.com, 2025-12-08; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Reliability note: sources cited are specialized defense outlets and mainstream defense-news aggregators; none evidence a deployed, fully functional marketplace by January 2026. The reporting consistently frames the marketplace as a planned, gradual capability rather than a completed system (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 03:55 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. DoD reporting confirms that a central counter-UAS marketplace is a core component of the effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, intended to provide access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options (JIATF 401, 4364049; Defense.gov).
Progress to date indicates ongoing development and planning rather than a deployed, end-to-end system. No firm deployment date is announced in official statements (Defense.gov, 4364049).
Evidence of concrete steps includes the December 2025 defense story detailing the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense, with emphasis on interoperability and rapid access to data and procurement pathways (Defense.gov, 4364049). Additionally, 2025 reporting from third-party outlets describes ongoing efforts to stand up a digital marketplace and to align interagency procurement processes and testing data, but notes that launch timelines and the number of available systems had not been finalized (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
This suggests the initiative is moving from concept to implementation phases, not yet fully deployed. The lack of a published completion date reinforces that the project remains in progress rather than complete.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 01:55 PMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department article (Dec 18, 2025) describes JIATF 401’s efforts and identifies a counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of the program, designed to provide access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Executive reporting (Nov 2025) indicates planning for an online marketplace aligned with interagency procurement and testing activities, with coordination across DoD components and the Defense Logistics Agency. The Army–led initiative emphasizes integrating sensors, data, and contracting pathways to accelerate fielding, but stops short of a launch date.
Current status against completion conditions: There is clear intent and ongoing development, including interagency coordination, testing events, and facilitation of procurement pathways, but no deployed marketplace and no announced deployment date. The Defense article notes ongoing integration and a push to leverage FEMA grant funding and DLA contracting support, implying continued progress rather than completion. Independent coverage corroborates a roadmap and active workstreams without confirming full deployment.
Reliability note: Sources are official DoD communications and reputable trade/gov-coverage outlets (Defense.gov, ExecutiveGov). They collectively indicate ongoing development with milestones around symposiums, interagency collaboration, and procurement pathways, but no definitive deployment date as of early 2026. The framing remains consistent with an in-progress effort rather than a completed system.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 12:10 PMin_progress
The claim asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The December 18, 2025 Defense Department article identifies a centralized counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 initiative, intended to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency partners. Independent defense-focused outlets in late 2025 corroborate the initiative as a digital marketplace under development, designed to provide authoritative performance data, user feedback, and vetted procurement pathways for
U.S. agencies and installations. Taken together, the claim reflects active development and planning, with deployment not described as complete in the sources to date.
There is no evidence in the cited material that the marketplace has been deployed nationwide or that interagency partners have universal access yet; sources describe ongoing stand-up efforts, integration with logistics contracting, and planned use cases for events such as
the 2026 World Cup and future safeguards. Overall, the available reporting indicates progress toward a centralized marketplace, but completion and broad deployment remain in progress beyond December 2025, with no definitive completion date announced by the cited sources.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 10:08 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Department of Defense communications from December 2025 describe the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401’s efforts, with DOW and interagency partners working to integrate data access, testing feedback, and validated procurement pathways. Independent reporting in November 2025 outlined the plan to stand up an online marketplace and related governance for testing, evaluation, and rapid procurement (no launch date yet).
Current status vs. completion: There is clear intent and ongoing development, but no documented deployment or formal completion as of early January 2026. Public statements indicate ongoing integration work, policy development, and a planned summit to advance implementation; a specific launch date has not been announced by the task force.
Source reliability note: Primary information comes from Defense Department News (Dec 18, 2025) and defense industry reporting (Nov 2025) that cite JIATF 401 leadership and plans for a marketplace and procurement pathway. These sources describe progress without claiming full deployment, aligning with the completion condition not yet met.
Synthesis on sources: The Defense Department release provides official framing, while Defense One and Breaking Defense offer contemporaneous reporting on plans, governance, and near-term milestones for the marketplace.
Overall assessment: The claim is progressing toward deployment, but remains in_progress given the absence of a published deployment date or confirmed full access for interagency partners.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 07:49 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency data access, user feedback, and procurement options for law enforcement and other partners.
Progress evidence: Defense Department communications (Dec. 18, 2025) describe the marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense, with emphasis on testing data, user feedback, and validated procurement paths. Industry reporting in Nov. 2025 likewise framed the marketplace as a near-term objective under an Army-led effort to stand up a digital counter-UAS marketplace and related procurement channels. These sources indicate active planning, interagency coordination, and initial infrastructure development rather than a deployed production system.
Status assessment: There is explicit language that the marketplace is being developed and integrated with logistics and contracting capabilities (DLA/FEMA funding pathways) to accelerate fielding, but no evidence yet that a fully deployed, centralized portal exists for all interagency partners. Publicly available material describes milestones like policy alignment, testing, and readiness activities, with deployment and access to data/ procurement options framed as ongoing goals rather than completed deliverables.
Milestones and dates: December 2025 press material highlights a symposium and ongoing integration efforts heading toward a joint interagency data-sharing and procurement framework. November 2025 reporting underscores planning for a
U.S. homeland counter-UAS ecosystem in time for major events (
World Cup 2026, Olympics 2028). No firm completion date is published, and sources consistently frame progress as incremental and in-progress rather than complete.
Source reliability note: Primary details come from Defense Department releases (DEFENSE.gov) and contemporaneous defense press coverage (Breaking Defense, Defense One). These sources are pertinent for U.S. defense program status, though the marketplace itself remains described as a development effort with staged milestones rather than a fully operational system at this time.
Follow-up rationale: Given the ongoing nature of interagency integration and procurement streamlining, a future update should confirm deployment status, user access across agencies, and any formal data-sharing permissions or portal availability.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 04:38 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from official reporting indicates the marketplace is a central element of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense effort and is intended to provide access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options (DOW Dec. 18, 2025).
Progress and milestones: Joint Interagency Task Force 401 established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with a law enforcement symposium held Dec. 11, 2025 to advance interagency coordination. A Defense Department article dated Dec. 18, 2025 describes the counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort, designed to reduce risk and accelerate fielding timelines by providing interagency access to data and procurement options (DOW/DoD News, Dec. 2025).
Current status and completions: There is no public indication that the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed or fully completed as of early January 2026. DoD reporting frames the marketplace as in development and as a mechanism to be implemented alongside ongoing testing, data sharing, and procurement pathways (DoD News, Dec. 2025; GlobalSecurity.org summary of the same release).
Reliability and sources: Primary information comes from DoD News and Army-defendered DoD communications (Dec. 2025), supplemented by GlobalSecurity.org’s republication of the DoD piece. These sources collectively describe ongoing development, with explicit language that the marketplace is a foundational element rather than a completed system by early January 2026. Overall, sources are appropriate and consistent, though the DoD releases emphasize ongoing progress rather than a deployed end state.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 03:24 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes development of a counter-UAS (C-UAS) marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting from December 18, 2025 notes that the marketplace is a central element of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense approach, with cooperation among the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to enable procurement and data sharing. Multiple late-2025 outlets echoed that the marketplace was in planning or early implementation phases, and that interagency engagement and testing exercises were ongoing (e.g., symposiums and testing events in November–December 2025). The sources consistently describe the marketplace as a work in progress rather than a fully deployed system.
Current status against completion condition: There is no evidence in the cited materials that the marketplace has been deployed to full interagency access or that procurement options are universally available to partners. The Defense.gov piece characterizes the marketplace as a cornerstone and notes progress toward integration, but states broadly that goals include data access and validated procurement pathways rather than a completed, nationwide deployment.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the December 2025 interagency symposium on counter-UAS capabilities, the ongoing collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage a FEMA grant program (approximately $250 million), and the broader emphasis on preparing for events like
World Cup 2026. Breakout outlets in November–December 2025 described plans to stand up a digital marketplace and outline procurement pathways, but did not confirm full deployment by early 2026.
Source reliability note: The Defense Department’s official Defense News release (Dec 18, 2025) is the primary source for the claim and describes the initiative in official terms. Reporting from Breaking Defense and Military.com corroborates the progression from planning to early implementation but also emphasizes that the marketplace remained in development rather than fully operational. Overall, the coverage points to continued development with concrete governance and funding mechanisms in place, but no evidence of full deployment by January 8, 2026.
Update · Jan 09, 2026, 12:52 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress includes the formation of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities (established Aug 2025), and a December 2025 symposium highlighting the marketplace concept as a central pillar of the effort (DOW article, 2025-12-18; JBSA briefing, 2025-11 to 2025-12 reporting).
Additional progress signals come from DLA collaboration to provide contracting and logistics support for C-UAS, a dedicated $250 million FEMA grant pathway, and ongoing interagency coordination to accelerate fielding of C-UAS capabilities (Defense.gov piece, 2025-12-18; accompanying defense and interagency coverage).
Completion condition status: The marketplace has been articulated as a cornerstone and is in the process of development and integration, but no public completion or deployment date is stated; access by interagency partners remains contingent on implementation milestones and contracting progress (Defense.gov and allied reporting, late 2025).
Reliability note: Sources are
U.S. government communications (Defense.gov) and multiple defense-focused outlets reporting on interagency planning and exercises; these sources consistently frame the marketplace as a next-step capability rather than a finished product, indicating ongoing development and coordination efforts.
Follow-up: 2026-12-31
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 10:10 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The envisioned mechanism is described as a centralized marketplace for access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The claim appears in the December 18, 2025 Defense Department article about the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401).
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting describes ongoing efforts to accelerate interagency integration and fielding of counter-UAS capabilities, including collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) to leverage contracting and logistics support for state and local agencies, and a FEMA grant framework to fund counter-UAS capabilities. Related outlets in late 2025 describe planning and stand-up activity toward a marketplace concept, indicating momentum but not a deployed portal.
Completion status: There is no public evidence of a deployed counter-UAS marketplace by January 2026. The Defense.gov piece calls the marketplace a cornerstone and notes measurable progress, but does not confirm deployment. Other 2025 coverage similarly discusses planning and readiness rather than a live system.
Dates and milestones: August 2025 saw the establishment of JIATF 401 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities. December 11–18, 2025 featured a law-enforcement symposium underscoring data sharing, interoperability, and procurement pathways. These milestones illustrate progression toward the marketplace, but no deployment date is cited.
Reliability of sources: The primary citation is a Defense Department news article (Defense.gov) from December 18, 2025, with corroboration from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and GlobalSecurity coverage describing planning and momentum. All acknowledge progress without confirming deployment, supporting a cautious in_progress assessment.
Overall assessment: The claim is best characterized as in_progress. Institutional support and funding pathways exist, but public confirmation of a deployed marketplace is not evident as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 08:02 PMin_progress
What the claim states: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace designed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The DoD report highlights a Joint Interagency Task Force 401-led effort to integrate interagency and law enforcement capabilities, with active coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage contracting and logistics support. It notes activities such as a December 2025 law enforcement symposium and ongoing joint exercises (e.g., November 21, 2025) to accelerate capability delivery and data sharing. The initiative explicitly frames the marketplace as a central element of this layered defense approach.
Completion status: There is no statement that the marketplace has been deployed or fully completed. The article emphasizes progress and a framework for integration rather than a finished product, with quotes indicating ongoing development and measurable progress but no deployment milestone.
Dates and milestones: August 2025: JIATF 401 established to rapidly integrate C-UAS capabilities. November 21, 2025: counter-UAS exercise in
Washington. December 11, 2025: interagency symposium highlighting data sharing, procurement, and shared air-picture needs. December 18, 2025: publication of the DoD piece detailing the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort. These dates illustrate a progression from organization to pilot activities, but stop short of deployment.
Reliability of sources: The primary source is an official Defense Department news story (defense.gov), which provides contemporaneous, governance-source detail on interagency efforts and marketplace framing. While it confirms progress and intent, it does not provide independent verification of deployment or operational access to the marketplace, suggesting cautious interpretation of the current state.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 06:16 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The December 18, 2025 Defense Department News release identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort, describing a centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The release also notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to support interagency capabilities, signaling ongoing development and coordination rather than a finalized product.
Progress status: The published article emphasizes planning, integration, and the creation of a shared procurement and data-access framework, but does not indicate a deployed, fully operational marketplace. Reports from late 2025 describe plans to stand up a digital marketplace and to accelerate fielding, with multiple milestones (task force establishment, interagency coordination, and funding mechanisms) in motion, yet no explicit deployment date is provided.
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include formation of JIATF 401 (established August 2025) and a law enforcement symposium in December 2025 focusing on interagency data sharing, integration, and procurement pathways. A $250 million FEMA-related funding opportunity through DLA logistics and contracting is highlighted as enabling rapid capability delivery. No completion date is announced; the narrative remains focused on development and near-term fielding efforts.
Source reliability: The principal source is a Defense Department News release (official government source) dated 2025-12-18, which provides direct statements about the marketplace and interagency collaboration. Secondary reporting from defense-focused outlets corroborates the planning nature of the marketplace and the broader effort, though these secondary sources often frame progress as ongoing plans rather than completed deployment.
Reliability note: Information is current to late 2025 with explicit statements that the marketplace is in development and not yet deployed; the assessment relies on official DoD communication and reputable defense journalism. Given the evolving nature of defense procurement and interagency collaboration, continued updates are expected as milestones approach.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 03:52 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense article describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of a broader effort to integrate C-UAS capabilities across agencies, including access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The stated goal is to provide a centralized mechanism for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities in support of federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial partners. A law enforcement symposium in December 2025 highlighted ongoing coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) and a FEMA grant pathway, including a $250 million funding opportunity dedicated to counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities. The article explicitly calls the marketplace a central component of these efforts, aiming to streamline data sharing, feedback, and procurement.
As of the current date, there is no public disclosure of the marketplace being deployed or fully operational. The sources describe development, coordination, and funding mechanisms, but do not announce a completed deployment or user access in interagency or law enforcement channels. The completion condition (marketplace developed and deployed with access for partners) remains unmet in public records.
Key milestones include: August 2025 (formation of JIATF-401), December 11–18, 2025 (interagency symposium in
Washington,
D.C. focusing on counter-UAS integration and cross-agency resource sharing), and ongoing collaboration with DLA and FEMA funding channels. These items establish concrete progress toward the marketplace, even as a formal deployment date is not provided. Source reliability is strong, with the primary reference being an official DoD Defense News article; cross-checking with independent outlets yields limited public detail beyond the DoD briefing.
Overall reliability is high for the facts cited by the DoD piece, though the absence of a deployment announcement suggests the marketplace remains in development. The report frames the marketplace as a central, future capability rather than a current, fully accessible system, consistent with early-stage program progress and interagency coordination. Given the absence of a deployed marketplace in public records, the claim is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 01:55 PMin_progress
What the claim states: The effort centers on a counter-UAS marketplace designed to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department coverage (Dec. 18, 2025) describes JIATF-401 advancing a layered counter-drone defense, with a cornerstone marketplace intended to enable access to DOW test data, user feedback, and procurement options. Public reporting from defense-focused outlets in Nov–Dec 2025 notes the initiative is in development, with no firm go-live date announced and emphasis on testing, integration, and interagency coordination.
Current status: The marketplace has not been publicly deployed as of early January 2026. The Defense Department article highlights ongoing integration efforts and partnerships (DLA logistics and FEMA funding mechanisms) to accelerate capability delivery, while noting the marketplace concept is central but not yet operational.
Reliability of sources: Official Defense Department communications provide authoritative framing. Complementary reporting from Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov in late 2025 supports that launch timing remains uncertain and tied to testing and readiness. Overall, sources describe an in-progress program with milestones focused on testing, funding, and interagency collaboration.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 12:06 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, enabling access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Official reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) describes JIATF 401 planning an online marketplace to centralize purchasing of counter-UAS gear and to provide authoritative data on performance. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) similarly reports the marketplace as a goal of the joint task force, with testing and evaluation processes to accompany vendor offerings. National Defense Magazine (Dec 10, 2025) notes the task force’s 100-day milestone, ongoing procurement efforts, and plans to test and field capabilities, including governance for domestic deployment and policy development.
Current status: As of early January 2026, DoD coverage indicates the marketplace is being developed and piloted but not yet deployed with full interagency access; no firm launch date is announced. The Defense.gov piece (Dec 18, 2025) frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort with progress toward integration, but does not confirm deployment.
Key dates/milestones: ~100-day anniversary of JIATF 401 (Dec 2025); planned counter-UAS summit; ongoing procurement and policy work; no published launch date or deployed access confirmed.
Reliability note: Sources are defense-focused outlets and official DoD communications; while they consistently describe ongoing development and near-term milestones, they do not confirm a live, fully-deployed marketplace as of 2026-01-08.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 09:59 AMcomplete
What the claim stated: a counter-UAS marketplace would centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows the effort reached a deployable stage and functions as a centralized hub for testing data, user feedback, and procurement options. DoD communications describe the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense approach (DoD, 2025-12-18). Industry and defense coverage confirms a central online marketplace intended to streamline evaluation and acquisition across federal partners (Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 07:55 AMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options).
Evidence of progress: Multiple defense and policy outlets reported in late 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) planned to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace to enable interagency partners (e.g., FBI, DHS, local law enforcement) to access test data, performance insights, and procurement options (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, Military.com coverage; Nov–Dec 2025). A summit and ongoing testing/policy work were noted as part of the development process (sources: Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Status assessment: As of 2026-01-07, reporting indicates the marketplace is still in development with plans for further events, testing, and policy formation, but no public release date or deployed platform confirmation. Articles describe ongoing work, governance, and procurement framework rather than a completed, live product (references cited above).
Milestones and dates: 2025-11 to 2025-12 communications describe the marketplace concept, a national-scale summit, and policy/guidance efforts for domestic deployment. No explicit completion date or deployment milestone was announced in those reports. The body of coverage suggests continued development rather than final deployment.
Source reliability: The cited outlets include Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, and Military.com, all of which track defense programs and policy initiatives. While industry/defense journalism provides timely insight, none of the reports publicly confirm a deployed marketplace as of early January 2026; several pieces frame the marketplace as an upcoming capability, not a completed system. Overall, sources are standard for defense program tracking, but lack official DoD deployment verification at this moment.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 04:01 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department article (Dec 18, 2025) identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401’s efforts. Independent outlets in Nov 2025 reported that the Army-led task force planned to stand up a digital marketplace and hosted a counter-UAS summit with interagency participation. Some outlets indicated testing components and policy guidelines as part of the marketplace efforts during late 2025.
Current completion status: No public evidence shows the marketplace has been deployed and fully accessible to interagency and law enforcement partners as of Jan 7, 2026. Reports describe ongoing development and planning, with milestones such as summits and policy discussions, but no confirmed deployment date or rollout completion published by the Defense Department or corroborated by primary agency releases.
Key dates and milestones: Inaugural JIATF 401 activities and a November 25, 2025 summit are documented as early milestones toward the marketplace. December 2025 reporting notes ongoing development and testing components, with a broader objective of centralized access to data, feedback, and procurement options, but without a published deployment date.
Reliability of sources: Defense.gov is an official government source; other outlets like
Breaking Defense provide industry-informed reporting. While these sources converge on the existence and intent of the marketplace, none establish a formal deployment as of early 2026, so conclusions should reflect an ongoing development status.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 01:55 AMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense effort and a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively integrating capabilities and coordinating with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) to leverage funding and procurement pathways. Public statements in December 2025 noted ongoing development, with a focus on accelerating fielding through a centralized marketplace and interoperable network (DOW article, 12/18/2025;
Breaking Defense coverage, 11/2025). A Notice of Funding Opportunity and collaboration with FEMA indicate milestones toward structured data sharing and procurement pathways (DOW 12/18/2025; Defense One coverage, 11/2025).
Status of completion: The marketplace has not been deployed or publicly announced as complete as of early January 2026. The Defense.gov piece emphasizes ongoing development and measurable progress without specifying a deployment date. Multiple outlets in late 2025 described ongoing planning and stepping-stone activities rather than a finished, operational portal (Breaking Defense 11/2025; Defense One 11/2025; PublicNow repost of DOW 12/18/2025).
Dates and milestones: Key events include the Dec. 11, 2025 interagency symposium in
Arlington,
VA discussing shared data, procurement, and a common air picture, and the Dec. 18, 2025 Defense Department release outlining the marketplace concept and partnerships with DLA and FEMA. Reports indicate ongoing integration efforts with interagency partners and a focus on rapid deployment to support
World Cup 2026 readiness, but no firm deployment date is provided in the sources. The reliability of these sources is high for official government communications (Defense.gov) and reputable defense policy outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One).
Reliability note: The sources are official government communications and reputable defense media; while they describe progress, there is no explicit deployment date, suggesting the status is best categorized as in_progress.
Update · Jan 08, 2026, 12:07 AMin_progress
What the claim states: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a central, centralized mechanism to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department piece (Dec 18, 2025) frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort and notes ongoing coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to enable procurement pathways and access to funding, including a $250 million FEMA/related grant channel for C-UAS efforts. A law enforcement symposium (Dec 11, 2025) and related briefings indicate active planning, testing integration, and interagency collaboration to advance the marketplace concept. Multiple defense-industry outlets in Nov–Dec 2025 report the digital marketplace as an early-stage objective under development rather than a deployed product.
Status assessment: The completion condition— marketplace developed and deployed with ready access to data, feedback, and procurement options—has not yet been publicly achieved as of Jan 7, 2026. Public statements describe measurable progress and near-term milestones (integration of sensors, data sharing, and streamlined contracting), but no formal deployment date is provided. The emphasis remains on planning, data-sharing pilots, and procurement pathways rather than a fully launched, nationwide portal.
Dates and milestones: December 11–18, 2025 mark the primary milestones referenced in official and defense-industry reporting, highlighting a symposium, interagency coordination, and funding mechanisms intended to support rapid fielding. The $250 million FEMA-related funding channel via DLA contracting support is cited as a key enabler for rapid deployment, though it does not by itself constitute marketplace deployment. No explicit completion date is published, reinforcing that the effort appears in progress rather than complete.
Reliability and sources: The core claim is corroborated by Defense Department News (DOW) reporting on JIATF 401, DLA logistics support, and FEMA funding; corroborating coverage appears in Defense One and Breaking Defense, which discuss the marketplace concept and ongoing work. Given the official source and industry coverage, the information is reasonably reliable for assessing progress, though details about a final deployment date remain undisclosed. The reporting consistently characterizes the marketplace as an emergent capability rather than a finished product.
Notes on interpretation: While the initiative shows clear progress toward centralizing data access and procurement options for interagency partners, the lack of a deployed portal or formal access mechanics means the claim is best described as in progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 10:17 PMcomplete
Claim restatement: The article described a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: Reports from late 2025 indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 moved from planning to deployment of a digital marketplace, with public statements and coverage in November 2025 and December 2025 (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com, ExecutiveGov, and GlobalSecurity). Completion status: The marketplace is described as being stood up and in use by December 2025, fulfilling the completion condition in practical terms by enabling data access, feedback, and procurement options for interagency partners. Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and government-affiliated outlets; while official DoD portals were not consistently cited, cross-source corroboration across multiple reputable defense and policy outlets supports the trajectory and milestones.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 08:00 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the JIATF 401 effort to provide interagency access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Evidence indicates this marketplace is in the planning and development phase rather than deployed nationwide as of late 2025.
Multiple sources confirm ongoing work and near-term milestones. The Defense Department (Dec. 18, 2025) notes the marketplace as a central component and highlights collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage procurement pathways and testing data. Trade press coverage (Nov. 2025) discusses the intention to stand up the digital marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with no fixed launch date announced. A federal press-outreach event in December 2025 underscores interagency cooperation and planned integration of data and procurement pathways.
Evidence of progress includes formal organizing efforts under JIATF 401, interagency symposiums in
Washington in December 2025, and statements about leveraging FEMA funding and DLA contracting support to enable rapid fielding of capabilities. The Defense Department notes ongoing integration of sensors, data sharing, and an interoperable network as foundational work toward the marketplace. However, none of the reporting shows that the marketplace has been deployed or publicly accessible to interagency partners yet.
Key dates and milestones identified include the December 11–18, 2025 series of events, the December 18, 2025 DOD profile of the marketplace, and ongoing discussions about testing, evaluation, and procurement pathways. The sources consistently describe the marketplace as a planned capability with staged development, not a completed system available to partners on January 7, 2026. No firm deployment date is provided in the publicly available material.
Source reliability: Defense.gov provides the authoritative government account of the effort, while Breaking Defense and Executive Gov offer corroborating reporting on the marketplace’s planned status and lack of a set launch date. All sources acknowledge the topic is development-focused and subject to interagency coordination and funding cycles. Given the available evidence, the claim remains plausible but uncompleted as of the current date.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 06:15 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: The 2025-12-18 Defense Department article identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401 and describes it as a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. Additional reporting in late 2025 confirms ongoing planning and development, including plans for a digital marketplace and related events, but no public deployment date is announced.
Completion status: As of 2026-01-07, there is no public record of a deployed marketplace. The coverage indicates movement toward stand-up, with testing, policy development, and governance work accompanying the effort; launch remains undetermined.
Key dates and milestones: Dec 18, 2025 (DoD press release naming the marketplace); Nov 2025 (multiple outlets outlining planning, a potential marketplace, and a summit). These establish a trajectory from concept to development without a deployed product.
Source reliability: DoD official reporting provides primary, verifiable information. Defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, Military.com) corroborate ongoing development and avoid low-quality sources, enhancing overall credibility.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 03:51 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for law enforcement and interagency partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department report on Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) details the central role of a counter-UAS marketplace within a broader, whole-of-government effort to integrate data, testing, and procurement. A December 18, 2025 Defense News release notes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort, enabling access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The same piece references a November-December 2025 timeframe for implementation milestones and interagency coordination, including a symposium highlighting shared data and capability delivery.
Status of completion: There is no evidence that the marketplace has been deployed to interagency and law enforcement partners by January 7, 2026. The Defense article characterizes the marketplace as a central, ongoing objective rather than a completed system, and notes efforts to integrate data and procurement pathways rather than announcing full fielding.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones include the December 11, 2025 interagency symposium in
Arlington,
VA, and the December 18, 2025 Defense.gov article confirming the marketplace as a central component of the layered counter-drone defense. The Defense piece also describes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways (e.g., a $250 million opportunity) to support rapid procurement, signaling ongoing operationalization rather than completion.
Reliability of sources: Primary information comes from official Defense Department materials (Defense.gov article) and a contemporaneous news report highlighting the same development trajectory (ExecutiveGov citing
Breaking Defense). Both sources are government or government-trusted outlets; coverage is consistent about the marketplace being in development with active interagency coordination, rather than a deployed, fully operational system. Cited material appears relevant and contemporaneous to the stated timeline.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 01:56 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports from November 2025 describe JIATF-401 pursuing a digital marketplace as part of an enterprise counter-UAS effort, with goals for capability sharing, testing data, and procurement guidance (Army.mil 2025-11-13; Defense One 2025-11-14; Executive Government 2025-11-18).
Current status: No public, official declaration that the marketplace has been developed and deployed or that partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Early 2026 coverage portrays ongoing development rather than a finished product (Soldier Systems Daily 2026-01-05).
Key milestones and dates: Interagency White House meeting (Nov 13, 2025) outlined marketplace concepts; a counter-UAS summit was planned for later that month to align testing, policy, and procurement pathways (Army.mil 2025-11-13; Defense One 2025-11-14). Ongoing reporting through January 2026 indicates continued work and planning (Soldier Systems Daily 2026-01-05).
Source reliability: Information comes from official Army communications and established defense outlets; they consistently frame the marketplace as an in-progress initiative rather than a deployed product, aligning with a cautious assessment of completion.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 11:59 AMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: A December 18, 2025 Defense Department feature describes JIATF 401’s efforts to develop a counter-UAS marketplace as a central mechanism for interagency access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Subsequent reporting in November 2025 and mid-2025 coverage reiterates plans to stand up a centralized procurement and data-sharing platform tied to C-UAS capabilities, with involvement from the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA grant pathways.
Status assessment: The marketplace is described as a cornerstone initiative and is actively under development, with public statements noting ongoing integration, testing, and procurement pathway work. There is no public confirmation of full deployment or formal access for all interagency partners as of early January 2026.
Key milestones and dates: Dec 11–18, 2025 symposia and public statements emphasize rapid integration, data-sharing, and centralized procurement. November 2025 coverage highlights planned digital marketplace development and testing/evaluation steps before adding solutions. No completion date is given; completion remains contingent on testing, interagency onboarding, and procurement deployments.
Source reliability: Core information comes from official Defense Department reporting (Defense.gov) and corroborating coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com, and ExecutiveGov. These outlets are generally reliable for defense topics, with Defense Department material serving as the primary source. Cross-sourcing strengthens the account, though none confirm a deployed, fully available marketplace by January 2026.
Follow-up note: No explicit completion date is projected; a follow-up should verify deployment status and partner access at a future milestone, such as 2026-12-18.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 10:01 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The aim is to create a centralized platform for data, feedback, and procurement related to counter-UAS capabilities.
Evidence of progress: November–December 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force is planning or standing up a digital marketplace for counter-UAS, with emphasis on authoritative data on performance and access to procurement options (Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17).
Current status: Public sources show development activity and planning rather than a publicly confirmed deployment. Several outlets describe the marketplace as a core element and ongoing effort, but do not confirm full deployment or access for interagency and law enforcement as of early January 2026.
Milestones and dates: The period from mid to late November 2025 through December 2025 features successive mentions of establishment and procurement functionality; no explicit launch date is disclosed in the sources, suggesting a multi-phase rollout.
Source reliability: The cited outlets are defense-focused trades and government-aligned coverage. While credible for programmatic intent, they do not provide a formal deployment confirmation; information appears to be unfolding and may be released incrementally.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 07:59 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department article (Dec 18, 2025) identifies a central counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401's effort and describes it as a centralized mechanism to access test data, user feedback, and procurement options. Independent reporting in Nov–Dec 2025 notes the Army-led task force outlining plans to stand up a digital marketplace and to test/evaluate with interagency partners, and to leverage FEMA/DLA pathways and a $250 million funding opportunity for acquisition and fielding readiness.
Current status vs. completion: There is clear forward motion and formal planning, but no publicly announced deployment or full operational deployment by early January 2026. Sources describe ongoing development, testing, and integration steps, with emphasis on planning, capability delivery, and procurement pathways rather than a completed, live marketplace.
Dates and milestones: December 2025 symposium and public statements highlighted integrated planning, logistics coordination with DLA, and a push toward a centralized marketplace; November 2025 reporting discussed intent to stand up the marketplace and conduct interagency testing. No finalized deployment date has been disclosed; completion conditions remain unfulfilled as of 2026-01-06.
Reliability of sources: The core source is a Defense Department news story (official government outlet) dated Dec 18, 2025. Supplementary coverage from Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, and Meritalk (Nov–Dec 2025) corroborates the planning trajectory and interagency collaboration, though these outlets are secondary and may reflect forward-looking plans rather than finalized implementation.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 04:20 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article asserts a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It frames the marketplace as a cornerstone to provide DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options in one centralized mechanism. The goal is to accelerate fielding and reduce risk by consolidating information and purchasing pathways.
Evidence of progress: The defense article (Dec. 18, 2025) describes JIATF 401’s role and highlights the marketplace as a central feature of the counter-UAS effort. Independent reporting in Nov. 2025 and mid-November 2025 coverage notes that Army-led JIATF 401 planned to establish an online/digital marketplace to catalog data on system performance and streamline procurement, with cooperation from DLA and FEMA funding mechanisms. These pieces indicate movement toward standing up the marketplace rather than a fully deployed system.
Current status and completion evidence: There is strong indication that planning, design, and initial integration activities are underway, but no public confirmation that a deployed, fully functional marketplace exists or that interagency partners have real-time access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Reports describe planning milestones, coordinating funding, and initial demonstrations or symposiums, suggesting progress is in-progress rather than complete. No authoritative post-2025 deployment notice confirms full deployment.
Dates and milestones: The Defense Department article is dated December 18, 2025, situating the initiative in late 2025 with emphasis on JIATF 401’s integration efforts. Independent outlets in November 2025 discuss the marketplace concept and funding approaches. No concrete deployment date has been announced or publicly documented as of early January 2026.
Source reliability note: The primary claim is drawn from an official Defense Department News Story, which is a credible primary source for the topic. Supplementary coverage from military-focused outlets (ExecutiveGov, Breaking Defense, Military.com) provides corroboration about the marketplace plan and progress, though these outlets are journalistic summaries and may reflect ongoing developments rather than finalized deployments. Overall, sources are reasonably reliable for describing ongoing program development and milestones, with caution warranted until formal deployment is announced.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 02:04 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, enabling access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress exists in late-2025 reporting that an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 401) is building an online marketplace to streamline purchasing, testing, and policy guidance, with aims to provide an authoritative data set and interagency collaboration (Defense One;
Breaking Defense; Army.mil; Nov 2025).
As of January 2026, no firm launch date or deployment milestone is published; sources describe ongoing planning, testing, and policy development. The effort is framed as progressing toward a centralized hub, but completion remained unconfirmed in the noted reports (Defense One; Breaking Defense; GlobalSecurity summaries; Nov–Dec 2025).
Reliability note: Coverage relies on defense-focused outlets and official military summaries, which are credible within the defense reporting ecosystem. The strongest confirmation would come from an explicit DOD deployment notice or marketplace launch announcement.
Update · Jan 07, 2026, 12:54 AMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department described the marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s layered counter-drone approach, intended to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Progress evidence: The Defense Department article outlines ongoing efforts to stand up a counter-UAS marketplace as part of JIATF 401’s mission, with emphasis on integrating data, feedback, and procurement pathways to accelerate fielding (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Additional reporting from Army sources in Nov 2025 confirms near-term priorities around a marketplace for capability sharing, testing data, and interagency collaboration (
Army.mil, 2025-11-13).
Status of completion: There is no evidence of full deployment or formal completion by early January 2026. The sources describe development, planning, and ongoing integration efforts rather than a deployed, operable marketplace accessible to partners. The completion condition remains unfulfilled pending deployment milestones (Defense.gov, Army.mil).
Dates and milestones: Key milestones referenced include Dec. 11, 2025 interagency symposium focusing on counter-UAS capabilities and data sharing, a Nov. 21, 2025 drone exercise illustrating joint coordination, and a broader push in Nov–Dec 2025 to establish a digital marketplace and procurement pathways (Defense.gov, Army.mil). FEMA grant coordination and a $250 million DLA-funded procurement pathway are cited as enabling steps (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Reliability of sources: Official Defense Department communications (Defense.gov) and Army public affairs reporting (Army.mil) are used, which are appropriate primary sources for verification of government initiatives. Secondary outlets referenced in initial searches corroborate the general direction but vary in specificity; nonetheless, the Defense Department piece provides the strongest, most direct evidence of the marketplace concept and its status as of December 2025 (Defense.gov, Army.mil).
Overall assessment: Given explicit statements that the marketplace is a central objective and the absence of deployment confirmation, the current status is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 10:47 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is under development to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting (Dec 18, 2025) describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort, intended to provide interagency and law enforcement partners access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Media coverage in Nov–Dec 2025 (Breaking Defense, Meritalk) reiterates plans to stand up a digital/online marketplace to streamline access to counter-UAS data, testing results, and acquisitions. A DoD article notes ongoing integration work with DLA and FEMA grant pathways to accelerate capability delivery, underscoring advancing momentum toward the marketplace concept.
Current status: As of Jan 6, 2026, sources describe ongoing development and planning, with explicit statements about the marketplace but no evidence of final deployment or formal partner access. The DoD piece emphasizes progress and the intention to reduce risk and speed deployment, yet does not confirm a deployed, publicly accessible system. Several summaries refer to milestones and governance (e.g., NDAA provisions), but no definitive launch date is reported.
Dates and milestones: Key references include the Dec 18, 2025 DoD article announcing the marketplace concept, and coverage through Dec 2025–Jan 2026 highlighting momentum. NDAA provisions establishing JIATF 401 are cited as enabling centralized interagency workflow, but again without a deployment date for the marketplace itself.
Reliability: Primary source is the official DoD Defense Department News article, with corroboration from credible defense outlets (Breaking Defense, Meritalk). They collectively describe intent and progress rather than a completed deployment, justifying a cautious, in-progress assessment.
Follow-up note: Continued monitoring for a deployed, partner-accessible marketplace and any official deployment announcements is recommended.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 08:06 PMcomplete
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The reporting in late 2025 indicates the effort progressed from planning to active development and piloting. By December 2025, multiple outlets reported that an online counter-UAS marketplace was being stood up by the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) to enable rapid procurement of counter-drone tools and access to vetted data and user feedback (JIATF 401 initiatives; Industry coverage).
Concrete milestones include: November 2025 announcements that the marketplace would be digital and vendor-agnostic, enabling interagency and local partners to shop for equipment and components; and a December 2025 report noting the marketplace was launched or near deployment for interagency access (Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, Military.com).
The December 2025 coverage explicitly framed the marketplace as a deployed or soon-deployed capability for interagency partners such as FBI, DHS, and local law enforcement, aligning with the completion condition of deployment and access to data, feedback, and procurement options. The sources consistently describe a centralized, Amazon-like portal concept and confirm progress toward operational availability within the 2025 timeframe. Overall, the evidence supports that the marketplace progressed to deployment or near-deployment by late 2025 and into early 2026.
Source reliability varies but includes defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Executive Gov) and defense press (Military.com). None of the cited pieces are from disreputable outlets, and multiple independent outlets corroborate the timeline from planning to marketplace launch. Taken together, these reports provide a credible, cross-verified account of the marketplace being developed and deployed for interagency access as of late 2025.
Notes on scope and caveats: while the marketplace appears deployed, full long-term adoption across all targeted partners may depend on interoperability, data-sharing agreements, and procurement policy at different agencies. The primary sources describe installations and partners broadly; exact user counts and procurement volumes are not publicly specified. Given the consistency of reporting across several outlets, the status is best characterized as complete with initial deployment and active access for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 06:14 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: DoD materials describe the marketplace as a central mechanism to provide interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options, with collaboration between JIATF 401 and the Defense Logistics Agency highlighted in late 2025. DoW coverage cites the marketplace as a cornerstone of layered counter-drone defense and notes ongoing integration and funding partnerships.
Additional reporting documents planning activity rather than a deployed system. Nov–Dec 2025 pieces from Breaking Defense, Military.com, and ExecutiveGov discuss a digital marketplace under JIATF 401, emphasize a range of vetted options, and note no firm launch date yet. The emphasis is on planning, data sharing, and procurement pathways rather than a ready-for-use portal.
Current status: No publicly visible deployment evidence as of January 2026. The completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; interagency and law enforcement partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—remains unmet pending launch.
Key milestones include the Dec. 11, 2025 interagency law enforcement symposium and Nov. 21, 2025 counter-drone exercises, which illustrate momentum and coordinated effort, not a deployed marketplace.
Source reliability: The primary source is an official DoW news piece (defense.gov), which provides authoritative confirmation of the concept. Secondary reporting from Military.com, Breaking Defense, and ExecutiveGov corroborates planning activity and interagency coordination, but these are journalistic outlets and reflect early-stage plans. Overall, sources support ongoing development rather than a completed system.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 03:50 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The DoD report indicates the marketplace is a central feature of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense effort, designed to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency users.
Evidence of progress: DoD coverage (Dec. 18, 2025) describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the broader counter-UAS initiative and notes ongoing integration efforts, testing, and coordination with Defense Logistics Agency to enable procurement pathways. The article also cites a synchronized approach with FEMA funding (Notice of Funding Opportunity) and emphasizes interagency collaboration with law enforcement at national and local levels. Acknowledged milestones include the establishment of JIATF 401 in August and a December 2025 law enforcement symposium highlighting data-sharing and procurement integration.
Completion status: There is no publicly announced deployment date or full operational deployment yet. The DoD piece frames the marketplace as an ongoing development aimed at reducing risk and accelerating fielding timelines, with measurable progress but not a completed, deployed system as of December 2025.
Dates and milestones: August 2025—creation of JIATF 401; December 11–12, 2025—law enforcement symposium focusing on counter-UAS integration and data sharing; December 18, 2025—formal DoD announcement highlighting the marketplace concept and ongoing integration with DLA and FEMA funding. These events establish momentum but do not declare completion.
Reliability note: The primary source is a Defense Department News story (defense.gov), which provides official context for the program and its objectives. Secondary industry coverage corroborates the marketplace emphasis and timelines but should be read alongside official DoD communications to avoid extrapolation beyond stated milestones.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 01:55 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense and military outlets from late 2025 indicate active development under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) with coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to support procurement. Reports cite a central marketplace as a core component, with a law-enforcement symposium and interagency meetings highlighting ongoing integration efforts (DOW article, 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11; Army.mil 2025-11/12).
Completion status: No evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace by early January 2026. Sources describe the marketplace as a developing capability rather than a completed deployment, with launch dates unspecified and planned events used to advance the program.
Dates and milestones: Notable milestones include the Dec. 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium and the Dec. 18, 2025 DOW piece signaling progress. November–December 2025 coverage discusses ongoing stand-up and coordination, but no firm deployment date is given.
Source reliability note: Sources include official Defense Department communications and defense-news outlets; they consistently frame the marketplace as an ongoing effort with coordinated interagency work and procurement facilitation, not a finished system.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 12:12 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense reporting from December 2025 confirms JIATF 401 has identified a counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of its efforts, with coordination between the Department of War, Defense Logistics Agency, and FEMA funding pathways to enable data sharing, user feedback, and procurement options (DOW News, Dec. 18, 2025; Breaking Defense, Nov. 17, 2025). Public briefings and law-enforcement symposia in December 2025 reiterated plans to integrate test data, operational feedback, and procurement through a centralized mechanism (DOW press story; Army/National Capital Region events).
Current status relative to completion: The marketplace is described as being developed and piloted with interagency collaboration and a planned procurement pathway, but no deployment date is published. Officials emphasize ongoing testing, data integration, and coordination with DLA for contracting and funding opportunities, indicating a staged, not completed, implementation (DOW article; Breaking Defense interview).
Dates and milestones: - Aug 2025: JIATF 401 established to consolidate counter-UAS efforts. - Nov–Dec 2025: marketplace concept reaffirmed; interagency symposium highlights data sharing, testing, and procurement pathways; FEMA/IGA funding opportunities identified. - Dec 18, 2025: official Defense Department itemizes the marketplace as a central component of the layered counter-drone defense. Reliability note: Sources include Defense.gov and defense-focused outlets; they support ongoing development without claiming a live deployment.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 10:00 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article from December 18, 2025 identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of the joint effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, describing it as a centralized mechanism for accessing DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress shows ongoing efforts to stand up the marketplace and related interoperability capabilities. The December 2025 piece notes interagency coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) to leverage contracting and logistics to accelerate fielding, and mentions a coordinated approach to test and validate solutions before inclusion in the marketplace. Additional reporting around the same period highlights planning and testing activities, including symposia and interagency collaboration aimed at shaping the marketplace framework.
There is no evidence in early 2026 that the marketplace has been fully deployed or that interagency partners have universal, built-out access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Public statements emphasize ongoing integration of sensors, data sharing, and procurement pathways, with milestones described as preparatory, coordination, and testing activities rather than a completed, fielded system. Completion remains contingent on continued interagency testing, governance, and procurement approvals.
Concrete milestones cited in late 2025 include a law-enforcement symposium (Dec. 11, 2025) focused on counter-UAS capabilities and a broader push to integrate DOW, DLA, and FEMA grant funding to accelerate fielding. The article also references up to $250 million in FEMA funding opportunities to support counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities, signaling material progress toward scalable procurement pathways. However, these are enabling steps rather than final deployment of the marketplace itself.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 07:35 AMin_progress
What the claim states: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, with a central mechanism for DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. This is described as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities for homeland defense and law enforcement partnerships. The article emphasizes rapid integration, testing, and delivery of C-UAS capabilities through a centralized marketplace.
Evidence of progress: DoD confirms in a December 18, 2025 DoD News story that JIATF 401 is integrating skills to create a layered counter-drone defense and highlights the marketplace as a central component. Coverage notes coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage contracting and procurement pathways, and mentions ongoing interagency collaboration and governance to advance data access and procurement options (DOW data, user feedback, validated options).
Status of completion: There is no published completion date or definitive deployment milestone for the marketplace. Reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov. 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov. 2025) indicates planning and development with no defined launch date, implying the initiative remains in the development or pilot phase rather than deployed to all interagency partners.
Reliability of sources: The primary source is a Defense Department article (defense.gov), which is official and high reliability for program intent and status. Additional context from Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov provides independent industry reporting that corroborates the lack of a firm launch date, enhancing overall assessment while maintaining cautious, progress-focused framing.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 04:13 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense communications from Dec. 2025 show the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) leading a coordinated effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities and support law enforcement, including collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage grant funding and procurement pathways. Reports and official summaries highlight the marketplace as a central feature for accessing test data, operational feedback, and procurement options (DOW article, Dec. 18, 2025). Additional coverage notes interagency symposiums and planning activities in December 2025, signaling ongoing development rather than a completed deployment.
Completion status: No public evidence indicates the marketplace has been deployed or fully implemented as of early January 2026. The materials describe milestones, partnerships, and the intent to stand up the marketplace, but do not confirm a live, interagency-accessible system. Key milestones referenced are planning symposiums, interagency coordination, and the establishment of procurement pathways, with no deployment date announced.
Dates and milestones: December 11–18, 2025 events include interagency law enforcement symposiums and senior-leader discussions focusing on counter-UAS strategy, data sharing, and procurement. November–December 2025 reporting notes ongoing efforts to stand up a digital, centralized marketplace and related testing/evaluation processes. The Defense Department communications emphasize collaboration with DLA and FEMA grant funding (noting a $250 million program) to enable rapid fielding, but stop short of confirming marketplace deployment.
Reliability and sources: Primary sourcing comes from Defense Department News (DOW) official article dated December 18, 2025, supplemented by
Army.mil and industry trade coverage (ExecutiveGov,
Meritalk, Breaking Defense). The DOW piece is a government primary source; companion coverage corroborates ongoing development and interagency coordination. Overall reliability is high for the status described (progress and planning), with no verified deployment cited in the available material.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 02:05 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS (C-UAS) marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as a centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: The defense.gov article (Dec 18, 2025) confirms that Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is prioritizing the marketplace as a centerpiece of its layered counter-drone defense effort and notes ongoing integration with interagency partners, law enforcement, and logistics support to enable data sharing and procurement pathways. Reports from November–December 2025 across defense-focused outlets likewise describe plans to stand up an online marketplace and related sandbox for testing and evaluation.
Status assessment: There is public documentation of planning, design, and initial coordination, but no reported deployment or full-access rollout of the marketplace as of early January 2026. Contemporary coverage emphasizes ongoing development, policy formation, and procurement pathways rather than an active, available-to-partners marketplace.
Dates and milestones: The Defense Department piece is dated December 18, 2025. Surrounding reporting (Nov–Dec 2025) highlights the task force’s push to establish the marketplace, begin testing, and coordinate with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding mechanisms. No concrete deployment date or completion milestone is stated.
Source reliability note: Primary information comes from a Defense Department-commissioned article (defense.gov), which is an official government source and credible for policy/status updates. Secondary coverage from Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, and Defense One corroborates the planning trajectory but does not provide independent verification of a deployed marketplace. Overall, sources are consistent on intent and progress but uniformly indicate ongoing development rather than completion.
Update · Jan 06, 2026, 12:13 AMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, with a centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department describes JIATF 401 as leading efforts to integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with a December 2025 symposium and a December 18, 2025 release referencing the marketplace as a central element and collaboration with DLA and FEMA-funded procurement pathways.
Completion status: No launch date or firm deployment milestone has been announced; reporting frames the marketplace as a planned capability undergoing testing and interagency coordination rather than a deployed platform as of early January 2026.
Dates and milestones: Notable milestones include the Dec. 11, 2025 law enforcement symposium at
Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall and the Dec. 18, 2025 DOD article describing the marketplace; ongoing coordination with DLA and FEMA funding is cited as enabling procurement pathways.
Reliability of sources: Primary information comes from official Defense Department communications (DOW), supported by industry coverage (ExecutiveGov, Breaking Defense). These sources are credible for status updates, though they describe progress and plans rather than a completed marketplace at this time.
Notes on status: Given the absence of a published deployment date and emphasis on progression and funding, the claim remains in_progress with anticipated updates as testing and interagency collaboration advance.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 09:58 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS efforts.
Evidence of progress: Defense and DoD reporting in late 2025 describe the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense approach. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) notes an online marketplace is being built to streamline purchasing and testing across federal partners, with a launch date still to be determined. The Defense Department’s 2025-12-18 Defense News story confirms ongoing integration efforts and the marketplace’s role in providing access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Completion status: There is explicit language that the marketplace is being developed and that a launch date had not yet been set as of December 2025. No public report indicates a deployed or fully operational marketplace by early January 2026. Evidence instead points to continued development, policy alignment, and procurement integration steps rather than completion.
Dates and milestones: Dec. 11–12, 2025 symposium and related briefings emphasizing data sharing, procurement pathways, and a shared air picture; Nov. 14, 2025 Defense One article announcing the marketplace concept; Dec. 18, 2025 Defense Department news story detailing progress and the marketplace’s data/feedback/procurement access goals.
Source reliability note: Primary sources include Defense Department press material (official .gov) and Defense One reporting (reputable defense-focused outlet). Secondary coverage from Defense One corroborates the official description, while industry-focused outlets provide context. Overall, sources are suitable for assessing progress and status, though none indicate formal deployment as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 07:53 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article from Dec. 18, 2025 explicitly identifies a counter-UAS marketplace as a central feature of JIATF 401’s layered defense effort, intended to provide access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. This establishes the stated objective, but does not indicate full deployment or user access yet.
Evidence of progress shows that the marketplace concept has been actively pursued as part of JIATF 401 activities. Defense communications from December 2025 describe integrating data, feedback, and procurement pathways, with close coordination between JIATF 401 and the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage funding opportunities and contracting support. Independent reports in late 2025 also mention planning for an online marketplace aligned with broader UAS marketplace initiatives.
As for completion status, there is no published completion date or confirmation of full deployment. The available materials describe the marketplace as a cornerstone under development, with emphasis on enabling access to data and validated procurement options, but stop short of announcing that interagency partners have operational access. This suggests the project remains in development or early implementation stages as of early 2026.
Concrete milestones cited include the establishment of JIATF 401 (August 2025) to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities, the December 2025 symposium focusing on shared data and procurement integration, and ongoing coordination with DLA for contracting and logistics support. These reflect progress in planning, testing, and readiness activities, rather than a finalized, deployed marketplace.
Source reliability varies: Defense Department releases (defense.gov) provide official framing of the marketplace concept; Army and defense-industry outlets corroborate planning milestones and anticipated capabilities. While multiple outlets confirm the marketplace as a central, progressing initiative, none report a deployed system with user access by interagency partners as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 06:21 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace designed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department reports that the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was established in August 2025 to oversee counter-UAS efforts and integrate interagency capabilities. A law enforcement symposium in December 2025 emphasized testing, data integration, and procurement pathways, including collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA grant funding. The Defense Department article explicitly identifies the counter-UAS marketplace as a central element of the effort, described as a centralized mechanism to access test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Current status: As of January 5, 2026, there is explicit language about the marketplace being a cornerstone and being developed, but no publicly announced deployment or operational rollout. Several industry-focused outlets in November–December 2025 discussed plans to stand up a digital marketplace, but those accounts describe ongoing development rather than a completed, live system. The explicit completion condition (marketplace developed and deployed with interagency access) has not been publicly met according to the available sources.
Dates and milestones: August 2025 – JIATF 401 established; December 11, 2025 – interagency symposium highlighting progress and data-sharing goals; November–December 2025 – media coverage of plans to create the digital marketplace. The available sources do not provide a concrete deployment date or a finalized feature set for the marketplace. Reliability of these milestones is strongest for official Defense Department communication (Defense.gov) with corroborating reporting from defense-focused outlets, though some coverage remains descriptive rather than confirmatory of a live system.
Source reliability note: The primary source is a Defense Department news story, an official government outlet, which is considered high reliability for stated facts about program structure and milestones. Secondary coverage from defense trade press corroborates the development timeline but indicates ongoing work rather than a deployed marketplace. In evaluating truthfulness, government communications emphasize progress while acknowledging ongoing integration challenges, aligning with standard defense reporting norms.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 03:53 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense article describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of a broader, joint, interagency effort to field counter-UAS capabilities across federal, state, and local partners.
Evidence of progress: The Dec. 18, 2025 Defense Department News release (War Department) identifies the counter-UAS marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401’s work and notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA funding and procurement pathways. The article also documents ongoing interagency symposium activities (Dec. 11, 2025) and emphasizes integrating data, sensors, and procurement across federal and nonfederal partners. Official materials cite a coordinated effort beginning with the establishment of JIATF 401 in August and ongoing efforts in support of law enforcement partners.
Evidence of status: There is explicit framing that the marketplace is being developed and deployed as part of an integrated approach; however, the release does not state that the marketplace is fully deployed or universally accessible to all interagency and law enforcement partners. The funding mechanism (e.g., FEMA grant pathways and DLA contracting support) and interagency alignment are described as in progress, with measurable progress noted but no completion date provided.
Key dates and milestones: August (task force establishment), November–December 2025 (counter-UAS training and law enforcement symposiums), December 18, 2025 (official announcement of the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort). The sources emphasize interagency collaboration, data sharing, test data access, and procurement options, but stop short of announcing full deployment or access for all partners.
Reliability of sources: The primary claim comes from an official U.S. Department of War/Defense Department News release (DoD.gov), which provides contemporaneous, primary documentation of the marketplace’s role and progress. Coverage is reinforced by a subsequent related defense-focused piece (Defense.gov) summarizing interagency collaboration and funding mechanisms. No contradictory or clearly false statements are evident in these official sources; the narrative remains descriptive of ongoing development rather than a finished product.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 01:58 PMin_progress
What the claim states: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, with DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options at its core. The Defense Department framing positions the marketplace as a cornerstone of a layered counter-drone defense effort led by JIATF 401.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting from November–December 2025 indicates active planning and development work led by the Army and JIATF 401, including efforts to stand up an online marketplace intended for interagency and law-enforcement access to data, performance results, and purchasing pathways. Coverage highlights collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to accelerate fielding (e.g., $250 million in related funding discussions) and reference a forthcoming marketplace as a central element.
Current status relative to completion: There is no evidence of a deployed, fully functional marketplace as of early January 2026. Multiple outlets describe ongoing planning, governance, and policy considerations, but no launch date or deployment milestone is publicly announced. Reports emphasize progress and near-term milestones rather than completion.
Dates and milestones: Key public markers include the Dec. 2025 Defense Department feature describing the marketplace cornerstone (Dec. 18, 2025) and November 2025 industry/defense reporting detailing plans to stand up the digital marketplace and a related counter-UAS framework. A national coordination emphasis is tied to events such as
World Cup preparedness and interagency symmetry of data and procurement channels (Nov–Dec 2025).
Reliability of sources: Reputable defense outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense) and public Defense Department communications provide consistent accounts of an ongoing marketplace initiative, focused on interagency data sharing and procurement. Other summaries corroborate the general direction but vary in granular specifics, underscoring the initiative is in planning and early development rather than completed deployment.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 12:04 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is underway, with Defense.gov noting a marketplace component that would provide access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options (Dec 18, 2025). Industry coverage cites planning for a one-stop shopping approach and a marketplace with a yet-to-be-determined launch date (Nov 2025). There is no official deployment date announced, suggesting progress is ongoing but not complete as of early 2026. Primary sources (Defense.gov) are reliable for official statements; industry outlets supplement context but vary in specificity about timelines. The status should be regarded as in progress pending a formal deployment announcement or a concrete launch milestone.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 10:13 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed as a centralized mechanism for interagency and law enforcement partners to access DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: JIATF 401 leadership has publicly described plans for an online marketplace and data-sharing framework, with Brig. Gen. Matt Ross noting the objective during 2025-11 to stand up a central procurement hub alongside a broader UAS marketplace. A December 2025 symposium highlighted ongoing integration work with the Defense Logistics Agency to enable tested capabilities, data access, and guided procurement pathways, including potential FEMA grant support for counter-UAS capabilities.
Completion status: Multiple outlets report that the marketplace is under development and not yet launched; officials emphasize ongoing testing, evaluation, and policy development prior to deployment. In December 2025, Ross stated that there is no fixed launch date yet, but measurable progress and preparations for related testing and governance are in progress. The combination of data-sharing aims, procurement pathways, and interagency collaboration remains interim and contingent on funding allocations and policy finalization.
Reliability notes: Primary sources include DoD-affiliated outlets and defense-focused outlets (Defense.gov, Defense One, Breaking Defense, GlobalSecurity.org). These sources consistently describe the marketplace as a work in progress with explicit caveats about launch timing and deployment readiness. The reporting aligns on the core claim while cautioning that no deployment date has been set.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 07:47 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense-focused reporting describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of a layered counter-drone defense, designed to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Evidence from official and credible outlets indicates this is an ongoing development rather than a completed product.
Evidence of progress includes: (1) the Defense Department’s Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) emphasizing integration, testing, and rapid delivery of C-UAS capabilities, (2) the involvement of the Defense Logistics Agency to facilitate contracting, logistics, and scalable procurement pathways, and (3) explicit mention of a centralized counter-UAS marketplace to streamline testing, feedback, and procurement. These points are highlighted in the December 18, 2025 Defense Department article and the November 2025 Defense One coverage, which frame the marketplace as an upcoming capability rather than a deployed system.
At present, there is no evidence of a fully deployed marketplace. Defense One notes that a launch date is still to be determined as of November 2025, and the Defense Department piece describes ongoing development and measurable progress without stating a deployment date. Related legislative action in the FY 2026 NDAA (signed December 18, 2025) formalizes JIATF 401’s responsibilities for counter-UAS procurement and policy, which supports continued development but does not signify completion.
Key dates and milestones include: Dec. 18, 2025 (Defense Department article announcing the marketplace concept and JIATF 401’s role); Nov. 14–21, 2025 (JIATF 401-led activities and testing efforts noted at relevant symposiums); and Dec. 2025 (FY 2026 NDAA signed into law, creating and authorizing structures and reporting for counter-UAS efforts, including JIATF 401’s acquisition and procurement responsibilities). These milestones support a trajectory toward a centralized procurement and data-sharing mechanism, but stop short of declaring deployment.
Source reliability: the core claim rests on official Defense Department reporting (defense.gov) and industry-press coverage (Defense One), both treated as credible for defense acquisitions and interagency initiatives. The NDAA summary from Crowell & Moring provides authoritative context on legislative groundwork affecting procurement governance and task-force structure. Given the stated status in these sources, the marketplace remains in development, with credible progress and formalized authority but no demonstrated deployment to interagency partners as of early January 2026.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 03:53 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is intended to provide access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: The Defense.gov article (Dec 18, 2025) identifies the marketplace as a central component of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense approach and notes ongoing efforts through collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA grant programs to enable procurement and data sharing. Industry and defense outlets in Nov–Dec 2025 summarize plans for an online marketplace led by an Army-led task force (JIATF 401) to standardize data, testing results, and purchasing options for C-UAS.
Progress status: As of late 2025 and early 2026, reporting indicates planning, data-sharing frameworks, and procurement pathways are being established, but the marketplace deployment and full access for interagency and law enforcement partners appear not yet completed. The Defense.gov piece emphasizes development and integration efforts rather than a live deployment.
Dates and milestones: December 18, 2025—Defense.gov piece; November–December 2025 coverage outlining stand-up of the marketplace and related procurement corridors. No official rollout completion date is provided.
Source reliability: Official government reporting (Defense.gov) provides a credible baseline; corroborating coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, and other defense-oriented outlets supports the existence and timeline of the marketplace initiative. These sources are considered credible within defense journalism, though not all are official government releases.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 01:45 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The December 2025 Defense Department article identifies the marketplace as a central feature of a broader interagency counter-UAS effort and describes it as a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department report notes ongoing, coordinated actions to integrate interagency capabilities, including Joint Interagency Task Force 401 taking a leading role and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage a $250 million FEMA grant for counter-UAS and air domain awareness. A December 2025 law enforcement symposium and discussions around a shared data and procurement ecosystem are described as part of the initiative.
Completion status: There is no public confirmation that the counter-UAS marketplace has been fully developed or deployed as of the reporting date. The piece frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of ongoing efforts and notes progress toward data sharing, interoperability, and streamlined procurement, but does not certify deployment.
Dates and milestones: Notable dates include December 11, 2025 (law enforcement symposium) and December 18, 2025 (article publication), with ongoing integration of data/feedback and procurement pathways and FEMA-backed contracting mechanisms. No firm deployment date is provided.
Reliability note: The sources are official Defense Department communications describing current, ongoing interagency operations and funding. They offer credible, primary information about program direction but do not independently verify deployment of the marketplace.
Update · Jan 05, 2026, 12:12 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The initiative is described as a centralized mechanism to access test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options as part of a broader interagency counter-UAS effort. The claim aligns with the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) push reported by DoD and defense outlets in late 2025.
Evidence of progress: Multiple 2025 reports indicate the
U.S. DoD, led by the Army and JIATF 401, planned and began building an online marketplace for counter-UAS capabilities. Notable milestones include the inaugural interagency summit in November 2025 and formal announcements of establishing a marketplace concept and related data/evaluation framework (DOW test data, operational feedback, procurement options). Sources include Defense One, Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, GlobalSecurity, Army News/DoD coverage (Nov–Dec 2025).
Current status: There is clear movement toward creation and deployment of a marketplace concept, with plans and initial multi-agency coordination events completed by late 2025. However, as of January 4, 2026, publicly available reporting does not confirm a fully deployed, live marketplace accessible to all interagency and law enforcement partners. The initiative appears to be in the deployment and integration phase, not yet complete.
Dates and milestones: July 2025–November 2025 saw the stand-up and organizational planning of JIATF 401 and the announcement of a counter-UAS marketplace concept. The November 25, 2025 interagency summit and subsequent DoD coverage mark concrete milestones toward data sharing, evaluation, and procurement workflows associated with the marketplace.
Source reliability: Coverage from DoD News, Defense One, Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, GlobalSecurity, and affiliated military/defense outlets provides cross-verified reporting on the marketplace concept and related interagency activities. The DoD primary sources offer authoritative context; other outlets vary in depth but corroborate the overall timeline. These sources are generally reliable for defense and national security topics.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 09:48 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, with DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options accessible through the marketplace.
Evidence of progress: JIATF-401 leadership described the marketplace as central to layered counter-drone defense in a Dec. 18, 2025 Defense.gov piece. Industry coverage (Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov, Nov. 2025) notes planning for a digital marketplace and procurement pathways but does not cite a live deployment date.
Completion status: No public deployment date or evidence of full marketplace deployment as of Jan. 4, 2026. Reports indicate ongoing development and integration efforts rather than a launched platform.
Key dates and milestones: November 2025 featured planning discussions; December 18, 2025 Defense.gov article frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort. Procurement pathway funding and coordination via FEMA and DLA are referenced as supporting actions, not a completed system.
Source reliability: Defense.gov is a primary military/official source; Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov provide contemporaneous reporting on planning status. Taken together, they indicate an active development trajectory with no deployed marketplace yet.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 07:43 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The defense reporting in late 2025, including Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) and a Defense Department feature (Dec 18, 2025), describes JIATF 401’s push to create an online “counter-UAS marketplace” and related procurement pathways. The December 2025 piece notes ongoing development, testing coordination, and policy work, with a launch date for the marketplace yet to be determined.
Completion status: There is no public documentation of a deployed, fully functional marketplace by early January 2026. Reports emphasize planning, testing, and policy development rather than a completed procurement hub accessible across agencies. The stated completion condition—marketplace deployed with interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options—has not been met according to the cited sources.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 Defense One article announcing an online marketplace concept, and the December 11–12, 2025 interagency symposium in
Washington, where progress and interoperability goals were discussed. The December 18, 2025 Defense Department piece underscores ongoing integration with DLA and FEMA funding pathways, but no deployment date is announced.
Source reliability: The most detailed public accounts come from Defense One and related defense-industry reporting, which describe ongoing development and policy work but do not publish the marketplace as deployed. The Defense.gov piece (shared in the prompt) provides an official framing but likewise does not indicate a launched platform by January 2026. Overall, sources are reasonably reliable for progress updates, though they do not confirm deployment.
Follow-up note: If a deployment or formal access rollout occurs, it should be documented in official DOW/JIATF communications or congressional notices. Current evidence points to ongoing development rather than completion as of 2026-01-04.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 06:07 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (JIATF-401 communications, DoD).
Evidence of progress: DoD and JIATF-401 describe the marketplace as a central component of the layered counter-drone effort, with coordination alongside the Defense Logistics Agency to enable data access, feedback, and procurement pathways (War Department article, Dec. 18, 2025). A law-enforcement symposium and ongoing interagency integration activities occurred in December 2025, including demonstrations of data sharing and integrated planning for grant-funded procurement (
War.gov, Dec. 11–18, 2025). Independent reporting confirms plans to stand up an online marketplace, though no published deployment date was given (Breaking Defense, Nov. 17–18, 2025; Executive Government, Nov. 18, 2025).
Assessment of completion status: The marketplace has been framed as a central, ongoing capability under development, not a deployed, fully operational tool as of early January 2026. No explicit deployment date or finished milestone was announced; statements emphasize progress, integration, and scalable procurement processes rather than a live, general-access marketplace (various DoD and defense press coverage).
Dates and milestones: Key events include the December 11–18, 2025 interagency symposiums and briefings, the November 21, 2025 drone-exercise activities, and the December 18, 2025 DoD article signaling ongoing marketplace development and interagency logistics support (War.gov). The reported $250 million FEMA/DLA funding pathway is highlighted as enabling rapid capability delivery to partners (War.gov).
Source reliability note: The primary sources are official DoD/War Department communications (War.gov, Dec. 2025) and reputable defense media reporting (Breaking Defense; Executive Government). These sources provide consistent descriptions of ongoing development, but they do not indicate a deployed marketplace as of early January 2026.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 03:45 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The defense-focused claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence exists in public briefings and Defense Department communications describing JIATF 401's role and a centralized data-procurement approach. Key milestones include the December 2025 Defense Department feature on JIATF 401 and related discussions about leveraging DLA logistics and FEMA funding pathways to stand up the marketplace. As of early January 2026, there is clear momentum, but no published, official deployment date confirming full access for all intended partners.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 01:50 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department article describes a central effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with a centerpiece being a counter-UAS marketplace intended to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. A December 2025 law enforcement symposium and related activities show ongoing interagency coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to support procurement and fielding, indicating active development.
Completion status: The marketplace is described as a core, ongoing component rather than a deployed, fully operational system. Phrases such as “a cornerstone of this effort is the development of a counter-UAS marketplace” and “we’re not there yet, but we are making measurable progress” imply progress is in progress but not complete as of December 2025.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones include the December 18, 2025 Defense.gov release announcing the initiative and the December 11, 2025 symposium illustrating progress and interagency coordination. Additional context references
World Cup 2026 planning and broader procurement collaboration underway in 2025. The exact deployment date for the marketplace remains unspecified.
Source reliability note: The primary source is the Defense Department’s official defense.gov piece, supplemented by coverage from War.gov that republishes the Defense release and related Army communications, both of which corroborate the ongoing nature of the effort and provide direct quotes from leaders involved. No obvious reliability concerns with these government and military outlets are evident, though they describe progress rather than completion.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 11:56 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (defense.gov, 2025-12-18). The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of a layered counter-drone defense effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), with emphasis on centralizing data access and validated procurement paths for interagency users (defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Progress evidence: DoD presentations and related coverage indicate active development and planning as of late 2025. A Dec. 11–12, 2025 law enforcement symposium highlighted ongoing efforts to test, integrate, and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with the marketplace framed as a centralized data and procurement hub (defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Reporting from ExecutiveGov (Nov. 18, 2025) corroborates that JIATF-401 is pursuing an online marketplace to provide authoritative performance data and facilitate rapid procurement, aligning with broader DoD interagency coordination (ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Completion status: The DoD article and partner reporting describe development and intent but do not announce a full deployment or a fixed completion date. The marketplace is presented as a work-in-progress component of a broader C-UAS integration effort, with milestones such as interagency symposia and testing activities ongoing in late 2025 (defense.gov, 2025-12-18). There is no publicly stated date for final deployment or universal interagency access as of early January 2026.
Dates and milestones: Key events include the December 11–12, 2025 interagency symposium in
Arlington,
Virginia, and
the November 21, 2025 drone exercise in
Washington, which underscore integrated planning and data-sharing goals (defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Reports note a $250 million FEMA/DLA-related funding pathway to support procurement and testing during the period, signaling resource mobilization for market-like access (defense.gov, 2025-12-18; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Source reliability: Primary sources are official DoD communications (defense.gov) and War Department-affiliated outlets, which provide direct statements about program design and progress. Supporting coverage from ExecutiveGov, a government-focused trade outlet, corroborates marketplace development and procurement aims. Overall, sources are credible for outlining planned capabilities and ongoing efforts; no independent verification of a deployed, fully operational marketplace exists as of 2026-01-04.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 10:06 AMin_progress
The claim: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: defense reporting confirms JIATF 401 centers the marketplace concept, with DLA providing procurement pathways and FEMA funding mechanisms to accelerate capability delivery. A December 18, 2025 Defense Department News story situates the marketplace as a central feature and notes ongoing interagency coordination, testing, and capability delivery activities tied to data sharing and procurement integration.
Completion status: as of January 4, 2026, there is no public record of a deployed, standing marketplace accessible to all interagency partners. Multiple December 2025 pieces describe the marketplace as an objective in development rather than a fully deployed system, indicating measurable progress but not a completed deployment.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 07:53 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The Defense Department description centers on a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense reporting from December 2025 explicitly identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort, with the centralized mechanism described as key to enabling access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Letters of progress indicate foundational work but no public deployment date has been announced.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department article (Dec. 18, 2025) states that JIATF 401 is integrating skills to deliver layered counter-drone defense and highlights the marketplace as a central element. Subsequent industry reporting in November 2025 notes that the Army-led task force intends to stand up a digital marketplace but does not specify a launch date or the number of systems to be available. Defense industry coverage in Dec. 2025 reinforces ongoing testing, standardization, and coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to support procurement pathways.
Evidence about completion status: As of early January 2026, there is no publicly announced deployment or operative launch date for the marketplace. Articles emphasize planning, testing, and coordination rather than a finished product ready for interagency access. Industry outlets describe the marketplace as an upcoming capability rather than a completed platform.
Dates and milestones: The Defense Department piece is dated December 18, 2025, indicating the marketplace as a “cornerstone” of the effort. Industry reports from November 2025 reference stand-up plans and a lack of a firm launch date. The narrative across sources points to ongoing integration work through late 2025 with anticipated deployment in the subsequent period, but no concrete milestone confirming full access has been published.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 03:52 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (Defense.gov metadata). News coverage confirms the initiative is active but without a fixed launch date, positioning the marketplace as a work in progress rather than a deployed system (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Evidence of progress includes leadership and organizational setup under JIATF 401, with statements that the marketplace will accompany an existing UAS marketplace and will provide authoritative performance data to help customers select appropriate tools (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
There is no completed deployment or access for interagency partners reported as of early 2026. The articles note that the task force has not set a launch date and that funding for the marketplace remains to be determined, potentially sourced from
O&M, RDT&E, and procurement budgets (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Concrete milestones cited include plans for a c-UAS marketplace tied to a broader UAS marketplace, and a scheduled interagency testing/testing-evaluation pathway through a forthcoming summit; however, these are described as forthcoming actions rather than completed deliverables (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18).
Reliability notes: the primary sources are defense-focused outlets reporting on statements from JIATF 401 leadership. While they corroborate the concept and intent, they acknowledge the absence of a firm launch date or budget, so the information reflects plans rather than a validated operational product.
Update · Jan 04, 2026, 01:44 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense release frames the marketplace as a central feature of a layered counter-drone defense led by JIATF 401. This indicates intent and ongoing development rather than a deployed system.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 11:52 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD reporting identifies Joint Interagency Task Force 401 as leading a whole-of-government effort to strengthen counter-UAS capabilities, with the marketplace described as central for access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options. Collaborations with the Defense Logistics Agency and a FEMA grant pathway are cited as mechanisms to accelerate fielding and interoperability. DoD coverage from December 2025 documents interagency coordination and ongoing development rather than final deployment.
Current status: No published completion date exists; officials describe measurable progress and ongoing development rather than a finished, deployed system. Multiple outlets in late 2025 describe the marketplace as a planned or developing capability, with milestones focused on planning, integration, and capability delivery rather than a deployed product.
Dates and milestones: Law-enforcement symposiums and interagency discussions occurred in December 2025 in
Washington,
D.C., signaling progress toward a shared data and procurement platform. Earlier 2025 reporting highlighted Army-led efforts to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone tech and procurement pathways. These events indicate ongoing work toward deployment rather than completion.
Reliability of sources: The core claim is substantiated by an official DoD article (Defense.gov, Dec. 18, 2025) and corroborating reporting from defense-focused outlets; while the exact deployment date remains unspecified, the materials consistently describe ongoing development and interagency collaboration.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 10:00 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: DoD coverage (Dec. 18, 2025) describes Joint Interagency Task Force 401 leading a whole-of-government effort around C-UAS, with a cornerstone being a counter-UAS marketplace to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The initiative is advanced in coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage funding opportunities and streamlined contracting pathways, including FEMA grant channels. Public briefings and a law-enforcement symposium in December 2025 emphasize ongoing integration work and the goal of rapid fielding for interagency partners.
Current status: As of early January 2026, there is no published deployment or proven completion of the marketplace. DoD sources describe development and planning, but “deployed” status and definitive completion milestones have not been announced. Independent outlets in late 2025 corroborate that the marketplace is a planned capability rather than a live, publicly accessible system.
Dates and milestones: Key references point to activities in November–December 2025 (task force formation, symposiums, and procurement/planning efforts) with a December 18, 2025 DoD article highlighting the marketplace concept. No 2026 deployment date or rollout schedule has been disclosed.
Source reliability note: The core claim and progress come from DoD-produced material (Defense.gov article) and corroborating reporting from Defense One and ExecutiveGov, which summarize official DoD briefings. These sources are appropriate for policy/defense progress; however, formal deployment status and completion dates remain undocumented in publicly accessible, primary DoD communications.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 07:43 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress is tied to the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 efforts to stand up an online, centralized marketplace alongside a UAS marketplace.
Evidence of progress: November 2025 reporting from Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov confirms the plan to establish an online marketplace with authoritative performance data and streamlined procurement, coordinated with interagency partners (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18).
Current status: Public details indicate the marketplace is in planning and development, with no launch date or deployed access for partners as of early 2026; no evidence of formal deployment has been documented in the cited sources (
Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Notes on reliability and milestones: The cited outlets are trade/news platforms reporting on statements by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401; corroborating DoD statements exist but concrete deployment milestones remain unannounced. A c-UAS summit was planned to coordinate testing before potential inclusion, but without a firm completion date the effort remains in-progress.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 06:07 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (as described in the DoD/JIATF-401 initiative). The Defense Department narrative emphasizes a centralized marketplace to access DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The December 18, 2025 DoD article positions the marketplace as a centerpiece of the broader counter-UAS effort, but does not indicate a launch date.
Evidence of progress: Multiple public reports in late 2024–2025 frame the marketplace as a near-term deliverable within JIATF-401 and with Defense Logistics Agency collaboration. DoD’s Dec. 18, 2025 piece notes ongoing integration work and the goal of providing a centralized mechanism for interagency partners. External reporting (Nov–Dec 2025) also describes the Army-led initiative and related procurement frameworks aligning toward a marketplace concept.
Completion status: There is no verifiable indication that the marketplace has been deployed or publicly opened to interagency and law enforcement partners as of early January 2026. DoD and partner coverage describe planning, data sharing aims, and procurement pathways, but stop short of announcing a live, fully deployed platform. The presence of associated funding and related test/fielding efforts suggests continued development rather than completion.
Dates and milestones: Key public markers include the DoD December 18, 2025 article detailing the marketplace concept and the November–December 2025 reporting on JIATF-401 activities and funding mechanisms (e.g., FEMA grant pathways via DLA). The July 2025 DoD announcement of the joint interagency task force establishes the governance, with subsequent 2025 activities focused on integration and coordination for law enforcement use. Reliability notes: DoD official publications (defense.gov) provide the primary, authoritative account of the marketplace concept; coverage from Federal News Network and ExecutiveGov corroborates the timeline and interagency collaboration, though some outlets frame it as planning or testing rather than deployed product. DoD sources are considered high credibility for defense programs; secondary outlets vary in depth and should be interpreted in light of official statements.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 03:45 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: A December 18, 2025 Defense Department article identifies the marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense effort and notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA funding for procurement pathways. The piece also highlights a law enforcement symposium in December 2025 and ongoing integration work with DLA to enable access to data, testing results, and procurement options.
Current status against completion: The article frames the marketplace as a foundational, ongoing capability rather than a deployed, fully operational system. It states the goal is to develop and provide access through a centralized mechanism, with phrases like “a cornerstone of this effort” and “we are making measurable progress,” but no explicit deployment date or completed rollout is announced.
Key dates and milestones: December 11–18, 2025 events include a law enforcement symposium and public acknowledgement of progress, with collaboration work between JIATF 401, DLA, and FEMA grant pathways. The source indicates a funding and governance pathway rather than a finished product.
Source reliability and limitations: Primary information comes from official
U.S. government communications (Defense Department News) and corroborating reporting from defense-focused outlets. While credible, the coverage describes ongoing development with no hard completion date, limiting certainty about final deployment.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 01:49 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Defense Department coverage (Dec 18, 2025) identifies the marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401’s efforts, with collaboration between JIATF 401, the Defense Logistics Agency, and FEMA to leverage a $250 million funding opportunity for counter-UAS capabilities. Army and Defense media in late 2025 publicly framed the marketplace as a developing, foundational component aimed at integrating data, testing results, and procurement pathways. Public reporting through late 2025 and early 2026 notes ongoing planning, testing, and policy work, not a deployed, end-user-ready system.
Current status: The marketplace has been described as in development and central to enterprise counter-UAS efforts; no public indication of full deployment or universal access by interagency and law enforcement as of early January 2026. Statements emphasize progress, integration with testing and procurement processes, and readiness to scale with funding and procurement mechanisms, rather than a completed, live marketplace.
Dates and milestones: December 11–18, 2025 symposiums and joint statements highlighted progress and next steps, including data integration, testing, and shared procurement pathways. The Defense.gov piece explicitly casts the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort, with mention of FEMA/NFO-based funding and DLA logistics support as enablers. No firm deployment date or completion milestone is cited.
Source reliability: Primary sources are official
U.S. government outlets (Defense.gov, Army.mil) and established defense-focused outlets (ExecutiveGov, Breaking Defense) reporting on the JIATF 401 initiative. These sources are generally reliable for policy and program status, though they describe progress and plans rather than presenting final, deployed capabilities. Cross-checks among multiple official and reputable outlets corroborate the ongoing development trajectory.
Notes on ambiguity: The available public reporting indicates ongoing development with measurable progress and funding pathways, but lacks a concrete deployment date or explicit completion confirmation. Given this, the status is best characterized as in_progress rather than complete or failed.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 01:25 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The interagency effort aims to develop a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting from December 2025 describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the JIATF 401 effort and notes ongoing development to provide data, feedback, and procurement pathways. November 2025 reporting also confirms planning for a digital marketplace to centralize C-UAS tools and data for federal and local partners.
Progress status: The marketplace is described as being developed and not yet deployed. Officials emphasize measurable progress and ongoing work to integrate data, testing results, and procurement mechanisms, with no announced launch date as of early 2026.
Key dates and milestones: Dec. 18, 2025—official DOW release highlighting the marketplace and progress; Nov. 2025—public discussion of marketplace plans. Reporting through early 2026 reiterates ongoing development rather than deployment.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 11:54 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense article describes a centralized mechanism for interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options as a core element.
Progress evidence: The Defense Department article (Dec. 18, 2025) identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401's layered counter-drone strategy and notes ongoing integration efforts with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to enable rapid procurement. Additional reporting around late 2025 describes Army-led plans to stand up a digital marketplace to provide authoritative data on performance and procurement options for counter-UAS tech.
Milestones and related events: A law-enforcement symposium (Dec. 11, 2025) highlighted coordination among federal and local partners and the need for an integrated data-and-procurement platform. Drone-domain press coverage from Nov. 2025 references active planning to launch an online marketplace for installation commanders, FBI, DHS, and local agencies to shop for counter-UAS capabilities. No explicit deployment date or full public rollout is reported as of early January 2026.
Current status assessment: There is clear progress toward creating a centralized marketplace concept and procurement pathway, but the Defense Department piece does not indicate that the marketplace has been deployed or completed. The completion condition—“marketplace developed and deployed; partners have access to data, feedback, and procurement options”—has not been publicly satisfied by the cited sources.
Source reliability note: The primary source is an official Defense Department news story, which provides authoritative confirmation of the ongoing initiative. Complementary coverage from defense-and-government outlets (ExecutiveGov, Breaking Defense, Defense One) reinforces the planning and funding context, though these are secondary to the DoD source. Overall, the information points to ongoing development rather than completion as of January 2026.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 10:10 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article asserts a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple 2025 outlets describe Army-led JIATF 401 planning an online marketplace for counter-UAS and UAS tech, including data on performance, testing feedback, and streamlined purchasing. Key statements came from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross in November 2025, with reporting noting the marketplace concept and related policy work were ongoing (
Breaking Defense, Defense One, CUAS Hub). A Defense.gov piece from December 18, 2025 highlights broader joint interagency integration work, including layered counter-drone capabilities, which supports the marketplace as part of the evolving framework.
Completion status: There is no evidence of a launched or deployed marketplace by early January 2026. Reports repeatedly state that a launch date has not been set and that the marketplace remains in planning, testing, and policy-development phases (Nov 2025 reports; Defense One/Breaking Defense). The articles emphasize ongoing testing, data standards, and procurement policy work rather than an active, end-to-end deployment.
Dates and milestones: Notable milestones cited include: Nov 14–17, 2025 reporting on the planned online marketplace and its testing/education efforts; November 2025 mentions of policy and testing frameworks; December 2025 DoD-related reporting on integrated counter-UAS efforts. Reliability note: Sources consist of defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, CUAS Hub) and a DoD official outlet; while they provide timely coverage of planning and policy, none confirm a live, fully deployed marketplace as of early 2026.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 07:36 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025).
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department report highlights JIATF 401 leading the effort, with ongoing integration of sensors, data sharing, and procurement pathways through partnerships with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA grant funding (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025). Notable actions include a law enforcement symposium in
Arlington (Dec 11, 2025) and a focus on delivering a shared, interoperable data-and-procurement framework (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025).
Completion status: The article frames the marketplace as a cornerstone and ongoing initiative rather than a completed system, noting progress and planned integration but not declaring deployment or full access for partners. No definitive deployment date is provided, and leaders describe measurable progress without claiming final completion (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025).
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the Dec 11, 2025 law enforcement symposium and the Nov 21, 2025 counter-UAS exercise in
Washington, culminating in statements about accelerating fielding and interoperability (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025). The involvement of DLA and FEMA grant funding ($250 million) is also highlighted as a procedural milestone toward fielding capability (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025).
Reliability of sources: The primary source is an official Defense Department news story, authored by the JIATF 401 leadership, which provides direct statements about ongoing efforts, partnerships, and funding. While it is an authoritative source for the initiative, it reflects the department’s perspective and frames progress in a positive light; cross-checks with independent evaluations or downstream procurement notices would strengthen verification (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025).
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 04:02 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, operational user feedback, and vetted procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD confirms the marketplace is a cornerstone of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense and notes ongoing integration with DLA logistics and FEMA-funded procurement pathways (Dec 2025). Independent reporting from Breaking Defense and ExecutiveGov/Defense One (Nov 2025) describes planning and development of an online marketplace to aggregate data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency users.
Completion status: No public evidence shows deployment or full access for interagency partners. DoD emphasizes progress toward integration and rapid fielding, but there is no deployment date published.
Dates and milestones: DoD article dated Dec 18, 2025, indicates ongoing development. November 2025 coverage cites intent to stand up a marketplace with near-term timelines, but no concrete deployment date is provided. Event planning for
World Cup/Olympics is cited as use cases, not a completion milestone.
Source reliability: Primary source is the official DoD News Story (Dec 18, 2025). Secondary outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, Particle News) corroborate development claims but are trade/industry outlets; none provide a deployed-date confirmation.
Follow-up note: A deployment milestone and user-access details should be tracked for 2026-06-30 to confirm completion status.
Update · Jan 03, 2026, 01:48 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense reporting (Dec. 18, 2025) confirms the marketplace is a central element of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense plan, with ongoing efforts to develop capability sharing, testing data, and procurement pathways via DOW and DLA/FEMA funding. Army reporting (Nov. 13, 2025) reiterates the marketplace as a near-term objective and highlights interagency coordination to stand up such a portal. A December 2025 symposium underscores progress toward integrated data sharing and interagency collaboration as foundational elements.
Completion status: No public confirmation of deployment or full deployment to interagency and law enforcement partners by Jan 2, 2026. Sources describe development, integration, and coordination as ongoing work, with milestones like shared data sets, testing environments, and procurement pathways referenced but not shown as completed.
Dates and reliability note: Key milestones include August 2025 (JIATF 401 establishment), November–December 2025 interagency events and symposiums, and the December 18, 2025 Defense release. Official government outlets are the strongest sources for status; secondary outlets corroborate ongoing planning but do not verify deployment.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 11:58 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The article states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD and Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) leadership describe the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense effort, with active planning and development described in December 2025 coverage. The GlobalSecurity report confirms the marketplace as a central component under development and notes coordination with DLA and FEMA funding pathways for related procurement activities.
Completion status: There is no published completion or deployment date. Articles emphasize ongoing development, policy alignment, testing, and the establishment of procurement and data-sharing mechanisms, but stop short of confirming full deployment or agency-wide access.
Dates and milestones: The December 2025 reporting marks a key milestone in articulating the marketplace concept and its role in interoperability, testing, and logistics. No firm launch date is provided; a future counter-UAS summit and continued testing are mentioned as interim steps in the process.
Source reliability: The supporting sources include DoD news coverage, Defense One reporting, and GlobalSecurity.org summaries. These outlets are credible for defense matters, with DoD material providing authoritative context. Overall, sources are consistent about the marketplace being in development, not yet deployed.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 10:02 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In late 2025, multiple outlets and official channels report the establishment and development of a Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF 401) to accelerate counter-drone capabilities, including plans for a digital marketplace that aggregates test data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options. Notable references include Defense Department-related announcements and defense press coverage dated November–December 2025.
Milestones and status: Reports describe a dedicated online or digital marketplace as a core component of JIATF 401’s mission to streamline access to data, feedback, and procurement for interagency partners. A 90-day timeline was publicly cited for common counter-drone command networks and procurement pathways as part of these efforts, with leadership indicating consolidation of DoD and partner capabilities.
Current completion status: As of early January 2026, no evidence demonstrates full deployment or operational access for all interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as being developed or planned, with ongoing integration and procurement coordination continuing under JIATF 401 and allied programs.
Reliability of sources: Coverage relies on defense-focused outlets, official DoD communications, and industry/defense-news aggregators. While these sources consistently describe ongoing development and planning, they do not confirm a deployed, fully functional marketplace by January 2026. The reporting is aligned with standard defense reporting practices and reflects credible, trackable milestones, though some outlets paraphrase or interpret announcements.
Follow-up note: Continued monitoring is advised to confirm deployment milestones and access for partner agencies; a targeted update around 2026-03-01 would capture any near-term deployment progress.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 07:54 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, including access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: In November 2025, JIATF 401 announced plans to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace alongside an overarching UAS marketplace, with the goal of centralizing access to performance data and procurement pathways (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025).
Completion status: As of early January 2026, the marketplace has not been publicly deployed. Officials described the marketplace concept, the data-sharing framework, and procurement pathways as ongoing developments with planned testing and governance, rather than a completed, live system (DOW article; Breaking Defense reporting).
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include the November 2025 decision to create the online marketplace, a December 11, 2025 interagency law-enforcement symposium outlining capability testing and data sharing, and the December 18, 2025 Defense Department article framing the marketplace as a central, advancing effort. These indicate progress and near-term implementation steps, not full deployment.
Sources and reliability: The Defense Department’s official article (Dec 18, 2025) provides primary, government-authenticated confirmation of the marketplace concept and interagency collaboration. Supplementary reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) corroborates the planned marketplace and its integration with procurement and data-sharing efforts. Overall, sources are credible, with official government communication reinforcing the progress narrative; caveats include the typical sensitivity around interagency data and procurement plans, which may affect visible timelines.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 06:10 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense reporting from Defense.gov highlights ongoing efforts under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to integrate and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, with a stated cornerstone being the development of a centralized counter-UAS marketplace that would provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The article is dated December 18, 2025 and describes activities including cross-agency coordination, leveraging FEMA grant funding, and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to enable procurement pathways.
Current status: The piece presents the marketplace as a central objective and foundational element of the layered counter-drone defense strategy, but does not publish a deployed deployment date or indicate full operational readiness. The symposium coverage (December 11, 2025) and subsequent Defense.gov article frame the marketplace as a developing capability rather than a completed system.
Reliability and context: The source is an official Defense Department news story, which provides credible, official context for government-led counter-UAS efforts. Timelines for defense programs can be fluid and depend on funding, interagency coordination, and testing; the article emphasizes progress and foundational work without asserting final completion.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 03:47 PMin_progress
Original claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, with a cornerstone described as a centralized mechanism for DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting in December 2025 frames the marketplace as a central focus of JIATF 401’s effort, describing it as a central mechanism for data, feedback, and procurement pathways. Independent coverage in November 2025 indicated planning stages with no launch date. Defense Department materials emphasize ongoing development and interagency coordination rather than a deployed product.
Status relative to completion: As of January 2026, public sources show no deployed marketplace. Break Defense (Nov 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 2025) note the lack of a firm launch date, aligning with a developing initiative rather than a finished system.
Dates and milestones: Key markers include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401, the December 11–18, 2025 symposium, and the Dec 18, 2025 Defense.gov piece. No firm deployment date is publicly announced. The reliability of the Defense Department as the primary source is high; cross-checks from industry-focused outlets corroborate the nascent status.
Reliability note: Official Defense Department publications provide authoritative framing, while industry outlets corroborate the absence of a launch date and the ongoing nature of development. Given the evolving procurement processes for counter-UAS, treat the marketplace as in development rather than deployed.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 01:52 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Multiple public reports describe an Army-led effort to create an online, centralized marketplace for counter-drone capabilities, intended to streamline data sharing, testing results, and procurement inputs for interagency users. The idea centers on a single portal to access vetted data, user experiences, and vendor options.
Evidence of progress: Reporting in late 2025 indicates concrete steps toward establishing the marketplace. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) notes the initiative is being planned, with emphasis on providing a range of counter-UAS options and interagency access, but no fixed launch date. Army.mil (Dec 19, 2025) references 100 days of counter-drone operations and highlights the marketplace as part of ongoing testing events and procurement efforts, implying active development rather than completion.
Current status against completion condition: The marketplace has not been publicly deployed as of the sources available in early 2026. Reports describe planning, policy alignment, and ongoing testing activities, but do not confirm a deployed, fully operational platform with guaranteed interagency access. The sources imply a work-in-progress with milestones centered on testing events, policy development, and vendor engagement.
Key dates and milestones: July–December 2025 period shows initial stand-up discussions, with November 2025 reporting emphasizing planning and scope, and December 2025 noting operational testing activities related to the marketplace. No explicit deployment date is provided; the anticipated milestones include a digital marketplace enabling procurement and user feedback loops.
Source reliability note: The cited outlets (Breaking Defense, Army.mil, ExecutiveGov, Defense One) are standard defense-policy/defense-industry publications and official military communication channels. They vary in depth and are generally reliable for identifying program intentions, timelines, and public statements, though exact deployment dates are not established and should be treated as subject to change. Cross-referencing with official DoD or JIATF 401 announcements would strengthen verification.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 11:57 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department report describes a centralized counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered defense effort, enabling access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Evidence of progress: The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is leading the initiative and coordinating with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) to leverage grant funding and procurement pathways. Public briefings and coverage in November–December 2025 describe ongoing development of the marketplace and related testing, data sharing, and interoperability efforts (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Current status: There is explicit language that the marketplace has not yet launched. Officials say there is no fixed launch date and emphasize ongoing testing, data integration, and procurement pathway establishment as prerequisites to deployment (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Dates and milestones: Key events include the JIATF 401-led
symposia and interagency discussions in December 2025, statements about leveraging a $250 million FEMA/DLA-enabled funding mechanism for counter-UAS, and the plan to hold a c-UAS summit to outline testing and evaluation processes (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Source reliability note: Primary coverage comes from official Defense Department outlets (Defense.gov) and established defense journalism (Breaking Defense). Both sources acknowledge ongoing development and avoid overstating a completed deployment; no outlet is relying on speculative or unverified claims in this reporting window.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 10:00 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the broader
JIATF 401 effort to integrate data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency use. It does not indicate the marketplace has been deployed and publicly accessible to partners yet.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department piece (Dec. 18, 2025) notes ongoing interagency integration efforts, including collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage a FEMA grant funding pathway and a $250 million funding opportunity for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities. It also highlights a law enforcement symposium (Dec. 11, 2025) and related rapid integration efforts. These items indicate tangible steps toward operationalizing data sharing and procurement mechanisms that would underpin a marketplace.
Evidence of completion status: The article frames the marketplace as a developing cornerstone rather than a deployed, fully active system. There is no explicit statement that the marketplace is deployed or that interagency partners have universal access. Instead, the piece emphasizes ongoing integration, testing, and capability delivery with milestones around events and funding channels. Completion cannot be confirmed from publicly available sources as of Jan 1, 2026.
Reliability note: The primary source is a Defense Department news story published on defense.gov, an official government outlet. Information appears consistent with other DoD communications about JIATF-401, DLA contracting support, and FEMA funding mechanisms; no high-quality independent corroboration is evident in the available material. The report’s framing remains cautious about progress, citing milestones and partnerships rather than a finalized, deployed marketplace.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 07:39 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD and JIATF 401 publicly describe the marketplace as a central mechanism for accessing test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025). Industry coverage notes ongoing plans to stand up an online marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with leadership indicating procurement and data integration efforts and no firm launch date (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025; Defense One, Nov 14–18, 2025).
Current status vs completion: There is no evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of Jan 1, 2026. Officials emphasize planning, integration, and procurement pathways rather than a live product, and no deployment date has been announced in the cited materials.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones include the Dec. 11–18, 2025 symposium and related DoD release outlining the centralized marketplace concept, and November 2025 reporting signaling imminent stand-up of a digital marketplace. These mark progress in design and governance, not completion.
Source reliability: Primary information comes from the DoD’s Defense.gov piece, which outlines the marketplace concept, supplemented by Breaking Defense and Defense One coverage that describe ongoing development and procurement integration. The DoD source is authoritative for policy and program intent; trade outlets provide corroboration of progression but describe non-final status.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 03:44 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The defense article frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of a broader, interagency effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to strengthen layered counter-drone defense, with a centralized mechanism to access test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress includes the formal establishment of JIATF-401 in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities (DOW article, Dec 18, 2025). In addition, the effort coordinates with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage a $250 million FEMA-like funding pathway for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities, aimed at accelerating fielding and procurement. The December 2025 symposium and briefings emphasize interagency collaboration and the development of an integrated data and procurement framework, including the marketplace concept.
There is no published confirmation that the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed or explicitly opened to all interagency and law enforcement partners as of January 1, 2026. The December 2025 article describes the marketplace as a central objective and a mechanism under development, rather than a completed, live system. Remaining status indicators point to ongoing integration, testing, and procurement consolidation rather than full deployment.
Key dates and milestones cited include August 2025 (JIATF-401 established), November–December 2025 (counter-UAS training exercises and interagency symposium in
Washington,
D.C.), and December 18, 2025 (official defense release detailing the marketplace concept and its role). These milestones demonstrate progress in capability integration and interagency cooperation, but stop short of reporting a deployed, access-controlled marketplace.
Source reliability: the primary source is a Defense Department news story (defense.gov), which provides official statements and dates. Secondary references include mirrors and defense-focused outlets (GlobalSecurity, public press listings) that corroborate the timeline. Given the official framing, the information is credible for progress claims, though the marketplace itself remains described as developmental rather than fully deployed.
Follow-up note: a structured update should confirm whether the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed and opened to interagency partners by a specific date. A follow-up date is set to 2026-12-18 to reassess completion status.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 01:45 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense reporting identifies the marketplace as a central feature of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities across agencies. The intent is to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options in one centralized mechanism.
Evidence of progress includes the formal establishment of JIATF 401 in August 2025 and a December 11–12, 2025 law enforcement symposium highlighting its mission and ongoing integration efforts. The Defense Department article notes ongoing collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA grant funding and create scalable procurement pathways, including a $250 million opportunity dedicated to counter-UAS and air domain awareness capabilities. These steps demonstrate momentum toward a centralized marketplace, even if deployment is not yet complete.
The completion condition—marketplace developed and deployed with interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options—has not been publicly fulfilled as of the current date. The Defense.gov piece describes the marketplace as a cornerstone and confirms measurable progress, but does not indicate full deployment or formal access for all partners. Given the available information, the project remains in_progress with identifiable milestones reached but not a finished state.
Concrete milestones cited include the December 2025 symposium defining interoperability needs and data-sharing goals, the collaboration with DLA to streamline contracting and logistics, and the allocation of FEMA funding pathways to accelerate fielding. The article emphasizes the goal of an authoritative data set for testing and evaluation and a shared, integrated air picture across jurisdictions, underscoring the scope of the marketplace concept. The reliability of these details is strengthened by the official Defense Department publication (DOW) reporting from December 2025.
Update · Jan 02, 2026, 12:11 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) to coordinate DoD-wide counter-UAS efforts. In November–December 2025, multiple outlets reported plans for an online or digital marketplace to allow commanders, interagency partners, and agencies like FBI and DHS to access performance data, user feedback, and vetted procurement options, indicating formal recognition and ongoing development rather than a deployed system. Reliability note: sources include DoD-affiliated outlets and defense-focused trade press; while generally credible, some outlets summarize briefings and announcements and may lack full deployment details.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 09:50 PMin_progress
The claim concerns a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article frames the marketplace as a central mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options, as part of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's broader effort.
Evidence of progress includes the creation of JIATF 401 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities, and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage contracting, logistics, and scalable procurement pathways, supported by FEMA grant funding for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness.
A concrete milestone cited is the December 2025 law-enforcement symposium in
Virginia, where leaders discussed shared data access, a unified air picture, and resource optimization across jurisdictions, illustrating progress toward a marketplace architecture. However, no official deployment date for the marketplace is provided, and the article describes it as developing rather than deployed.
Contemporary reporting from defense outlets corroborates ongoing efforts to create a digital marketplace for counter-UAS data and procurement, underscoring that integrations and standardization are still in progress, with no confirmed completion date. The primary source is a Defense Department release, reinforced by industry coverage that emphasizes a phased, interagency approach.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 07:45 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners (DOW, Dec 18, 2025). The marketplace is positioned as a cornerstone to provide authoritative test data, user feedback, and validated procurement paths to accelerate fielding of counter-UAS capabilities (DOW article; ExecutiveGov summary of JIATF 401 statements, Nov 2025).
Progress evidence: Multiple public pieces confirm ongoing efforts to design an online counter-UAS marketplace aligned with a broader UAS marketplace, with leadership from JIATF 401 and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways (DOW article;
ExecutiveGov Nov 2025). Reports indicate plans to test, evaluate, and integrate data streams and procurement pathways, but without a published launch date or full deployment details (ExecutiveGov; IDGA Defense News Digest, Dec 2025).
Current status assessment: As of early January 2026, there is clear public acknowledgement of the marketplace concept and active development, but no official deployment or user-access announcement has been publicly documented. The evidence points to ongoing design, testing, and interagency coordination rather than a completed, live central marketplace (DOW article; ExecutiveGov, Nov 2025).
Milestones and dates: Key milestones cited include establishment of JIATF 401 (August 2025) and a December 2025 symposium emphasizing data-sharing and procurement integration; the articles note funding pathways and interagency collaboration but stop short of confirming a live system or access for partners (DOW; ExecutiveGov; WAR.gov page, Dec 2025).
Reliability note: The Defense Department’s own publication (DOW) provides the strongest, official framing of the marketplace concept; secondary coverage from ExecutiveGov and industry-focused outlets corroborates the development timeline but remains second-hand regarding technical readiness. The reporting avoids clearly biased outlets and relies on government-affiliated sources and established defense press, aligning with a balanced, fact-focused approach.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 06:10 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: In December 2025, Joint Interagency Task Force 401 led efforts to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities in coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding mechanisms (notably a $250 million opportunity). A central feature highlighted was a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize data access, feedback, and procurement options for federal, state, and local partners (DOW article, 12/18/2025; other outlets citing JIATF-401 activity).
Evidence on completion status: The Defense article explicitly notes the marketplace as a cornerstone and describes ongoing integration efforts, but it does not indicate a deployed, fully functional marketplace by early 2026. Public reporting summarizes progress and planning rather than completion; a quoted line states, “We’re not there yet, but we are making measurable progress.”
Dates and milestones: Key milestones include the Dec. 11–21, 2025 interagency symposium at
Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, where leadership discussed shared data, procurement, and a unified air picture. The Defense liaison with DLA and FEMA funding discussions were foregrounded around mid-to-late 2025, with continued pursuit into early 2026. No explicit launch date for the marketplace is provided.
Reliability of sources: Primary information comes from Defense Department News (defense.gov), an official government source, corroborated by industry-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) and defense-oriented sites that summarize JIATF-401 activities. While several pieces describe progress and intent, none show a formal deployment as of early 2026. These sources are generally reliable for official policy and program status, though they reflect ongoing development rather than finalized implementation.
Follow-up note: Given the ongoing nature of the program, a targeted follow-up should be scheduled for a date when the marketplace is publicly announced as deployed or when a formal procurement portal is opened to interagency partners.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 03:48 PMin_progress
The claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (verbatim: a centralized marketplace providing access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options).
Evidence of progress: Multiple outlets in November 2025 reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning and developing an online counter-UAS marketplace to streamline purchasing, testing, and data sharing for counter-UAS capabilities across DoD, DHS, FBI, and local agencies. Key remarks from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross described a centralized system intended to provide authoritative performance data and testing feedback to guide procurement and deployment (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Nov. 2025).
Current completion status: As of early January 2026, reporting indicates the marketplace is in planning and development with no announced launch date. Defense outlets note a summit and ongoing policy/testing work, but explicitly state that a launch date had not been set and the marketplace remains under development (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Nov. 2025).
Milestones and dates: Notable milestones include the November 2025 press coverage of the marketplace concept, the stated intention to hold a counter-UAS summit later in November 2025, and the broader legal/organizational framework from NDAA 2026 creating JIATF 401 and assigning procurement/testing responsibilities to the task force (NDAA context cited by multiple outlets). These sources collectively indicate intent and ongoing work, not a completed deployment. Reliability: The sources are defense-industry outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, and NDAA analyses) that track official DoD statements and policy; while credible for current developments, timelines remain contingent on official DoD confirmation.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 01:52 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It positions the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense approach (DOW/Army.gov, Dec 18, 2025).
Evidence of progress: DoD and Army communications through JIATF 401 highlight ongoing development of a digital marketplace for vetted counter-UAS solutions, data access, and procurement pathways. In December 2025, Army public affairs and DoD outlets described the marketplace as an active priority, with emphasis on data sharing, user feedback, and validated procurement options (DOW War.gov article;
Army.mil, Dec 18–19, 2025).
Current status and milestones: The communications indicate the marketplace is in development and progressing toward deployment, not yet described as fully deployed or universally accessible to all interagency partners. The December 2025 briefings cite planned or ongoing fielding and initial procurement activities (e.g., border deliveries and initial capability deployments) but stop short of stating a complete, agency-wide rollout.
Dates and milestones: Dec 18, 2025 (DoD War Department news release) announces the marketplace as a central element and notes ongoing integration efforts. Dec 19, 2025 (Army public affairs) details 100 days of JIATF-401 operations and references an initial delivery of approximately $18 million in counter-sUAS capabilities planned for January 2026, with a digital marketplace for vetted solutions in development.
Reliability of sources: Primary sources are official
DoD and U.S. Army communications (DoD War Department News, Army.mil), which are highly reliable for policy and program status. Coverage from defense-focused outlets corroborates the marketplace’s existence and pathway toward centralized procurement, though these secondary sources echo the official stance.
Overall assessment: The claim reflects an active development trajectory with concrete milestones on the near-term horizon, but a full deployment to all interagency partners appears not yet complete as of the latest reporting.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 12:17 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting describes an Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) initiative to stand up an online or digital marketplace for counter-UAS tools and data. The marketplace is intended to provide access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (e.g., FBI, DHS) as part of a broader counter-UAS effort. No firm deployment date has been announced.
Evidence of progress includes multiple late-2025 reports confirming ongoing planning and development activity, with leadership statements outlining the marketplace concept and its intended capabilities. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) notes that the task force aims to provide a range of options for departments and partners but explicitly states there is no set launch date. Executive Gov (Nov 18, 2025) describes the marketplace as an upcoming online platform for rapid selection and purchasing of counter-UAS solutions. These sources indicate progress in design and planning rather than a completed deployment.
As of early 2026, there is no public confirmation that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access to data, feedback, and procurement options. The cited reporting emphasizes ongoing development, vendor diversity, and procurement pathways rather than a finished product. The completion condition—completed deployment with access for all interagency and law enforcement partners—has not been evidenced in the sources available to date.
Reliability note: The sources are industry-focused or defense-press outlets (Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, Federal News Network) reporting on the project’s planning and status; none provide an official DoD-wide deployment confirmation. The Defense Department press coverage in December 2025 (via public-facing summaries) reiterates the marketplace concept but does not state a launch date or full access milestones. Overall, the status is best characterized as in_progress with ongoing development and no firm completion date at this time.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 12:05 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: December 2025 reporting describes JIATF 401 advancing a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options, with planning and integration discussions ongoing (symposium Dec 11; defense release Dec 18). Nov 2025 coverage confirms a broader digital marketplace effort accompanying the counter-UAS effort, with no launch date published. These accounts indicate development rather than deployment.
Status against completion: There is no published deployment date or proof of wide interagency access as of January 2026; sources describe ongoing development, data-sharing planning, and procurement pathways as objectives rather than a finished system. The project remains in_progress pending formal deployment and access by partners.
Key dates/milestones: Dec 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium; Dec 18, 2025 defense briefing highlighting the marketplace as a cornerstone; Nov 17, 2025 reporting detailing marketplace stand-up plans. Reports emphasize collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and interagency partners to define data access and procurement flows, with no confirmed launch.
Source reliability: Reports from Breaking Defense and GlobalSecurity.org corroborate the marketplace’s development status and objectives; Defense.gov material was inaccessible in this session, but the secondary sources present consistent, traceable coverage of the initiative.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 11:41 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Public reporting indicates the effort is in the planning and development phase, not yet deployed for broad interagency access.
Multiple sources describe an Army-led initiative (JIATF 401) to stand up an online marketplace for counter-UAS data, performance information, and procurement options, with initial reporting in November 2025 and statements during December 2025. They emphasize centralized access to authoritative data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency partners.
Evidence of progress includes announcements and plans for a digital marketplace and the intent to enable streamlined acquisition and information sharing among federal agencies and law enforcement. However, there is no confirmed deployment date or evidence that the marketplace is fully operational and publicly accessible as of the current date.
The reported milestones focus on roadmap development, stakeholder alignment, and the creation of a centralized platform concept, rather than a completed, live system. Reliability is moderate: several defense and policy outlets corroborate the planning stage, while the primary Defense Department article is not readily accessible for independent verification.
Overall, the situation aligns with an in-progress status: a centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed with ongoing planning and stakeholder coordination, but a deployed, fully accessible system has not yet been demonstrated in public sources.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 11:28 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: November–December 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is establishing a digital marketplace concept and related procurement pathways, with leadership emphasizing data sharing, a centralized vendor ecosystem, and testing-evaluation coordination (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025; Globe/GlobalSecurity mirror, Dec 18, 2025). Additional coverage notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding mechanisms to enable rapid procurement, suggesting ongoing development rather than a launched product (GlobalSecurity, Dec 18, 2025).
Completion status: No public confirmation of a deployed, fully operational marketplace by early 2026. The Dec 18, 2025 Defense Department piece and contemporaneous reporting describe planning and ongoing integration efforts, not a completed deployment or user-access rollout.
Milestones and reliability of sources: Key milestones cited include: (1) the formation and testing-focused mandate of JIATF 401 under
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross; (2) plans to stand up a central marketplace aligned with a broader UAS marketplace; (3) collaboration with DLA, FEMA funding avenues, and interagency engagement; (4) a scheduled c-UAS symposium to outline testing and procurement approaches. Sources are varied (Breaking Defense, GlobalSecurity.org mirror) and consistently describe an ongoing process rather than a finished product.
Reliability note: The most authoritative direct statements originate from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense) and a GlobalSecurity mirror of a DoD release; defense.gov content is inaccessible due to 403, so corroboration relies on secondary coverage, which aligns in tone but emphasizes ongoing development rather than completion.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 10:06 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Late-2025 reporting indicates active efforts to stand up a digital marketplace led by JIATF 401 and related interagency initiatives, with articles noting plans for capability sharing, data/testing sets, and procurement access (Nov–Dec 2025).
Current status: No publicly available source up to Jan 2026 shows a deployed marketplace; sources describe development and pilots rather than full deployment, and no formal completion date is documented.
Key milestones and reliability: Announcements between November and December 2025 cite standing up the marketplace and associated data and collaboration forums; sources include Army.mil, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and GlobalSecurity, which are credible within defense reporting, though not all are official DoD press releases. No independent verification of deployment exists in early 2026.
Follow-up: Revisit on 2026-06-01 to verify deployment status, partner access, and active procurement channels.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 10:01 AMTech Error
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Update · Jan 01, 2026, 09:57 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize data access, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (e.g., access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options).
Progress evidence: In November 2025, announcements from JIATF 401 and multiple defense outlets indicated the Army-led task force is planning an online marketplace that would provide authoritative performance data and a range of counter-UAS tools for military and interagency customers (FBI, DHS, local law enforcement) (Breaking Defense 2025-11; ExecutiveGov 2025-11). Defense-focused reporting also highlighted ongoing work on integrating data, testing, and procurement processes, with plans to host a c-UAS summit to outline collaboration with partners (Breaking Defense 2025-11). A December 2025 piece reiterates the central marketplace concept alongside broader C-UAS integration efforts (Defense One 2025-12). These sources collectively show progress in design and planning, but not a deployed, fully accessible platform.
Completion status: There is no evidence of a deployed marketplace as of 2025-12-31. The leaders describe establishing a central marketplace and data-access framework, but no launch date, catalog, or user access metrics are published; the initiative remains in the planning and development phase (Breaking Defense 2025-11; ExecutiveGov 2025-11; Defense One 2025-12). Milestones cited include a planned c-UAS summit and ongoing coordination with interagency partners, rather than a completed system.
Reliability and limitations: The reporting comes from defense-focused outlets and official-sounding briefings, but Defense.gov content referenced in the claim was not accessible due to access restrictions (403). Secondary outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Defense One) are reputable in defense journalism, though they are not primary government documents. Given the absence of a public deployment or launch date, the sources collectively support an in-progress status rather than completion.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 08:43 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities.
Evidence of progress: Multiple 2025 reports describe the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 pursuing an online marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement options. Nov 2025 coverage states the marketplace is in planning/development, with leadership noting no launch date yet and ongoing work to establish data access and procurement pathways (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Status of completion: As of 2025-12-31, no deployed marketplace is evidenced in the public record; sources emphasize planning, data standardization, and procurement integration rather than a live, fully launched system. The Defense Department and JIATF 401 have described ongoing development without a firm deployment date (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18).
Dates and milestones: Key timestamps include November 2025 public statements about establishing the marketplace and coordinating data/test resources; December 2025 reporting reinforces ongoing development with no stated go-live date (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Meritalk 2025-12-22).
Reliability note: The sources cited are defense-press reporting and official-leaning outlets; while generally credible for defense program status, none provide a verifiable, government-verified deployment date to confirm launch. Cross-source consistency supports an interpretation of ongoing development rather than completion by 2025-12-31 (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; JBSA; GlobalSecurity; Meritalk).
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 07:45 AMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, interagency user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of a broader, layered counter-drone defense effort led by JIATF 401 (Nov 2025 coverage).
Evidence of progress: multiple November 2025 reports state that the Army-led JIATF 401 is standing up a digital marketplace to consolidate counter-UAS data and procurement pathways, aligning with a parallel UAS marketplace initiative (Breaking Defense, Nov 17-18, 2025; ExecutiveGov, Nov 18, 2025).
Current completion status: there is no public indication that the counter-UAS marketplace has been deployed or made accessible to partners; statements consistently describe planning, development, and testing phases without a fixed deployment date (BD, ExecGov, GlobalSecurity.org 2025).
Milestones and reliability of sources: the reporting cycle centers on statements from JIATF 401 leadership and defense outlets, with corroboration across Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and GlobalSecurity.org. While reputable for defense updates, none show a deployed marketplace as of end-2025; reliability is moderate for a status still in development.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 03:54 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Public progress evidence is limited. An official DoD article described the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort, but the Defense.gov page is currently blocked (403), hindering independent verification of milestones. Some secondary summaries reference a centralized data and procurement platform but do not provide concrete deployment dates.
There is no publicly documented completion or deployment date as of 2025-12-31. Reports discuss planning and development phases with emphasis on data access, user feedback, and procurement options, but no confirmation that interagency partners have full access or that the marketplace is live.
Notable dates include the article publication date (Dec 18, 2025) and subsequent defense-industry discussions in late 2025. These sources vary in precision and do not offer independently verifiable deployment evidence.
Source reliability is mixed: primary DoD communications would be strongest, but access issues limit verification. Secondary outlets offer context but differ in data provenance.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 01:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD announced the stand-up of a joint interagency task force to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities (July 2025). Industry reporting and defense outlets outlined plans to establish a digital marketplace with testing, evaluation, and procurement integration (November–December 2025).
Completion status: The marketplace is described as being in development, with discussions of governance, funding, and testing mechanisms, but no definitive deployment date or full operational rollout confirmed as of late 2025.
Dates and milestones: July 2025 (task force formation), November–December 2025 (marketplace planning and policy discussions), December 2025 symposiums highlighting data-sharing and procurement pathways.
Source reliability: Reports come from Breaking Defense, Defense One, Federal News Network, and GlobalSecurity.org—credible defense-focused outlets that quote DoD officials and task-force leadership; however, they reflect planning and pilots rather than certified deployment or formal procurement.
Follow-up note: A concrete deployment date or measurable fielding milestone remains undecided; a targeted update around mid-2026 would capture progress toward deployment and access for interagency partners.
Update · Jan 01, 2026, 12:03 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence of progress: November 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is planning or standing up an online marketplace to provide data on system performance and procurement options for customers including installation commanders and interagency partners (FBI, DHS, local
LE). DoD strategy materials from 2024–2025 support centralized data repositories and data-driven solutions as a precursor to such a marketplace. Progress status: Public reporting shows the marketplace concept and development are underway, but there is no publicly available evidence of full deployment or complete access by all partners as of 2025-12-31. Dates and milestones: Key signals emerged in November 2025 with announcements of a digital marketplace and data-sharing framework; DoD documents frame centralized data access as a goal rather than a deployment date. Source reliability: DoD materials provide authoritative context, while Defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, Battle Updates) report on progress and intent; cross-source corroboration strengthens the picture of an emerging marketplace rather than a completed system.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 09:58 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: November 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is planning an online marketplace to streamline purchasing of counter-UAS gear and provide authoritative data and evaluation feedback, with leadership comments from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Status of completion: No launch date has been announced; sources describe planning, policy development, and testing processes rather than a deployed product, and a counter-UAS summit is planned to discuss implementation rather than a deployment milestone (Defense One;
Breaking Defense).
Dates and milestones: Noted activity in November 2025, including intent to create an integrated marketplace and accompanying evaluation framework, with ongoing policy and procurement discussions; no definitive completion date exists in public reporting.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) with contemporaneous statements from JIATF 401 leadership; while not official DoD press, these outlets are standard industry-focused sources and generally neutral in presenting planning-stage information.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 07:52 PMcomplete
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence: DoD-affiliated reporting and defense media in late 2025 describe the Army-led JIATF 401 planning, standing up, and deploying a federal digital marketplace for counter-UAS data, testing results, and procurement guidance. Concrete milestones: November 17, 2025, Breaking Defense reported plans to stand up the digital marketplace; December 8, 2025, Military.com reported that the marketplace was launched to centralize testing data and procurement information for federal partners. Completion status: Multiple outlets indicate deployment and ongoing expansion of data sharing and procurement tools, with no credible reports of cancellation. Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Military.com) and DoD-related reporting; cross-verification with official DoD announcements would strengthen confidence, but current evidence supports completion.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 06:20 PMin_progress
Claim restated: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD materials indicate ongoing organizational steps for counter-UAS data integration and interagency collaboration. Notably, Aug 28, 2025, establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) shows a formal structure with procurement authority to support counter-UAS efforts; Dec 18, 2025 DoD coverage frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort, signaling progress but not providing deployment details.
Current status: no public confirmation of a deployed, fully functional marketplace or ongoing access by interagency partners to data, feedback, and procurement options as of 2025-12-31. Available materials describe planning and governance toward centralization, rather than finished deployment.
Milestones: (1) 2025-08-28 — JIATF 401 established to harmonize counter-UAS activities; (2) 2025-12-18 — DoD narrative references the marketplace as part of the effort, indicating progress without deployment specifics.
Reliability note: primary DoD materials are official for policy direction, but specific deployment details are not publicly verified; some sources are institutional summaries or promotional in nature, so cross-check with official program updates when available.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 03:48 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, providing authoritative data on performance and a streamlined path to purchase.
Evidence of progress: Reports in late 2025 indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) aims to stand up an online C-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, with plans to provide performance data and vendor options (Nov 2025).
Current status: There is no publicly confirmed deployment date or access for interagency partners yet. Sources emphasize ongoing development, testing, and interagency coordination rather than a live platform (Nov 2025).
Dates and milestones: Notable milestones include
JIATF 401's August 2024 establishment, with marketplace plans publicly discussed in November 2025 and a forthcoming c-UAS summit and testing window in late 2025–2026. No launch date has been announced.
Source reliability: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, DRONELIFE). They are credible for policy and procurement developments but describe planning stages rather than a deployed system, so interpretations should be cautious.
Follow-up: A 2026 check should confirm whether a formal launch or enrollment occurs, and any published procurement catalog.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 01:51 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A centralized counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple official and industry outlets indicate the effort is underway as of late 2025. Army and DoD-related communications cite establishing or developing an online C-UAS marketplace intended to provide authoritative data and procurement access (e.g.,
Army.mil remarks in November 2025; MeriTalk reporting December 2025).
Status assessment: There is clear progress toward creation and deployment, with references to an online marketplace modeled after commercial platforms and designed to consolidate data, feedback, and procurement options. No firm completion date is published; the material repeatedly frames the marketplace as an ongoing initiative rather than a finished product.
Dates and milestones: November 2025 remarks indicate initial establishment of a UAS/C-UAS marketplace concept; December 2025 coverage notes ongoing development and deployment activities. These point to a near-term rollout phase rather than full completion by year-end 2025.
Source reliability note: DoD and Army official communications provide the most authoritative basis (e.g., defense.gov content via official DoD channels; Army.mil). Trade press and industry outlets (MeriTalk, Debuglies) corroborate timelines but vary in depth and official status; cumulatively they support a progressing initiative rather than a concluded deployment.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 12:05 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple defense outlets report ongoing development and planning for an online, centralized marketplace to support counter-drone capabilities. Nov 2025 coverage notes an Army-led task force plan to stand up a digital marketplace for counter-drone technology and procurement, with governance by JIATF 401.
Current status and milestones: As of late 2025, reporting frames the marketplace as planned or under development rather than deployed. No public go-live date is published; emphasis is on planning, data integration, policy development, and initial implementation steps.
Source reliability: The conclusions derive from Defense Department reporting augmented by independent defense outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, GlobalSecurity). Defense.gov is the primary official source, though direct access to the article may be restricted; corroborating coverage across multiple outlets supports a developing, not completed, status.
Follow-up date: 2026-06-30
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 10:07 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Late-2025 reporting describes the marketplace as planned and under development under JIATF 401, led by Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, with indications of an online marketplace paired with a UAS marketplace, and data on system performance to inform procurement, but no launch date is provided.
Completion status: No evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of December 2025. Coverage consistently notes planning, testing, and coordination activities (summits) ahead of any launch, without a concrete completion date.
Dates and milestones: Notable references from November–December 2025 discuss impending testing, interagency coordination, and summit planning; no definitive deployment milestone has been published.
Reliability note: Sources include Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and Globalsecurity reports, all asserting ongoing development with no official deployment date; DoD material referenced is second-hand in coverage. Overall, the reporting supports a progressed but incomplete status toward a centralized procurement/data platform.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 07:33 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Public summaries describe a cornerstone effort to create a centralized marketplace enabling interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options, as part of a layered counter-drone defense strategy.
Status assessment: There is no publicly verifiable deployment or formal completion announced. The available piece (dated Dec 18, 2025) indicates ongoing development with no explicit rollout dates or access provisioning confirmed by independent sources.
Reliability note: The primary DoD item is an official source, but access to it is restricted for verification, limiting corroboration. Secondary reports vary in reliability and do not provide definitive deployment confirmation.
Overall assessment: Given the information available, the marketplace appears to be in_progress rather than completed, pending concrete deployment milestones and partner access provisioning.
Notes on evidence quality: The strongest signal is the official DoD statement; however, restricted access diminishes independent verification, so conclusions should remain cautious until formal deployment details emerge.
Scheduled follow-up · Dec 31, 2025
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 03:55 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: November 2025 reporting indicates the Army-led JIATF 401 is planning an online counter-UAS marketplace to provide authoritative data, performance comparisons, and streamlined procurement. A December 2025 DoD-linked briefing and subsequent summaries reiterate that a centralized marketplace is a cornerstone of the effort, with ongoing work to integrate data, testing, and procurement pathways. These sources show active development and planning but do not confirm a deployed platform.
Current status against completion condition: There is no publicly documented deployment as of December 30, 2025.
The Breaking Defense piece explicitly states no launch date had been set for the digital marketplace, while the GlobalSecurity summary frames the marketplace as in development and tied to forthcoming testing and interagency coordination. Completion—not achieved according to available reporting.
Dates and milestones: November 17, 2025—announcement that a digital marketplace is to be stood up as part of the JIATF 401 effort. December 11–12, 2025—law enforcement symposium highlighting interagency integration and the need for a shared data-and-procurement framework. December 18, 2025—report reinforcing the marketplace as a central element of the counter-UAS initiative. These milestones show momentum but no final deployment date.
Source reliability note: Primary references include Defense Department–affiliated briefings and corroborating analyses from Breaking Defense, GlobalSecurity, Defense One, and MilitarySpot. While direct defense.gov access was limited here, the summarized reporting consistently describes the marketplace as under development rather than deployed, indicating cautious but credible coverage of the initiative.
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 01:51 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The effort envisions a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Army-led JIATF 401 is pursuing an online, centralized marketplace for counter-UAS tools to serve the military, DHS, FBI, and local law enforcement, with public statements in November 2025 describing the marketplace as a work in progress and not yet launched (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). Reports in December 2025 reiterate the establishment of a digital marketplace framework, with ongoing planning and vendor data integration (Breaking Defense; Meritalk summarized coverage; GlobalSecurity).
Completion status: There is no evidence of a deployed, fully operational marketplace as of the current date. Officials indicate there is no set launch date, and funding arrangements remain to be defined or sourced from multiple pools (e.g., O&M, RDT&E, procurement) (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Dates and milestones: Key milestones referenced include the November 2025 announcement of a central online marketplace and the planned c-UAS summit later in November 2025 to test and evaluate candidate platforms before potential inclusion in the marketplace (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). No concrete deployment or production date has been published publicly to date (Breaking Defense, 2025-11; 2025-12 coverage).
Update · Dec 31, 2025, 12:05 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, enabling access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: Defense reporting in November–December 2025 indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively building an online, centralized marketplace for counter-UAS gear and related data, with testing, evaluation, and policy development accompanying the effort. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) and Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) describe the marketplace as being developed, not yet launched, and emphasize policy alignment and test-evaluation integration. The U.S. Army public affairs release (Dec 19, 2025) notes ongoing 100-day progress of JIATF-401 and references a planned initial delivery of counter-sUAS capabilities to the southern border in January 2026, tied to the marketplace and related testing efforts.
Status assessment: The marketplace is in development and not yet deployed as of late December 2025. Initial expectations include a January 2026 delivery window for some capabilities to support homeland defense, with the marketplace intended to streamline procurement, testing feedback, and interagency access. The lack of a firm launch date in public reporting confirms the project remains in the implementation phase rather than completed.
Dates and milestones: Aug 2025 — JIATF 401 established to coordinate counter-sUAS efforts; Nov 14–17, 2025 — public reporting identifies the online marketplace as a work in progress with no launch date; Dec 19, 2025 — Army confirms 100 days of operation for JIATF-401 and references near-term capability deliveries (e.g., January 2026) and marketplace testing activities. These pieces collectively frame a multi-month development timeline with near-term deployment activities.
Source reliability: Coverage from Defense One and Breaking Defense provides industry-facing context and quotes from JIATF 401 leadership, while the U.S. Army public affairs page offers official operational milestones. Defense.gov content was blocked in this check, but the corroborating reporting from multiple defense-focused outlets and the Army confirms ongoing development and near-term milestones. Overall, sources are consistent in describing a developing marketplace with imminent, but not yet completed, deployment.
Follow-up note: Should be reviewed again around early February 2026 to confirm whether the marketplace has launched and whether interagency partners have gained access to data, feedback, and procurement options or if further delays occurred.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 10:07 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting from November–December 2025 shows the Army-led JIATF 401 planning and testing activities, including plans to stand up an online marketplace and related data-sharing mechanisms (Breaking Defense). A December 2025 GlobalSecurity.org piece describes the marketplace as a central pillar of the JIATF 401 effort and cites ongoing integration with DLA contracting and FEMA funding pathways. The symposium in mid-December highlighted data interoperability and an integrated procurement approach.
Status relative to completion: The marketplace has been announced as a development objective and is being pursued, but no deployment or launch date is publicly announced as of 2025-12-30. Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as in planning or early development stages, with milestones like data-sharing intent and procurement pathways described but without a live portal yet.
Dates and milestones: November 17–18, 2025: Breaking Defense reports on the planning of the digital marketplace. December 11, 2025: law enforcement symposium highlighting data-sharing and procurement goals. December 18, 2025: GlobalSecurity.org summarizes the marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense efforts and notes ongoing collaboration with DLA and FEMA grant pathways. A specific launch date has not been disclosed.
Reliability of sources: Coverage comes from defense-focused outlets and public-facing summaries via secondary aggregators (GlobalSecurity.org, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov). These sources consistently describe the marketplace as a planned, not-yet-deployed, component of JIATF 401’s C-UAS strategy. While not all articles are official DoD confirmations, they corroborate the claimed progress and the absence of a public deployment date as of 2025-12-30.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 07:52 PMin_progress
What the claim states: The effort centers on developing a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
What evidence suggests progress: Multiple December 2025 reports describe the marketplace as a central objective within JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense program. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) notes there will be a digital marketplace to provide authoritative performance data and procurement options, with no launch date set. GlobalSecurity.org (Dec 18, 2025) reiterates the marketplace as a cornerstone but again does not confirm deployment.
Current status versus completion: The evidence indicates the marketplace is actively being planned and developed, with leadership emphasizing integration, data sharing, and procurement pathways, but there is no confirmed deployment or access for partners as of December 2025. Both sources describe ongoing work and upcoming events rather than a completed, live marketplace.
Dates and milestones: The key milestone is the public framing of the marketplace as a central component of the C-UAS effort in December 2025 coverage. Reports also mention coordination with DLA, FEMA funding pathways, and forthcoming testing/evaluation events to inform the marketplace, but precise deployment dates are not published.
Source reliability note: The primary sources are Defense Department coverage (Defense.gov) and reputable defense-news outlets (Breaking Defense, GlobalSecurity.org). Defense.gov is official; secondary outlets provide corroboration but also rely on statements from JIATF 401 leadership. No low-quality or clearly biased outlets are evident in the cited material.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 06:13 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Publicly reported statements describe a centralized marketplace intended to provide authoritative performance data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency customers. There is no evidence yet of a deployed, fully functional platform or a published launch date.
Progress evidence shows planning and coordination rather than deployment. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401 has described the marketplace concept, its alignment with a broader UAS marketplace, and the goal of providing a range of vetted options informed by testing and evaluation. Reports cite ongoing discussions, a planned counter-UAS summit, and policy/test-evaluation activities as part of the development.
As of November 2025, reporting notes that the marketplace remains in the planning and testing phase, with no launch date announced and no confirmed access for agencies. Sources emphasize that testing, evaluation, and interagency policy alignment are prerequisites before any deployment or provisioning of procurement options.
Key milestones cited include: (1) formal characterization of the marketplace concept by JIATF 401, (2) scheduling a counter-UAS summit to coordinate testing and interagency involvement, and (3) parallel development of related UAS marketplace work. These elements appear consistently in late 2025 coverage and signal progress without a completion date.
Source reliability is moderate and based on defense industry outlets (Breaking Defense, Defense One) and government-focused publications (ExecutiveGov, GovCon Wire). These sources describe planning stages and statements from officials, rather than a verifiable, deployed system, so the claim remains plausible but unconfirmed in terms of deployment.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 03:49 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS (C-UAS) marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Public statements and reporting in November 2025 indicate active steps toward a digital marketplace. The Army-led JIATF 401 discussed establishing an online marketplace for counter-drone equipment to serve military and interagency partners (Breaking Defense, Nov 17, 2025). A Pentagon interagency meeting summarized by the U.S. Army in November 2025 reaffirmed plans to develop a counter-UAS marketplace for capability sharing, testing data, and interagency collaboration (Army article, Nov 13, 2025). These items collectively show ongoing planning and alignment, not a finalized deployment.
Status of completion: There is no published completion date or deployment milestone. Sources repeatedly state that the marketplace is in development and that there are plans to stand up the platform, but they do not indicate a launch date or confirmed operational access for partners.
Dates and milestones: Key public markers are November 13–17, 2025, when interagency coordination and marketplace concepts were highlighted by DoD-connected entities and press coverage. The materials specify ongoing development and testing coordination rather than a finished product.
Reliability of sources: The lead claims come from Defense Department-affiliated outlets and defense-press coverage (Breaking Defense, Army.mil). These sources are appropriate for military modernization topics, though they primarily reflect planning and statements rather than an externally verifiable deployment with user access. Cross-source consistency strengthens the interpretation that the marketplace is being developed but not yet deployed.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 01:53 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It envisions a centralized platform where DOW test data, operational user feedback, and procurement options are accessible to relevant agencies.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting indicates planning and development activity around a counter-UAS marketplace led by interagency teams. A November 2025 briefing cited by defense-focused outlets reports that Brig. Gen. Matt Ross of JIATF 401 said the marketplace would provide authoritative performance data and streamline procurement, aligning with broader efforts to accelerate c-UAS delivery.
Completion status: There is no published confirmation of a deployed, fully functional marketplace as of 2025-12-30. The available reporting emphasizes planning, data-sharing aims, and the intention to launch alongside related UAS marketplaces, but no firm deployment date or rollout is documented.
Dates and milestones: The key milestone identified is the planned online counter-UAS marketplace coordinated by JIATF 401, with statements around providing performance data and procurement access. No concrete launch date is provided; sources indicate ongoing coordination and anticipated testing/summits, but these are not formal completions.
Source reliability: Primary defense coverage is incomplete due to accessibility issues with the original DoD piece, but corroboration exists from ExecutiveGov/Breaking Defense and related defense policy outlets. The TSA C-UAS Test Bed Program provides contextual interagency information sharing but does not confirm a centralized marketplace. Overall, sources are credible for progress signals but do not confirm completion.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 11:57 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Reports in late 2025 describe the Pentagon-led effort to create an online, Amazon-like marketplace for counter-UAS gear and services, with language about a centralized shopping portal for interagency and partner access. Sources note ongoing development by an Army-led task force to enable access to data, feedback, and procurement options. The narrative indicates progress and onboarding activities rather than a fully deployed system as of now.
Completion status: No fixed completion date has been published publicly; sources describe development, piloting, and onboarding rather than completed deployment. DoD or official confirmation is not readily accessible due to retrieval issues, while industry outlets corroborate ongoing construction and testing.
Milestones and dates: The period November–December 2025 is cited for development updates and procurement portal discussions; no definitive deployment date is provided. The completion criterion remains contingent on testing, security clearances, and interagency onboarding.
Reliability note: The central claim relies on a DoD article that could not be retrieved directly; corroboration from industry outlets provides context about ongoing development. Given the sensitive nature of interagency data and procurement, reports should be treated as progress indicators rather than definitive deployment confirmation.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 10:10 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The work is framed as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 efforts and is described as a planned capability rather than a deployed system.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 07:45 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article described a plan to develop a counter-UAS marketplace, a centralized platform for interagency and law enforcement partners to access authoritative data, user feedback, and procurement options for counter-drone technologies.
Evidence of progress: Reporting from November–December 2025 indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively pursuing a digital/online marketplace for counter-UAS and UAS-related data, with public statements from
Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and coverage noting a marketplace is to be established and tested, not yet launched (Breaking Defense, Nov 17–18, 2025).
Current status and completion assessment: There is no evidence of a deployed, fully functional marketplace as of 2025-12-29. Sources consistently note planning, data collection, and testing activities, but no definitive deployment date or completion milestone has been announced (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov summaries referencing JIATF 401 plans).
Dates and milestones: Key published moments include Breaking Defense coverage on Nov 17, 2025 (marketplace planned alongside a UAS marketplace) and related reporting through Nov–Dec 2025, with statements that the marketplace will provide data on system performance and procurement options but without a launch date (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov).
Reliability and sourcing: The strongest, most relevant reporting comes from defense-analytic outlets (Breaking Defense) that directly quote task-force leadership and describe ongoing development work. Some secondary summaries (ExecutiveGov) echo the project but are less authoritative. Overall, no primary DoD deployment confirmation is available, suggesting ongoing development rather than completion.
Follow-up note: Given the absence of a deployed marketplace by late 2025, monitor official DoD/JIATF 401 communications and
Breaking Defense updates for a concrete deployment date or milestones in 2026.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 03:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Defense One reported on Nov 14, 2025 that an Army-led task force is building an online marketplace for counter-drone components, with plans to test, evaluate, and provide feedback to vendors; a launch date had not yet been determined. A Defense Department article on Dec 18, 2025 reiterates the marketplace as a cornerstone of the interagency effort, describing it as a centralized mechanism for access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options, but does not indicate deployment.
Progress assessment: The marketplace is described as being developed with governance, testing, and policy work underway; public documentation does not show a deployed or fully operational system as of Dec 2025.
Dates and milestones: Key dates include Nov 14, 2025 (Defense One coverage of planning) and Dec 18, 2025 (Defense.gov confirmation of ongoing development). No published launch date is documented in the sources.
Source reliability note: Sources are
U.S. defense-focused outlets (Defense One and Defense.gov). They provide contemporary updates on policy and program status; neither shows a deployed marketplace as of the reported dates.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 02:21 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a centralized mechanism for interagency and law enforcement partners to access test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting indicates JIATF 401 is actively developing a digital marketplace as part of a layered counter-drone defense, with coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and planning for interagency events to test and populate the marketplace with data and solutions.
Current status and milestones: No firm deployment date has been announced; multiple outlets (Nov–Dec 2025) describe the effort as ongoing and plan a c-UAS summit and testing/evaluation activities to guide future inclusion of systems in the marketplace.
Reliability of sources: Reports come from defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, Meritalk) and GlobalSecurity, which summarize official briefings and statements and note the development status as ongoing; no official DoD deployment confirmation is published in these sources.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 01:52 AMin_progress
What the claim stated: A counter-UAS marketplace would centralize data access, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article frames the marketplace as a core element of a layered counter-drone defense and interagency integration effort.
Evidence of progress: The December 18, 2025 Defense Department piece places the marketplace at the center of JIATF 401’s effort and describes ongoing work to centralize data, feedback, and procurement pathways, in coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding mechanisms. It also references recent interagency
symposia and exercises showing active collaboration.
Progress status: The article does not report a fully deployed or publicly accessible marketplace; language indicates ongoing development and measurable progress, not completion.
Dates and milestones: August 2025—establishment of JIATF 401; November 21, 2025—counter-UAS exercise; December 11–12, 2025—law-enforcement symposiums on data integration and procurement; December 18, 2025—official framing of the marketplace as a central objective with related funding pathways.
Source reliability: The information comes from an official Defense Department publication, which provides direct statements about interagency initiatives and funding, but the piece reflects policy framing and program status rather than a finalized product.
Update · Dec 30, 2025, 12:05 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence from official DoD reporting confirms the marketplace as a central mechanism within JIATF 401 to provide test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. Additional Nov–Dec 2025 reporting describes planning and intent to launch a digital marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace, but without a fixed launch date. The DoD piece notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways, indicating structured progress, while other outlets describe ongoing planning rather than a deployed product. There is no firm completion date announced as of 2025-12-29.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 10:16 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: The Defense Department reports JIATF 401 is leading a whole-of-government effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities, with a central focus on a marketplace to provide data, feedback, and procurement options (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA-funded procurement pathways and to convert grant funding into deployable capabilities is noted (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). A December 2025 law-enforcement symposium highlighted ongoing integration, testing, and capability delivery to state and local partners (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Current completion status: No firm deployment date is given; the marketplace is described as a cornerstone under development to reduce risk and accelerate fielding, with no reported deployment as of late 2025 (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). External outlets in late 2025 echoed ongoing development and procurement workflows but did not report full deployment at that time (e.g., Breaking Defense, Defense One, MilitarySpot).
Dates and milestones: December 11–21, 2025 featured counter-UAS exercises and interagency coordination in the National Capital Region, signaling progress; the article is dated December 18, 2025. The collaboration with DLA and FEMA funding indicates concrete funding and contracting steps underway.
Source reliability: Primary detail from the U.S. Department of Defense (Defense.gov) with corroboration from industry-focused outlets; Defense.gov provides official statements from JIATF 401 leadership, lending reliability to the described progress, though no deployment date is stated.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 10:14 PMin_progress
What the claim states: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple 2025 reports indicate the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is actively planning and pursuing an online c-UAS marketplace alongside a broader UAS marketplace. These outlets quote Brig. Gen. Matt Ross and describe the marketplace as a central data and procurement hub intended to provide authoritative performance data and vetted procurement options (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov, 2025-11-18). Global Security coverage reiterates the marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401’s efforts, noting coordination with DLA and interagency partners (GlobalSecurity.org, 2025-12-18).
Completion status: As of late 2025, no launch date or deployment milestone has been announced. Reports consistently phrase the marketplace as “in development” or “planned,” with leadership indicating goals and structure but not a fixed completion date (Breaking Defense; ExecutiveGov; GlobalSecurity.org).
Dates and milestones: Key public touchpoints include the November–December 2025 period when announcements described creation of the marketplace and planned testing/evaluation events with interagency partners (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18). A December 2025 article reinforces the concept but still without a deployment date (GlobalSecurity.org 2025-12-18).
Source reliability: The most consistently cited outlets are defense-focused trade outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) and defense-oriented reference sites (GlobalSecurity.org). While they provide timely accounts of planning and leadership statements, they do not show a finalized deployment or user access metrics, and some items reflect announcements rather than verified deployments. Collectively they offer a credible picture of ongoing development rather than completed deployment.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 09:37 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department describes the marketplace as a centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. This sets the expectation that interagency partners will have a single access point for such capabilities when deployed.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department article (Dec. 18, 2025) identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401). It notes ongoing integration work, coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), and use of FEMA grant funding pathways to accelerate capability delivery. Publicly available reporting from late 2025 corroborates these efforts and the interagency collaboration around procurement and testing.
Status assessment: There is explicit signaling that the marketplace is in development and intended to enable access to data, feedback, and procurement options, but no indication of final deployment or formal launch date in the sources reviewed. The December 2025 Defense article emphasizes progress and near-term milestones (work with DLA, procurement pathways, and data integration) without stating a completed deployment.
Reliability note: Defense.gov is an official government source; secondary outlets provide context but should be weighed against primary documents. Overall, the most authoritative source confirms ongoing development rather than completion.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 08:19 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The Defense Department report describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a centralized platform for interagency and law enforcement access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. It positions the marketplace as a core element of a layered counter-drone defense and capability-sharing effort.
Evidence of progress: Public reporting in December 2025 confirms ongoing development under JIATF 401, with leadership emphasizing integration of data, testing, and procurement pathways. November–December 2025 briefings and
symposia highlight activities to stand up an authoritative data set, testing framework, and shared purchasing mechanisms, in collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding channels.
Current status against completion conditions: There is clear progression toward a centralized data-and-procurement platform, but no published deployment date or full access rollout for all interagency partners. Statements describe measurable progress and near-term milestones (e.g., shared air-picture concepts, procurement pathways, and interagency collaboration), yet a complete deployment and access for all partners remains in progress as of late 2025.
Key dates and milestones: Dec. 18, 2025 defense story details the marketplace concept and symposium progress; Nov. 11–21, 2025 events in
Washington focused on integrating data-sharing, testing, and interagency collaboration; a $250 million FEMA-related opportunity and DLA contracting support are cited as enablers for rapid fielding. These milestones indicate ongoing implementation rather than final completion.
Reliability notes: Sources include Defense.gov coverage of JIATF 401, Breaking Defense summaries, and related DoD/war department communications. While several outlets confirm progress and intent, there is no independent, final deployment confirmation; the most authoritative updates come from official DoD communications and defense-related outlets, which are generally reliable for program progress but may frame milestones optimistically.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 01:56 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a centralized mechanism for interagency and law enforcement partners to access DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: Defense.gov reporting (Dec. 18, 2025) places the marketplace at the core of JIATF 401’s efforts, highlighting close coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to enable procurement and data sharing. Additional coverage (Dec. 2025) notes ongoing interagency symposiums and demonstration efforts that emphasize data integration, testing, and interagency collaboration, with measurable progress toward a shared data and procurement framework.
Current status of completion: The marketplace is described as a central initiative and a developing capability, not a deployed, fully functional system. The Defense article emphasizes the design and integration work, plus procurement conduits, but does not indicate a deployed product or established access for all partners.
Dates and milestones: Key milestones cited include a December 2025 interagency symposium in
Arlington,
VA, focusing on counter-UAS integration, data sharing, and procurement pathways; a broader push with DLA contracting and FEMA grant utilization to stand up capability delivery; and ongoing JIATF 401 activity through late 2025. No definite completion date is provided in the sources.
Source reliability and balance: The Defense Department's official article provides the primary authoritative view of the program. Supplementary reporting from defense-oriented outlets corroborates the emphasis on marketplace development and interagency collaboration, though these outlets are secondary to the official source. Overall, the record presents a developing program with stated aims rather than a finished deployment.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 12:37 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense Department reporting from December 18, 2025 confirms that a counter-UAS marketplace is at the center of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's layered defense effort, intended to provide access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The article frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of the broader effort to integrate interagency capabilities and accelerate fielding, rather than as a completed system.
Evidence of progress includes formal efforts to accelerate capability delivery through a collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) and a Federal Emergency Management Agency funding pathway, aimed at improving contracting, logistics, and procurement for state and local partners. The December 2025 piece notes a $250 million FEMA-related funding opportunity and DLA involvement to establish procurement pathways and interoperability across federal and nonfederal partners. These elements indicate concrete steps toward enabling centralized access as described.
There is no statement in the article that the marketplace has been deployed or that interagency partners have full access yet. While the narrative emphasizes rapid integration, testing, and delivery of counter-UAS capabilities, it also quotes leadership acknowledging that a unified, shared data and procurement portal is a developmental objective rather than a completed product.
Key dates and milestones cited are the December 11–21, 2025 law enforcement symposium and the December 18, 2025 publication date of the article, which together signal ongoing momentum and governance for the marketplace project. The article highlights interagency coordination and international-event preparedness (
World Cup 2026,
Olympics), underscoring the urgency but not a fixed completion date for the marketplace.
Reliability of sources: the Defense Department article itself is a primary source describing official program intent and interagency collaboration. Other outlets cited in searches reflect secondary reporting and may vary in emphasis or depth; however, the central claim about a counter-UAS marketplace as an ongoing initiative is consistently reported across multiple DoD-aligned outlets. Given the official framing, the information is credible for assessing status, though not a finalized deployment.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 10:54 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department report highlights that a counter-UAS marketplace is at the center of the JIATF 401 effort, designed to provide interagency partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. A December 18, 2025 Defense Department piece confirms ongoing integration efforts and the marketplace concept as a core element.
Current status and milestones: As of December 2025, the marketplace remains in development and planning phases, with no public launch date announced. Reporting from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) notes that the Army-led task force intended to stand up an online marketplace but had not set a launch date. The Defense article describes ongoing steps, including coordination with interagency partners and leveraging existing funding mechanisms, but stops short of deployment.
Dates and concrete milestones: The Defense.gov article is dated December 18, 2025 and describes continued integration efforts and the goal of a centralized marketplace; it does not provide a deploy date. Prior reporting (Nov 2025) indicates the marketplace was in the planning/standup stage with no completion date. A December 2025 symposium and messaging emphasize ongoing collaboration and the intention to translate funding opportunities into fielded capabilities, not a completed system.
Source reliability note: Primary sourcing includes official Defense Department communications (DOD News) and reporting from Breaking Defense, both generally considered reliable for policy and program updates. Secondary coverage from industry-focused outlets aligns with contemporaneous statements but should be weighed against definitive government announcements when assessing deployment status.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 08:27 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace envisioned as a centralized mechanism for interagency and law enforcement partners to access test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress evidence: The Defense Department’s Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is leading a whole-of-government effort to integrate C-UAS capabilities, with a central role for the proposed marketplace to consolidate data and procurement pathways. A key milestone cited is a law-enforcement symposium held December 11, 2025, focusing on interagency integration and capability delivery, including
World Cup/state event readiness. The article notes ongoing collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and a FEMA grant funding pathway (approximately $250 million) to accelerate procurement and fielding of C-UAS capabilities.
Status interpretation: The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of the effort and is framed as in development rather than deployed. Observations from the symposium emphasize accelerating fielded solutions and reducing risk, but no explicit deployment date is provided and no evidence of formal deployment to all interagency partners is reported.
Dates and milestones: December 11, 2025 symposium in
Arlington highlighted interagency integration; December 18, 2025 Defense Department release confirms ongoing development and the DLA/FEMA funding pathway to support rapid procurement. The article does not specify a completion date or a firm deployment timeline for the marketplace.
Reliability note: The sources are official U.S. Defense Department communications (Defense.gov), which provides direct statements about program structure and activities. While the report is authoritative for government plans, it reflects strategic messaging and progress descriptions that may overstate readiness or speed; cross-checking with programmatic releases or procurement notices would further corroborate deployment status.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 04:22 AMin_progress
Claim restated: Interagency and law enforcement partners are to access a centralized counter-UAS marketplace that consolidates test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options. The defense article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the joint effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities and streamline access to data, feedback, and procurement through a centralized mechanism. This aligns with the stated objective to centralize data access for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department’s Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) leads the effort, with collaboration from the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage contracting and procurement pathways. The December 2025 article notes ongoing integration efforts, a symposium in
Arlington highlighting cross-agency coordination, and the intention to enable rapid delivery of counter-UAS capacity to state, local, territorial, and tribal partners. Additionally, a $250 million FEMA/related funding stream is referenced to support procurement and fielding, coordinated with DLA.
Completion status: There is no explicit confirmation that the counter-UAS marketplace has been fully developed and deployed as of December 28, 2025. The article repeatedly frames the marketplace as a central ongoing objective and a developmental milestone within broader efforts to integrate sensors, data, and procurement, with measurable progress but not a completed rollout.
Dates and milestones: Key dated elements include the December 11–12, 2025 law enforcement symposium highlighting interagency collaboration, the November 2025 cluster of interoperable activities in the National Capital Region, and the December 18, 2025 Defense Department article announcing the marketplace concept as a cornerstone. The absence of a stated deployment date suggests the completion condition remains in_progress.
Source reliability: The primary source is a Defense Department News Story (defense.gov), which provides official, contemporaneous information about the program. Supporting coverage from defense-focused outlets corroborates the development trajectory and interagency coordination, though these are secondary to the official briefing. Overall, sources are appropriate for assessing government program progress, with attention to the official caveat that the marketplace is being developed rather than fully deployed.
Update · Dec 29, 2025, 01:45 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: The Defense Department piece (Dec 18, 2025) frames the marketplace as a central feature of JIATF 401’s layered counter-drone defense, enabling access to test data, feedback, and procurement options. Outside coverage in Nov–Dec 2025 describes ongoing planning, testing, policy development, and procurement pathways rather than a live deployment.
Status interpretation: While substantive progress toward creation is documented, there is no verified deployment or active access for partners as of 2025-12-28; launch date remains undetermined and the effort is described as in development and evaluation.
Milestones and dates: December 2025 symposiums and coordination with DLA and FEMA funding are cited as foundational steps toward a centralized marketplace; November 2025 reporting confirms planning and testing phases without a go-live date. Concrete deployment milestones have not been published.
Source reliability: Primary sources include official
DoD communications (defense.gov) and defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Military.com, Breaking Defense). While these outlets are credible for policy and program updates, the status is best treated as ongoing until a formal deployment or pilot is announced.
Follow-up note: Update desired upon any formal launch announcement or deployment confirmation; consider revisiting after 2026-06-30 for a conclusive status.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 11:53 PMcomplete
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: A December 2025 Military.com report states the Army, leading JIATF-401, launched a federal digital marketplace to sort, test, and share information about counter-UAS systems for agencies, with a central online hub described as a single source for vetted technology and procurement guidance.
Completion status: The marketplace appears to have been deployed as of December 2025, with ongoing emphasis on centralizing testing data, performance information, and acquisition options for federal partners; no contra-indicating reports of cancellation exist in the cited sources.
Dates and milestones: Key milestone reported is the December 8, 2025 launch of the marketplace under JIATF-401, led by the U.S. Army, to streamline evaluation and procurement of counter-UAS capabilities across federal agencies.
Source reliability: The primary corroboration comes from Military.com, which details the marketplace launch and its intended functions. Additional coverage from trade press (Breaking Defense, Defense One) in late 2025 provides context on the broader rollout and data-sharing goals; while some outlets discussed planning phases earlier, the December 2025 launch claim is consistent across the cited reports and aligns with the topic’s progression. Overall, sources are credible trade/news outlets focused on defense and technology, though the coverage spans different angles and emphasis.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 07:44 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is intended to provide authoritative data, validated procurement options, and a forum for interagency collaboration as part of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) efforts.
Evidence of progress: Multiple late-2025 reports indicate active planning and foundational work. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) quotes
Brig. Gen.
Matt Ross confirming plans for an online UAS/counter-UAS marketplace and data-sharing, with no fixed launch date yet; Army sources similarly describe ongoing interagency engagements and data-for-testing initiatives (Nov 13, 2025).
Current status and milestones: The initiatives envision a centralized marketplace alongside an authoritative data set for testing and evaluation and a forum for collaboration. A Pentagon-interagency meeting (Nov 13, 2025) and a subsequent Army briefing describe near-term priorities and ongoing testing/testing-evaluation efforts, with a summit planned later in November 2025 to outline implementation details. No public completion date has been announced, and the marketplace is characterized as in development rather than deployed.
Dates and milestones: Key events include the November 13, 2025 interagency White House–level meeting and the November 17–18, 2025 reporting cycle detailing the marketplace concept and testing framework. The articles note that funding sources for the marketplace were to be identified and that procurement authority would be exercised by JIATF 401, but do not document a launch or deployment date.
Source reliability note: Primary confirmations come from official DoD/Army channels (
Army.mil) and reputable defense journalism. Secondary coverage corroborates the marketplace concept, but the strongest evidence remains that the system is in development rather than deployed.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 06:09 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes an Army-led initiative to create a counter-UAS marketplace that centralizes access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence: Defense reporting in 2025 shows the JIATF 401 effort is actively developing the marketplace as a central access point for data and procurement, with involvement from the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding streams to enable procurement pathways. Public briefings and interviews in November–December 2025 indicate ongoing planning, policy development, and readiness activities to stand up the marketplace.
Current status against completion: As of late December 2025, a launch date for the marketplace had not been announced, and officials described the marketplace as a planned capability in development rather than a deployed, fully operational system. Observations from Defense reporting emphasize testing, evaluation, and integrated procurement planning rather than a completed deployment.
Dates and milestones: Nov 14, 2025, Defense One reported the marketplace concept and ongoing policy/testing efforts; Nov 17–21, 2025, Army/JIATF 401 activities highlighted the broader counter-UAS program; Dec 11, 2025, a law-enforcement symposium underscored interagency collaboration and readiness. The central feature—a centralized marketplace—was repeatedly described as a future capability rather than a current, operational hub.
Source reliability note: Primary sources include Defense Department communications (DOW War.gov article, Dec 18, 2025) and industry-focused outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense). These sources consistently frame the marketplace as a developing capability with ongoing testing and policy work, though official deployment timelines remain unspecified. The coverage aligns with a prudent, progress-focused assessment rather than a confirmed implementation.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 03:50 PMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department's Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) is leading the effort to integrate skills and deliver a layered counter-drone defense, with a cornerstone being the development of a counter-UAS marketplace. The December 18, 2025 Defense Department piece explicitly states this marketplace as a central feature and notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) to enable access to data, feedback, and procurement options.
Completion status: As of December 28, 2025, the marketplace is described as in development and central to ongoing efforts, not as fully deployed or publicly available. Public reporting from multiple outlets characterizes the marketplace as a future capability being standup or piloted rather than an operational, deployed system.
Key dates and milestones: Dec. 18, 2025 article confirms the marketplace as a cornerstone and ongoing effort; Dec. 11–21, 2025 law enforcement symposium and related briefings highlight progress, with deployment not yet announced. The reporting emphasizes interagency coordination, DLA contracting support, and FEMA grant pathways as enabling mechanisms, but no fixed deployment date is provided.
Source reliability: The primary source is an official Defense.gov news story (DOW) dated Dec. 18, 2025, which provides a reliable basis for the claim and current status. Additional coverage from Breaking Defense and Executive Government corroborates the development trajectory and organizational context, though they are secondary sources. Overall, sources present a cautious, progress-based view rather than a completed capability rollout.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 01:51 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Multiple outlets in late 2025 reported that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is pursuing an online or digital marketplace to streamline purchasing and data sharing for counter-UAS systems (Defense One, Breaking Defense, Executive Gov, Nov–Dec 2025).
Current status: There is no reporting that a fully deployed, live marketplace exists as of December 2025. Analyses indicate ongoing planning, vendor coordination, and no fixed launch date, with officials describing a need for a broad set of tools and a staged rollout (Breaking Defense; Defense One; Executive Gov; GlobalSecurity).
Milestones and dates:
Articles note continued development activity in November–December 2025, with discussions of store-like access to tested components and procurement options, but no completion or deployment milestone published (Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Executive Gov 2025-11-18).
Reliability of sources: Core details come from defense-oriented outlets and a DoD-focused briefing environment. While Defense.gov provided the originating claim, corroboration from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Executive
Gov supports a status of ongoing development rather than completion; these sources are generally reliable for defense policy and program updates, though official
DoD confirmation would strengthen certainty.
Follow-up note: To determine completion, a formal DoD deployment announcement or program milestone update would be required. Current reporting suggests in-progress development with no deployed marketplace as of 2025-12-28.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 11:56 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department and Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) have publicly characterized the effort as underway, with multiple outlets reporting plans to create an online or digital marketplace to consolidate data, user feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS systems (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-12).
Completion status: There is no announced deployment date or full completion; sources repeatedly describe the marketplace as a planned capability that will be stood up and populated with data and vendors over time, rather than an already deployed system (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-12).
Milestones and dates: No concrete launch date is provided in official or reputable reporting. Public reporting emphasizes planning, data-sharing intent, and marketplace design rather than a ready-to-use platform (JIATF-401 briefings cited by Defense.gov; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-12).
Source reliability note: Primary information comes from Defense Department outlets and established defense-news outlets (Defense.gov, Defense One, Breaking Defense). Coverage is consistent about an ongoing development process with no final deployment date; several sources emphasize policy and procurement implications rather than a completed product.
Follow-up date: 2026-06-30
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 10:03 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article identifies the marketplace as a cornerstone of a broader layered counter-drone defense effort. It notes the goal of providing interagency and law enforcement partners with access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: JIATF 401 was established in August and is actively integrating, testing, and delivering C-UAS capabilities to support state, local, territorial, and tribal law enforcement, with a December 11, 2025 symposium focusing on partnership and capability delivery. The Defense Logistics Agency is coordinating with JIATF 401 to leverage a FEMA grant opportunity; a $250 million funding pool is described to support counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities, including procurement pathways. A central stated feature is the counter-UAS marketplace enabling access to data, feedback, and procurement options, positioned as a key component of rapid fielding and risk reduction.
Status assessment: The marketplace is described as a centerpiece and underway, but the Defense.gov piece does not confirm deployment or full operational access for partners as of December 2025. The article emphasizes planning, integration, and capability delivery, with a focus on accelerating fielding and leveraging grant funding; no explicit deployment date is provided. Completion conditions remain undefined, and formal deployment to all interagency partners appears not yet completed.
Dates and milestones: December 11, 2025 symposium highlighted interagency collaboration and shared air-picture goals, with an emphasis on
World Cup 2026 readiness. The article is dated December 18, 2025 and notes ongoing efforts to integrate sensors, reactors, and command systems, plus a FEMA-funded procurement pathway through DLA. The current date (December 27, 2025) places the status firmly in progress rather than finished.
Reliability of sources: The primary source is an official Defense Department news story, which is a high-reliability government document for describing interagency initiatives. Additional context from Defense Logistics Agency supports the described progress. Given the official nature of the source, the information is credible for describing ongoing program developments, though it does not provide a definitive deployment date for the marketplace.
Follow-up note: Monitor for a publicly announced deployment or partner access milestones, and any procurement pathway rollouts or marketplace user feedback reports in 2026.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 07:43 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The Defense Department reports that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The centerpiece is a centralized marketplace intended to provide DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options to relevant partners. The article frames this as a foundational element of a layered counter-drone defense network.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department describes ongoing integration efforts led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, including collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage existing contracting and procurement pathways. The article notes the use of FEMA grant funding (roughly $250 million) to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities and the aim to field interoperable sensors, effectors, and mission-command systems. It also documents interagency coordination and shared data needs highlighted at a December 2025 symposium, signaling active advancement toward the marketplace concept.
Current status and milestones: The piece states the marketplace is a cornerstone concept and that progress is being made toward faster fielding and reduced risk through centralized data and procurement access; however, no explicit deployment date or final completion milestone is provided. The narrative emphasizes ongoing integration efforts and planned use of grant funding, rather than a completed, publicly deployed marketplace. The reliability of the source is official Defense Department communications (DOW), supplemented by coverage in defense-focused outlets that describe related developments; these sources are timely but should be cross-checked with official updates for precise milestones.
Notes on reliability: The primary source is a Defense Department News story (defense.gov), which provides direct information on program aims and interagency coordination. Secondary coverage from Defense One corroborates the existence of a centralized procurement-forward approach and marketplace concept, though it may discuss a broader interpretation of the initiative. Given the evolving nature of counter-UAS programs, information should be updated as official milestones are announced.
Sources:
https://www.defense.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/4364049/joint-interagency-task-force-integrates-skills-creates-layered-counter-drone-de/;
https://www.defenseone.com/threats/2025/11/one-stop-shopping-counter-drone-gear-aim-joint-task-force/409533/Update · Dec 28, 2025, 03:49 AMin_progress
What the claim stated: The article describes the development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It positions the marketplace as a cornerstone of a layered, interagency counter-drone defense effort led by JIATF 401.
Evidence of progress: Defense and allied reporting indicate active efforts to create the marketplace as part of JIATF 401’s broader mission to integrate interagency counter-UAS capabilities. The Defense Department piece (Dec. 18, 2025) notes ongoing development and a symposium in December 2025 highlighting data sharing, procurement collaboration, and shared testing results. External coverage (Nov. 2025) also references planning and interoperability work with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding pathways to support interagency access and procurement.
Status of completion: There is no published completion date or deployment milestone for the marketplace. The Defense article describes the marketplace as a central goal and discusses interagency data access and procurement pathways as intended outcomes, but it does not indicate that the marketplace has been deployed or fully operational as of Dec. 2025. The accompanying reporting emphasizes progress and planning rather than a finished product.
Dates and milestones: Key dated items include the Dec. 18, 2025 Defense News release announcing the initiative and a Dec. 11, 2025 interagency law enforcement symposium focusing on counter-UAS integration and data sharing. November 2025 reporting notes ongoing discussions of testing, evaluation, and a potential counter-UAS summit to coordinate procurement and testing. These dates mark progress milestones but not a completed marketplace.
Source reliability note: The primary source is a Defense Department News story, which provides official messaging and in-context quotes. Additional context comes from Industry-focused outlets (ExecutiveGov/Breaking Defense) summarizing leadership remarks. Taken together, sources are credible for describing ongoing development and planned procurement pathways, though they acknowledge that deployment is not yet complete. The material is consistent in describing a central marketplace as a strategic objective rather than a finished system.
Update · Dec 28, 2025, 01:44 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: DoD reporting notes that the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is leading a whole-of-government effort to strengthen counter-UAS capabilities, with a cornerstone focus on a centralized marketplace to provide access to test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options (Dec. 18, 2025 DoD piece). The effort has included interagency symposiums, coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency, and engagement around leveraging FEMA funding to advance fielded capabilities (Dec. 2025 coverage).
Current status: The marketplace is described as a central element of the initiative and is in development/planning stages; no deployed, fully operational marketplace is reported publicly as of the latest communications. The DoD article emphasizes progress toward an integrated data/feedback/procurement framework but does not specify a deployment date.
Dates and milestones: Aug 2025—JIATF 401 established to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities; Nov–Dec 2025—briefings and symposiums highlighting interagency collaboration and procurement pathways; Dec 18, 2025—DoD feature confirming marketplace development as a cornerstone.
Reliability of sources: The primary information comes from an official DoD News article, with corroboration from defense-industry reporting noting ongoing development and planning for a centralized counter-UAS marketplace. These sources reflect official intent and public updates and may evolve with the program.
Follow-up note: Given the ongoing nature of the initiative, a follow-up should review any public DoD release or official JIATF 401 updates for deployment milestones and access provisions for interagency partners.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 11:54 PMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Evidence shows ongoing development rather than deployment, with explicit focus on creating a centralized marketplace for test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress indicators include a Defense One report from November 2025 describing an Army-led effort to build an online counter-UAS marketplace to streamline purchasing and testing for federal and law enforcement users. The article notes that a launch date had not yet been determined but that planning and policy work were advancing, along with related testing and demonstrations.
A contemporaneous Defense Department update from December 2025 emphasizes the marketplace as a cornerstone of Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s work, describing ongoing integration of data, feedback, and procurement pathways and noting that deployment details were not provided. This corroborates that the initiative is in the development and pilot/implementation phase rather than fully deployed.
Key dates and milestones identified in publicly available reporting include: (a) November 2025 reporting on marketplace development and planned counter-UAS summit; (b) December 11–21, 2025 interagency symposium activities highlighting interagency data sharing, testing, and procurement integration; (c) December 18, 2025 DoD piece reiterating progress but not a deployment date. The sources collectively indicate ongoing development with progress toward standardizing data access and procurement for interagency partners, but no confirmation of full deployment yet.
Source reliability: Defense One is a reputable defense industry outlet with firsthand reporting from officials involved in the JIATF 401 effort. The Defense Department piece (DoD-mirrored War.gov site) presents official stance and progress from the Joint Interagency Task Force, reinforcing the in-progress status. Both sources are appropriate for assessing this claim, though neither confirms a deployed marketplace as of the latest reporting.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 09:48 PMin_progress
What the claim states: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a centralized mechanism to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department reports ongoing, integrated efforts led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, with active coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage contracting and logistics support, plus use of FEMA grant funding pathways to accelerate capability delivery. The December 2025 symposium and related exercises illustrate continued interagency collaboration and planning to advance C-UAS capabilities, including data sharing and joint procurement pathways.
Evidence of status: The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of the effort and as a development in progress, not something that has been deployed. The article emphasizes integration, testing, and rapid fielding mechanisms rather than a completed, live marketplace. There is explicit language about reducing risk and speeding fielding timelines, but no statement that the marketplace has been deployed to interagency partners.
Dates and milestones: Establishment of JIATF 401 in August 2025; law enforcement symposium in Arlington, VA, on December 11, 2025; drone-centric exercises around November 21, 2025 in Washington; the Defense Logistics Agency collaboration and the FEMA-related funding pathway noted in the article. These dates mark progress milestones toward the marketplace, not its completion.
Source reliability: The primary source is a Defense Department News Story (defense.gov), an official government outlet, which is generally reliable for official statements and program progress. Cross-referencing with DLA contracting activities, FEMA funding notices, and interagency event coverage would reinforce accuracy, but the article itself is the central document. Overall, the reporting is consistent with a progressing program rather than a finished deployment.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 07:42 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article confirms a central component of the effort is a counter-UAS marketplace intended to provide interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options (Defense.gov, Dec. 18, 2025).
Evidence of progress appears in the described coordination efforts surrounding Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), the involvement of the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), and the use of FEMA grant funding pathways to move capabilities into the field. The article notes collaboration with DLA to leverage a $250 million FEMA-related opportunity and to integrate procurement pathways, which supports the marketplace’s provisioning objective (Defense.gov, Dec. 18, 2025).
There is no explicit declaration that the marketplace has been deployed or completed. The article emphasizes ongoing integration, testing, and delivery of C-UAS capabilities, and describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort rather than a finished product. The status is described in terms of progress and readiness activities rather than a completed deployment (Defense.gov, Dec. 18, 2025).
Concrete milestones referenced include the December 2025 law-enforcement symposium at Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall to advance interagency collaboration, and the broader three-year planning context for counter-UAS capability delivery to law enforcement partners, with World Cup and Olympics-related readiness cited as priority use cases (Defense.gov, Dec. 18, 2025).
Source reliability: Defense.gov is the official U.S. Department of Defense news outlet, providing contemporaneous government-facing information. The parallel coverage in other outlets cited in public aggregators mirrors the Defense.gov framing but varies in specificity and tone. Overall, the primary source supports the claim's premise while clearly indicating progress is underway rather than a completed deployment (Defense.gov, Dec. 18, 2025).
Conclusion: Based on the available evidence, the counter-UAS marketplace is being developed and progressed through interagency coordination, procurement pathway integration, and test-data-sharing efforts. There is no confirmation of full deployment or access for all partners as of late December 2025; the initiative remains in-progress with defined milestones and collaborative actions advancing toward deployment.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 06:06 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department described this marketplace as a cornerstone of a layered counter-drone defense effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401.
Evidence of progress: The December 2025 Defense Department article confirms ongoing work to create the marketplace and integrate data, feedback, and procurement pathways for interagency partners (DOW/JIATF-401). External reporting in November–December 2025 notes the broader digital marketplace initiative and coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to stand up procurement and data-sharing capabilities (Breaking Defense, MeriTalk, Army.mil coverage).
Current status of completion: There is no published completion date, and official statements describe ongoing development and integration rather than a deployed, fully accessible marketplace. Multiple sources describe milestones and planning, with emphasis on accelerating fielding through shared data and procurement channels.
Dates and milestones: Key public references include the Dec. 18, 2025 DOD article announcing the marketplace concept; Nov. 2025 reporting detailing JIATF 401’s efforts to stand up a digital marketplace; and related Army.mil and Breaking Defense pieces highlighting procurement integration and interagency coordination ahead of upcoming events (World Cup 2026 security, etc.). These collectively establish ongoing development through late 2025 without a declared deployment date.
Reliability of sources: The primary source is Defense.gov (official U.S. government); supportive coverage comes from Army.mil, Breaking Defense, and MeriTalk, all describing the same initiative with consistent framing. While crisis-era outlets are avoided, the cited sources are reputable within defense reporting and official government communications, though some articles are aimed at industry readers and may emphasize progress timelines.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 03:44 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a centralized mechanism for interagency and law enforcement partners to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting (Dec. 18, 2025) places the marketplace at the core of JIATF 401's efforts, with collaboration across the War Department, DLA, and FEMA-supported procurement pathways. Nov. 2025 coverage across defense outlets notes ongoing planning and development of an online marketplace for counter-UAS capabilities.
Current status: There is emphasis on development and integration rather than a deployed marketplace; no published deployment date is given and officials frame progress as accelerating fielding and data-sharing rather than completion.
Milestones and reliability: Key milestones include the November 2025 interagency symposium and the December 2025 Defense.gov feature detailing ongoing development. Source reliability is solid, with primary statements from official Defense Department channels and established defense news outlets.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 01:51 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Progress evidence: JIATF 401 was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with a December 11, 2025 symposium highlighting interagency coordination and capability delivery. Completion status: The marketplace is described as a central objective and development cornerstone, but no deployment date is given and official materials describe ongoing integration rather than a finished product. Milestones and dates: August 2025 creation of JIATF 401; December 11, 2025 symposium emphasizing data sharing and procurement pathways; December 18, 2025 Defense.gov note that deployment has not yet occurred. Source reliability: Defense.gov is the primary official source, supported by Federal News Network; both are authoritative for U.S. defense and interagency work, though the material frames progress rather than a completed platform.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 11:54 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners, enabling shared data on system performance and streamlined purchasing.
Evidence of progress: Multiple 2025 reports confirm Army-led JIATF 401 is planning and developing a digital marketplace to host authoritative performance data, feedback, and procurement options for counter-UAS capabilities. Notable milestones include a November 13, 2025 interagency White House meeting outlining near-term priorities and the task force’s focus on a capability-sharing marketplace, data sets for testing and evaluation, and interagency collaboration (Army.mil; DoD-linked briefings). Additional coverage in Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and ExecutiveGov (Nov 18, 2025) reiterates that the marketplace is in the planning/stand-up phase and that no launch date has been set.
Current status relative to completion: The marketplace has not been deployed or publicly launched as of late November–December 2025. Leaders described establishing an online marketplace and aligning data/test resources, but there is no announced completion date or deployment milestone. The November–December 2025 reporting consistently notes ongoing development, testing coordination, and upcoming interagency summits rather than a finished product.
Key dates and milestones: Nov 13, 2025 – Pentagon/White House interagency meeting discussing cross-agency collaboration and the concept of a counter-UAS marketplace; Nov 17–18, 2025 – press coverage highlighting planning to stand up the marketplace and data-enabled procurement options; Dec 2025 – DoD article reiterating the marketplace as an ongoing effort. Milestones cited include data sharing, testing/evaluation datasets, and interagency coordination forums, with no fixed launch date announced.
Source reliability note: Information comes from DoD/Army official channels (Army.mil), and defense-focused outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, GlobalSecurity). These sources are generally considered credible for defense policy and program updates; however, they describe an ongoing program with evolving timelines and do not provide a concrete deployment date, reflecting typical early-stage program status reporting. Cross-source consistency strengthens the reported status, though exact operational readiness cannot be confirmed.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 09:59 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options.
Defense Department reporting confirms the marketplace concept as a central element of the effort, led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401). The DoD article (Dec. 18, 2025) describes the marketplace as a cornerstone that would enable interagency partners to access DOW test data, operational user feedback and validated procurement options, aided by collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding mechanisms.
Independent defense outlets in Nov. 2025 echoed that the Army-led task force planned to stand up a digital/online marketplace to sort, test and share information about counter-UAS systems for agencies that need tools safe around aircraft, communications and crowds. These reports framed the marketplace as an upcoming hub rather than a live system.
There is some ambiguity about live deployment; a number of reports state the Pentagon had not announced a go-live date, aligning with the view that the marketplace remains under development.
Milestones cited include a Dec. 11, 2025 interagency law-enforcement symposium, close coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to enable rapid contracting pathways, and a FEMA-led funding pathway of $250 million to accelerate capability delivery, signaling progress toward field-ready solutions.
Reliability assessment: the DoD-authored article provides the strongest basis for the marketplace concept, with corroboration from Defense One, Breaking Defense and Military.com indicating ongoing development rather than full deployment as of 2025-12-26.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 07:35 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department describes this marketplace as a central pillar of the layered counter-drone defense.
Progress evidence: JIATF 401 leads the effort to build the marketplace, with the Defense Department identifying it as a cornerstone of the counter-UAS push and detailing coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to assist law enforcement and leverage FEMA grant funding. The report notes a $250 million FEMA-dedicated funding stream for counter-UAS and air domain awareness capabilities, illustrating material support.
Status evidence: Public reporting indicates the marketplace is in development but not yet deployed, with no launch date announced. Breaking Defense and Defense One both note the absence of a defined launch date as of November 2025.
Milestones and dates: Public coverage in November 2025 highlighted the marketplace concept and testing plans; by mid-December 2025, a law-enforcement symposium emphasized interagency coordination and procurement pathways, underscoring progress though not completion. The November 14–18 timeframe included discussions of a counter-UAS summit and policy/testing work; the December 11 symposium highlighted data sharing and a shared integrated air picture across jurisdictions.
Reliability of sources: Defense.gov is the official DoD publication providing primary status updates, with corroboration from trade outlets Breaking Defense, Defense One, and ExecutiveGov that quote officials such as Brig. Gen. Matt Ross. The combination of an official source and independent reporting supports a cautious assessment of progress without declaring deployment complete.
Conclusion: Status remains in_progress as of December 2025; the marketplace has been announced and is under development, but deployment and a firm launch date have not yet occurred.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 03:57 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) in August 2025 to lead counter-UAS integration. Defense Department reporting on December 18, 2025 describes a 'counter-UAS marketplace' as a centralized mechanism that lets interagency and law enforcement partners access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. This framing signals an ongoing effort aimed at deployment within the broader counter-UAS program.
Additional reporting in November 2025 confirms ongoing development of an online marketplace. Break Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) report that launch dates have not been set and that a counter-UAS summit was planned to shape policy, testing, and procurement. The reporting also notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to streamline contracting and funding.
As of 2025-12-26, the marketplace has not launched and no firm deployment date has been announced. The effort remains in planning, testing, and policy development phases.
Key milestones include the August 2025 formation of JIATF 401, the December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium on counter-UAS at Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall, and the December 18, 2025 Defense.gov article detailing the marketplace concept. Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as a central access point rather than a deployed platform, with no announced launch date by year-end.
Source reliability: Defense.gov is an official DoD outlet; Breaking Defense, Defense One, and ExecutiveGov are credible defense-industry outlets reporting on the same initiative. Taken together, the coverage supports the claim that the marketplace is in_progress, not yet complete or cancelled.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 01:51 AMin_progress
A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes this marketplace as a central element of the multi-agency counter-UAS effort.
Evidence of progress includes the leadership by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), established in August to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities. At a December 11, 2025 law enforcement symposium, Brig. Gen. Matt Ross stated that 'we're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress' toward that objective.
By November 2025, multiple defense outlets reported that the plan is to stand up an online 'UAS and counter-UAS marketplace' to provide authoritative performance data and streamline procurement; however, no launch date has been announced. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) and Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) cover the timeline and constraints.
The effort encompasses policy and legislative work (including 130I authorities for homeland counter-UAS) and close cooperation with NORTHCOM, DHS, and other agencies to ensure data sharing, testing, and rapid fielding. This broader context is reflected in Defense One and Army.mil reporting from November 2025.
Status as of 2025-12-26 remains 'in progress': the marketplace is in development, with demonstrations and a planned counter-UAS summit on the horizon, but no deployment date has been set. The defense press and official DoD outlets consistently emphasize ongoing development rather than a deployed system.
Reliability note: The sources cited include Defense.gov (official DoD news), Army.mil (public affairs), Defense One, and Breaking Defense (defense-specialist outlets). Cross-checking shows consistent emphasis on progress and planning rather than a live deployment at this time.
Update · Dec 27, 2025, 12:08 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense Department coverage describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401's layered counter-drone defense.
Evidence of progress includes JIATF 401's August establishment to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with the Defense Logistics Agency coordinating logistics and contracting support. The DoD report notes collaboration with FEMA-funded procurement pathways and a central marketplace to provide data, feedback, and procurement options. A law-enforcement symposium (Dec. 11, 2025) and a Nov. 21, 2025 drone exercise signal ongoing activity and testing.
Completion status: as of Dec. 18, 2025, the marketplace is described as under development, not deployed. Independent outlets reported that launch dates had not been set, suggesting continued development rather than a live deployment.
Milestones include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401, the November 21, 2025 drone exercise, and the December 11, 2025 symposium; a $250 million funding pathway via FEMA and DLA is highlighted to enable procurement and fielding. No firm deployment date or vendor count has been announced.
Source reliability: the primary DoD release provides official, primary evidence, while independent outlets offer context and interpretation; however, they do not carry the same procurement authority.
Verdict: in_progress. The public record shows active development of a centralized counter-UAS marketplace, but deployment and partner access to data, feedback, and procurement options have not been confirmed as of 2025-12-26.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 10:01 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department describes this marketplace as a central mechanism to provide interagency partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Progress evidence: DoD calls the marketplace a cornerstone of the counter-UAS effort and notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to accelerate capability delivery and procurement for interagency partners. The effort leverages a FEMA grant program; about $250 million is available to counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Current status: There is no deployment date announced; the marketplace is described as still in development. Recent reporting shows ongoing testing and interagency coordination, including a Dec. 11, 2025 symposium and November 2025 drone exercises. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Military.com 2025-12-08)
Key milestones and dates: JIATF 401 was established in August 2025 to lead counter-UAS work. A Nov. 25, 2025 interagency summit and a Dec. 11, 2025 symposium highlighted testing and resource sharing; a Dec. 19 Defense One piece noted efforts toward a common network within about 90 days. (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-12-19; Military.com 2025-12-08)
Reliability note: The primary status comes from an official Defense.gov article, which provides authoritative detail. Trade outlets corroborate progress but emphasize that deployment timelines remain unannounced. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Military.com 2025-12-08; Defense One 2025-12-19)
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 07:53 PMin_progress
The claim concerns a counter-UAS marketplace designed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace would provide a centralized mechanism for DOW test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Defense.gov describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF-401's effort to integrate counter-UAS capabilities and enable access to testing data, feedback, and procurement paths. Officials note progress but say deployment is not complete.
JIATF-401 was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities. A November 2025 interagency meeting and related symposiums emphasized the marketplace as a near-term priority.
Milestones cited include plans for a counter-UAS marketplace for capability sharing, an authoritative data set for testing and evaluation, and a forum for interagency collaboration; these reflect concrete steps toward deployment.
Sources are official DoD outlets (Defense.gov and Army.mil), which underpin the status reported. War.gov coverage also corroborates the marketplace concept.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 06:18 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace would consolidate test data, user feedback, and validated procurement options across agencies. The claim appears in Defense Department communications about JIATF 401.
Evidence of progress: Defense.gov's Dec 18, 2025 story positions the marketplace as a cornerstone of the counter-UAS effort and describes central access to DoW test data, feedback, and procurement options. Army and DLA coordination and FEMA funding pathways are cited as enablers.
The task force is leveraging DLA contracting support and FEMA grant pathways; the $250 million FEMA funding notice supports counter-UAS and air-domain awareness. This funding aims to help state, local, and tribal partners rapidly obtain capabilities.
Current status: The marketplace has not yet launched; officials say a launch date has not been determined. Reports emphasize ongoing development and testing rather than deployment.
Milestones: JIATF 401 established Aug 2025 to lead counter-UAS efforts. Nov 13, 2025 interagency White House meeting; Nov 14-17 coverage of marketplace development by Defense One and Breaking Defense. Dec 18, 2025 article notes progress and a plan for a common C2 framework within about 90 days.
Source reliability: Primary source Defense.gov; corroboration from Army.mil, Defense One, Breaking Defense. Conclusion: in_progress.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 03:56 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress includes DoD's description of the marketplace as a central element of JIATF 401's efforts. It notes coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to integrate testing data, user feedback, and procurement options, aided by FEMA grant funding.
Status: The marketplace has not yet been deployed; officials say they are making measurable progress but deployment is not complete.
Dates and milestones include the establishment of JIATF 401 in August 2025. An interagency summit occurred November 25, 2025, followed by December 2025 briefings and a DoD release describing ongoing development.
Reliability note: DoD's official account is supported by reporting from MeriTalk and Inside Unmanned Systems that emphasize ongoing progress rather than completion.
Follow-up: monitor DoD updates and subsequent interagency milestones to confirm deployment and user access.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 01:59 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for law enforcement partners. Progress evidence: JIATF 401 was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with DLA providing contracting/logistics support and FEMA funding a $250 million opportunity for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness. Evidence of status: The DoD article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort but notes there is no launch date yet and that progress is being made, not deployed. Milestones and dates: August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401; November 21–21, 2025 drone exercise; December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium; December 18, 2025 Defense.gov piece; funding and procurement pathways are being organized through DLA and FEMA. Reliability: Primary source is Defense.gov, corroborated by Breaking Defense, MeriTalk, and ExecutiveGov, which together support an in-progress status rather than completed deployment.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 12:06 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the broader counter-UAS effort (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Evidence progress: The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is rapidly integrating skills to create the layered counter-drone defense, with a December symposium focusing on law enforcement partnerships. The effort includes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to support procurement pathways and a FEMA grant program to fund counter-UAS capabilities (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Status of completion: The marketplace is described as being developed; there is no deployment date yet and launch timing remains undetermined. Statements in industry and defense press indicate launch dates have not been announced (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Milestones and dates: A law enforcement symposium occurred on Dec. 11, 2025, and November 2025 coverage described planning with no fixed launch date. These items point to ongoing development rather than a live deployment (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Source reliability: The Defense.gov piece is an official DoD government communication and represents the primary status report. Defense One and Breaking Defense are established defense policy outlets that provide context and timelines, while Military.com describes the marketplace as planned with no live deployment as of December 2025 (Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 10:02 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense Department reporting describes the marketplace as a central mechanism to provide interagency users with access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: JIATF 401, established in August 2025, is leading efforts to rapidly integrate and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, with the marketplace at the center of these efforts. A December 2025 defense symposium and related reporting describe ongoing development and progress toward the marketplace, though it is not yet deployed.
Status of completion: As of December 2025 there is no deployed counter-UAS marketplace; sources describe the marketplace as being developed rather than launched. Independent defense reporting corroborates that the marketplace remains in planning stages with no announced launch date.
Milestones and dates: August 2025 – JIATF 401 established; November 2025 – marketplace planning and related events; December 2025 – law-enforcement symposium highlighting progress. Public reporting notes that there is no launch date yet, but planning and testing activities are underway.
Source reliability: The primary source is an official Defense.gov article, which is reinforced by industry reporting from Breaking Defense and Defense One. Taken together, the coverage supports a developing marketplace rather than a completed deployment.
Verdict: in_progress.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 07:37 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense, enabling access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress includes steps to integrate with the Defense Logistics Agency to support law enforcement and to leverage FEMA grant opportunities. The August 28, 2025 memo establishing JIATF 401 gave procurement authority and a mandate to consolidate drone-forensics, exploitation, and replication programs (Defense News 2025-08-28). The December 2025 DoD release notes ongoing interagency collaboration and funding mechanisms, including a $250 million FEMA-related funding line and DLA logistics support to accelerate fielding (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Evidence of completion: none; the marketplace has not yet launched. The Defense.gov report states 'we’re not there yet, but we are making measurable progress,' indicating ongoing development without deployment as of December 2025.
Concrete milestones cited include the JIATF 401 establishment (Aug 28, 2025) and related demonstrations and symposiums (Nov 2025) that advance interagency testing and data sharing; a separate Breaking Defense article notes the marketplace is planned but with no launch date yet (Nov 17, 2025).
Reliability: DoD official outlets and major defense trades outlets corroborate the storyline of ongoing development rather than completed deployment; the core claim is supported by Defense.gov (2025-12-18), Defense News (2025-08-28), and Breaking Defense (Nov 2025).
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 04:00 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence from DoD News (Dec 18, 2025) describes the marketplace at the core of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's layered counter-drone defense, enabling access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Progress indicators show the marketplace remains in development rather than deployed. Officials say there is no launch date yet and a digital marketplace will accompany the broader UAS marketplace.
Milestones referenced in November–December 2025 reporting include interagency symposia and coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency. They also highlight funding pathways, including FEMA grant mechanisms, to support procurement and testing.
Status: the initiative is in_progress.
Source reliability: the primary source is a DoD official news release, which provides strong authoritative status; multiple independent outlets (Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov) corroborate ongoing planning and development, though they do not confirm deployment.
Update · Dec 26, 2025, 01:56 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Progress evidence includes the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, and a December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium that highlighted the mission's trajectory. The Defense Logistics Agency is coordinating support with contracting and logistics, and FEMA has announced a $250 million funding opportunity for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22).
Status: the marketplace has not been launched; there is no public launch date, and press coverage characterizes it as still under development (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Concrete milestones include the December 11 symposium and planned counter-UAS summit noted by Defense One for November 2025, as well as ongoing work to align DLA logistics and FEMA grant pathways for rapid fielding (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). The marketplace is described as a central hub for testing data, feedback, and procurement options to shorten acquisition timelines (Defense One; Breaking Defense).
Source reliability note: DoD's Defense.gov article is an official government source; coverage from Defense One, Breaking Defense, Military.com, and MeriTalk corroborates the intended architecture and status (Defense.gov; Defense One; Breaking Defense; Military.com; MeriTalk).
Verdict: in_progress. Follow-up date: 2026-06-01.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 05:45 PMin_progress
The claim concerns a counter-UAS marketplace designed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners.
Progress evidence includes the August 2025 establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to rapidly integrate and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, and a December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium focusing on shared data, testing results, and procurement pathways. The effort is being advanced in coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA, reinforcing a centralized marketplace concept.
There is no published launch date or deployment; multiple reports note planning and ongoing development rather than completion. A November 2025 Breaking Defense article described the marketplace as being planned with no set launch date.
Milestones include the August 2025 JIATF 401 formation and the December 11, 2025 symposium; credible official sources anchor the development (Defense.gov, Army.mil), while Breaking Defense provides contemporaneous coverage of the planning stage. Overall, sources indicate ongoing development rather than completed deployment.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 04:53 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It describes a centralized mechanism to provide interagency partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Public reporting indicates the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is prioritizing the marketplace as a core element of its counter-UAS program. Defense.gov's December 18, 2025 article calls it a cornerstone of the effort. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) reported that JIATF 401 intends to stand up an online marketplace to streamline procurement from multiple vendors.
Despite these statements, there is no deployed marketplace. Officials have said the task force has not announced a launch date for the digital marketplace. Other coverage portrays ongoing testing, policy development, and procurement planning rather than a live system.
Key milestones cited include interagency meetings and symposia (e.g., Nov 13 interagency White House meeting; Dec 11–13 law enforcement symposium) and coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA grant funding. The FEMA Notice of Funding Opportunity provides up to $250 million for counter-UAS and air domain awareness capabilities. No concrete deployment milestone or go-live date was announced.
Source reliability: The most authoritative statements come from Defense.gov and Army.mil; secondary coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, MeriTalk, and GlobalSecurity corroborates the marketplace focus. Overall, reporting describes progress and planning rather than a completed marketplace.
Current status: in progress; no launch date announced.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 03:46 PMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is presented as the centerpiece of a layered counter-drone defense effort.
Evidence of progress includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 in August to rapidly integrate and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, and a December 11 interagency law-enforcement symposium highlighting coordination with state and local partners. The Defense Logistics Agency is coordinating procurement pathways and leveraging FEMA grants to support rapid fielding.
Status of deployment remains unmet; officials say the marketplace is not deployed yet and there is no announced launch date. Army Brig. Gen. Matt Ross said that progress is being made, but the marketplace has not launched.
Independent reporting confirms the broader marketplace concept. Breaking Defense reported plans for an online c-UAS marketplace in November 2025, and Defense One reported a Pentagon push for a common network to run counter-UAS systems in December 2025.
Reliability: DoD's Defense.gov release is a primary source. Coverage from Breaking Defense and Defense One corroborates the direction but emphasizes ongoing development and lack of deployment date.
Conclusion: As of 2025-12-25, progress toward a centralized counter-UAS marketplace is underway but not complete.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 02:52 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This portal would consolidate DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence progress: Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), formed in August 2025, is leading the effort to rapidly integrate and test counter-UAS capabilities. The marketplace is described as the central mechanism for access to data and procurement options for interagency partners.
Current status: as of December 2025, reporting indicates planning and testing are underway, but no marketplace is deployed and no firm launch date has been announced. Defense.gov coverage emphasizes ongoing development rather than deployment.
Milestones and dates: the effort includes interagency summits and symposia in late 2025 and coverage of the December 2025 timeframe; a formal launch date remains unscheduled.
Source reliability: the claim is grounded in an official DoD outlet (Defense.gov) and is corroborated by multiple defense-focused outlets (Defense One, Military.com, Breaking Defense, Army News Service), indicating credible reporting on ongoing development rather than completion.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 01:55 PMin_progress
A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Defense.gov describes the marketplace as the central focus of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's efforts to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, with interagency partners granted access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. 'We're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress,' said Army Brig. Gen. Matt Ross (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Breaking Defense reports that the Army-led task force plans to stand up a digital marketplace that will provide authoritative data on how each system performs under varying conditions and allow users to select the right tool; the launch date has not been set (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17).
Defense One notes an online 'UAS and counter-UAS marketplace' to streamline purchasing for installation commanders and agencies such as the FBI and DHS, with a counter-UAS summit planned and no launch date announced (Defense One 2025-11-14).
As of 2025-12-25, the marketplace remains in development with no deployment date and no evidence of full access for interagency partners. The completion condition described—centralized data access, user feedback, and validated procurement options—has not yet been achieved. Credibility of sources: Defense.gov is an official DoD publication; Breaking Defense and Defense One are reputable defense-focused outlets; all three corroborate ongoing progress without a deployed marketplace.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 01:34 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace would consolidate data, feedback, and vetted purchasing options across agencies.
Progress evidence: Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is leading the effort to integrate tests and deliver C-UAS capabilities and held a law-enforcement symposium in December 2025. Coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to provide contracting, logistics, and scalable procurement pathways is part of the plan, including FEMA funding and a $250 million pool for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness.
Completion status: The marketplace has not yet been deployed; officials say there is no launch date and progress is ongoing. Public statements emphasize measurable progress rather than a finished product.
Dates and milestones: November 2025 reporting indicated no launch date; December 11, 2025 symposium; December 18, 2025 DoD article confirms ongoing progress.
Reliability of sources: DoD official piece on defense.gov is the primary source; corroborating reporting appears from Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and GlobalSecurity.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 11:43 AMin_progress
Restatement of the claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options. The Defense Department article frames this marketplace as a cornerstone of a broader layered counter-drone defense effort.
Evidence of progress: DoD describes the marketplace as the centralized mechanism for interagency partners to access test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. It places the marketplace within the Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s effort to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities.
Status: There is no deployed marketplace yet and no announced launch date; the initiative is described as developing with ongoing testing, data integration, and policy work across agencies.
Dates and milestones: August 2025 saw the establishment of JIATF 401; late November 2025 featured counter-UAS exercises and planning for interagency coordination; December 11, 2025 marked a law-enforcement symposium, and December 18, 2025 DoD coverage framed the marketplace as an active development with accompanying testing and policy work.
Reliability note: The sources are official DoD communications and defense trade press (Defense.gov, Defense One, Breaking Defense); the DoD piece provides primary framing, while the trade outlets corroborate ongoing development and lack of a defined launch date.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 10:54 AMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The goal is to streamline how agencies test, review, and acquire counter-UAS capabilities.
Defense.gov's December 18, 2025 article frames the marketplace as a central mechanism to provide interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Breaking Defense reports on November 17, 2025 that the Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force 401 is establishing an online marketplace for counter-drone equipment to centralize procurement and provide authoritative performance data.
Defense One notes that the task force stood up in August and is testing and standardizing training for components that may enter the marketplace, with implications for events such as the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
MeriTalk coverage on December 22, 2025 describes partnerships with state and local law enforcement and FEMA funding to support counter-drone capacity and procurement pathways, aligning with the marketplace concept.
Overall status: in_progress. Public reporting indicates ongoing development, testing, and interagency coordination, with no fixed deployment date announced.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 09:51 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It would consolidate DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement paths.
Evidence of progress: The DoD News article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401's layered counter-drone effort, intended to give interagency partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. It notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to provide contracting support and scalable procurement pathways, aided by FEMA grant funding.
Status as of 2025-12-25: Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as still in development, with no public deployment date announced. Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) and Defense One (Nov 2025; Dec 2025) report ongoing planning and testing, not a launched platform.
Milestones and dates: Nov 2025 reports describe an online marketplace to be stood up, with a counter-UAS summit planned later that month. Defense One (Dec 19, 2025) notes efforts toward a common command-and-control framework to run any marketplace-procured C-UAS gear within about 90 days. An interagency symposium in the National Capital Region (Dec 11-18, 2025) highlighted testing, policy development, and data-sharing needs.
Reliability of sources: The central claim comes from an official Defense Department article, which is high reliability. Complementary reporting from Breaking Defense and Defense One provides credible context about planning and procurement workflow, but describes ongoing development rather than deployment.
Verdict: in_progress. Follow-up date: 2026-06-30.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 08:58 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a cornerstone of a layered counter-drone defense.
Evidence of progress includes the Army-led JIATF 401's August 2025 stand-up and a December 11, 2025 interagency law-enforcement symposium focused on integrating C-UAS capabilities. The effort also leverages Defense Logistics Agency contracting support and FEMA funding pathways to move procurement forward; no launch date has been announced.
There is no completion yet; multiple outlets report the marketplace is still in development with no live deployment date (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Military.com, 2025-12-08). Defense One notes a plan to implement a common C2 network within 90 days to run these systems, underscoring ongoing integration work rather than a deployed portal.
Source reliability: Defense.gov is the official source; corroboration from Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, and Military.com supports ongoing development; some outlets are industry press.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 07:48 AMin_progress
Restated claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department News (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18) places the marketplace at the center of JIATF 401's layered counter-drone defense, describing a centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Further progress is echoed by an Army update (Army.mil, 2025-12-19) noting the marketplace as a line of effort and citing near-term milestones, including an anticipated $18 million in counter-sUAS capability deliveries to the southern border in January 2026.
Status: public reporting indicates the marketplace remains under development rather than deployed, with no published launch date as of December 2025; coverage emphasizes ongoing development and near-term milestones.
Reliability: sources include DoD and Army official communications (Defense.gov; Army.mil) and defense-industry reporting (Breaking Defense; GlobalSecurity) that corroborate ongoing development.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 07:02 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as a single hub to evaluate, share lessons, and streamline buying decisions for counter-UAS capabilities.
Progress evidence comes from official DoD communications that frame the marketplace as a central mechanism for interagency access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The December 18, 2025 DoD post explicitly describes the marketplace in these terms (DOW War.gov 2025-12-18).
Earlier reporting in November 2025 framed the marketplace as an online platform under JIATF 401, with emphasis on testing, evaluation, and feedback loops rather than a ready-to-use product. Articles from Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and Army.mil (Nov 14, 2025) indicate no fixed launch date and ongoing development (Breaking Defense; Army.mil).
DoD reporting also notes partnerships with DLA and FEMA for funding and contracting pathways to accelerate fielding, signaling concrete procurement steps accompanying marketplace development (DOW War.gov 2025-12-18).
Planned milestones include a counter-UAS summit and interagency symposia to synchronize testing and policy across agencies, as reported in Defense One and Army.mil coverage (Defense One 2025-11-14; Army.mil 2025-11-14).
Reliability assessment: the primary DoD source provides authoritative confirmation of intent; industry coverage corroborates the trajectory but there is no evidence of a deployed marketplace as of December 2025. Verdict: in_progress.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 02:47 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department article describes this as a centralized mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress: DoD notes the marketplace is a core element of the layered counter-UAS effort and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA grant pathways. The article emphasizes that this approach reduces risk and accelerates fielding timelines by consolidating data and procurement options.
Additional reporting shows ongoing interagency coordination and funding mechanisms to move grant funding into deployable counter-UAS capabilities. Defense One and MeriTalk corroborate ongoing data-sharing and efforts to connect the marketplace to a common network for counter-UAS systems.
Milestones: JIATF 401 was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities; a December 2025 interagency symposium highlighted data sharing, law-enforcement partnerships, and procurement integration for homeland counter-drone efforts.
Reliability of sources: DoD's official reporting is corroborated by Defense One, Defense News, and MeriTalk; as of 2025-12-24 there is no public deployment date for the marketplace.
Update · Dec 25, 2025, 01:54 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It envisions a centralized hub where interagency partners can access DOW test data, operational user feedback and validated procurement options (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Defense.gov describes the marketplace as a central, shared mechanism that would consolidate testing data, user feedback, and procurement pathways, with coordination from the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA grants to support rapid fielding (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Multiple defense outlets reported that a live launch date had not been set as of mid- to late November 2025, with the marketplace still in planning, testing, and policy development phases (Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17).
By December 2025, reporting noted ongoing work toward a common command-and-control network for counter-UAS assets and integration with the marketplace, with executives framing a 90-day windows for some network capabilities (Defense One 2025-12-19).
Overall, the project is described as progressing through planning, testing, and interagency alignment rather than being deployed as a finished system by 2025-12-24; credible sources reflect continued development and near-term milestones (Military.com 2025-12-08; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18).
Update · Dec 24, 2025, 07:12 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace would centralize DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Defense.gov's Dec 18, 2025 article frames the marketplace as central to JIATF 401's effort to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities. It notes JIATF 401 was established in August and is coordinating with the Defense Logistics Agency to support procurement pathways via FEMA funding. It also highlights that the marketplace aims to reduce risk and accelerate fielding by providing access to data and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
As of Dec 24, 2025, there is no deployed marketplace; sources describe ongoing development rather than a finished product. Coverage from Defense One and Breaking Defense reiterates progress without a launch date. (Defense One, 2025-12-19; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17)
Concrete milestones cited include the August establishment of JIATF 401 and interagency events in late November and early December 2025. The Defense.gov piece mentions a $250 million FEMA grant opportunity and DLA support for scalable procurement. There is also emphasis on plans to test and evaluate platforms before potential inclusion in the marketplace. (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Reliability of sources: Defense.gov and War.gov provide official DoD content confirming the marketplace concept; Defense One and Breaking Defense are established outlets reporting on planning and progress. All coverage describes plans and ongoing development rather than deployment. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; War.gov, 2025-12-18; Defense One, 2025-12-19; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17)
Bottom line: current status is in_progress with ongoing development and planned integration; no fixed deployment date is provided. Follow-up when deployment occurs will indicate completion or delay. (No date)
Update · Dec 24, 2025, 07:10 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. A cornerstone of this effort is the development of a centralized marketplace that will provide interagency access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress includes the August 2025 establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities. A December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium highlighted expanded data sharing with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA's $250 million funding for counter-drone capabilities, underscoring the push toward a centralized marketplace. These items signal momentum but stop short of deployment.
There is no deployment date announced as of December 24, 2025. Multiple outlets in November 2025 described the marketplace as under development and noted a counter-UAS summit was planned. Defense.gov's December 18, 2025 article reiterates the concept and ongoing testing, policy, and integration work.
Milestones include the August 2025 creation of JIATF 401, the November 2025 reporting on an online marketplace, and the planned events to test and evaluate systems before potential inclusion. The initiative also ties into homeland-security planning for major events, such as the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Source reliability is high for Defense.gov, and corroborating reporting from Defense One, Breaking Defense, ExecutiveGov, and MeriTalk supports the storyline. Overall status: in_progress.
Update · Dec 24, 2025, 05:04 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense Department reporting identifies this marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone effort, intended to provide a single portal for test data, operational feedback, and vetted procurement options.
Evidence of progress includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities, and a December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium highlighting interagency collaboration. Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) coordination and FEMA’s grant program (up to $250 million) are being leveraged to fund and accelerate capability delivery to state and local partners. The center of this effort is the counter-UAS marketplace described as a centralized mechanism to access test data, feedback, and procurement options.
There is no evidence that the marketplace has been deployed; officials say, “we're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress,” indicating ongoing development rather than completion. Multiple outlets describe the marketplace as a core component under development, with procurement pathways and data-sharing features being iterated.
Key milestones cited include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401, the November 21, 2025 drone exercise, and the December 11, 2025 symposium. Reliability: Defense.gov is an official DoD source; GlobalSecurity mirrors DoD content; trade press MeriTalk and Defense News corroborate ongoing coordination and lack of a deployed marketplace.
Update · Dec 24, 2025, 04:23 AMin_progress
Claim restated: The article asserts that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centrally provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-drone capabilities (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). This marketplace would consolidate DOW test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency partners.
Evidence of progress: Defense Department reporting describes the marketplace as a central pillar of the layered counter-drone effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401, with ongoing efforts to integrate sensors, data, and mission-command systems and to leverage Defense Logistics Agency logistics and contracting support (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). FEMA grant mechanisms (~$250 million) and DLA contracting support are being used to accelerate fielding and procurement pathways for interagency partners (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Additional evidence of momentum: In November 2025, Breaking Defense quoted JIATF 401 commander Brig. Gen. Matt Ross stating there will be a UAS/counter-UAS online marketplace but that no launch date has been set, underscoring development rather than deployment (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17).
Deployment status: By late December 2025, multiple outlets note that the marketplace remains in development and not yet live. Defense One reports a broader push for a common command-and-control network to run counter-UAS software in the marketplace, with plans to proceed in a fast timeline but without a published live date (Defense One, 2025-12-19).
Milestones and dates: The Defense Department notes interagency coordination events in December 2025 (e.g., law-enforcement symposium in Arlington, Nov. 11–21, 2025 and related interagency summits) that underscore progress toward an integrated data-and-procurement framework. MeriTalk highlights ongoing data-sharing discussions and the FEMA/DLA-supported procurement pathway as part of the effort (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22; Defense One, 2025-12-19).
Reliability note: The most authoritative source is Defense.gov, which provides the official snapshot of the program. Complementary coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, MeriTalk, and Military.com corroborates the development focus and the absence of a live launch date, adding context about procurement, data-sharing, and interagency coordination.
Update · Dec 24, 2025, 02:38 AMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense communications describe it as a cornerstone of the layered counter-UAS defense.
Progress evidence exists: Defense.gov describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort and notes progress is being made. It does not indicate deployment yet.
Concrete milestones and timelines: Army.mil marks 100 days of counter-drone operations and references a digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions, with an initial delivery to the southern border planned for January 2026. Defense One reports a push for a common network to run counter-UAS systems and to support a federal online marketplace.
Status of completion: The marketplace has not been deployed; no fixed deployment date is announced and development continues. Milestones described include testing, policy alignment, and integration efforts rather than full fielding.
Reliability of sources: The reporting relies on official DoD outlets (Defense.gov, Army.mil) and defense press outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense, MeriTalk), which broadly corroborate ongoing development without asserting full deployment as of 2025-12-23.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 11:54 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options. The Defense Department article frames this marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense led by JIATF-401. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18).
Progress evidence: JIATF-401 is leading the effort to integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with the marketplace intended to provide access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. DLA is assisting with contracting and logistics and FEMA grant funding is being leveraged to accelerate fielding. The framing indicates ongoing development rather than a deployed portal. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17).
Status: As of 2025-12-23 the marketplace has not been deployed; officials say no launch date has been announced. Multiple outlets describe planning rather than a live portal (Breaking Defense 11/17/2025; Defense One 12/19/2025).
Dates and milestones: A December 11, 2025 interagency law-enforcement symposium highlighted data sharing and capability delivery. Defense One notes a plan to achieve a common C2 framework and operation within 90 days to enable cross-installation data sharing. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Defense One 2025-12-19).
Reliability note: Reporting relies on the official DoD release and industry coverage from Breaking Defense, Defense One, ExecutiveGov, and MeriTalk, which broadly corroborate ongoing development but lack a deployment date. This combination supports an 'in_progress' status while highlighting the need for concrete rollout milestones.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 11:00 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The marketplace is described as a centralized mechanism to provide access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
Evidence of progress includes the central role of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 in the effort and a December 2025 Defense Department News story describing cross-agency testing, data integration, and funding pathways. The initiative involves collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA to turn grant funding into deployable counter-UAS capacity, including a $250 million funding pool. The Defense.gov piece is the primary official source, with Breaking Defense, Defense One, and GlobalSecurity corroborating the timeline and noting ongoing development.
Status: the marketplace has not launched yet. DoD officials say progress is ongoing but no deployment date has been announced; a counter-UAS summit was planned for late 2025 to discuss policy, testing, and procurement for domestic deployment.
Key milestones cited include August 2025 for the JIATF 401 establishment, November 2025 planning announcements, and December 2025 symposia; ongoing policy development and testing are expected to continue into 2026. Reliability: Defense.gov is a primary source, and its reporting is corroborated by industry outlets, lending reasonable confidence in the timeline.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 09:57 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Evidence of progress: The Defense Department describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense, designed to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The Defense.gov article notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA funding to accelerate capability delivery.
Current status: There is no deployment reported; officials say, "we're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress."
Dates and milestones: Key events in late 2025 include a Nov. 21, 2025 counter-unmanned aircraft system exercise in Washington, D.C.; a Dec. 11, 2025 interagency law-enforcement symposium; and the Dec. 18, 2025 Defense.gov piece describing progress. Defense One (Dec. 19, 2025) reports an intent to establish a common C2 network within about 90 days.
Reliability of sources: The primary information comes from the U.S. Department of Defense (Defense.gov) and is corroborated by GlobalSecurity.org; additional context from Defense One and Breaking Defense supports the ongoing development status; overall reliability is high.
Conclusion: The counter-UAS marketplace remains in development (in_progress). A follow-up around 2026-03-19 is recommended to assess deployment and partner access.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 08:58 PMin_progress
Claim: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Defense.gov's December 18, 2025 article identifies the counter-UAS marketplace as a centerpiece of the joint effort led by JIATF 401, intended to provide interagency and law-enforcement partners access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. It notes close collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA's grant-financing pathway to accelerate capability delivery. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
As of the article's publication, the marketplace is being developed but not yet deployed; the piece notes that progress is being made.
Mentioned milestones include a Dec. 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium and a Nov. 21, 2025 counter-UAS drone exercise. The DLA logistics support and FEMA grant pathways are cited as progress indicators.
Reliability: The source is an official Defense Department publication, which lends credibility to the claims about the marketplace's development; however, independent verification or deployment status is not provided in the article.
Overall status: in_progress. No deployment has been announced as of Dec 18, 2025, and the completion condition (marketplace deployed with access to data, feedback, and procurement options) has not been met.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 07:54 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. It presents the marketplace as a central mechanism within the layered counter-drone defense effort. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Evidence of progress: JIATF 401 is leading the effort, coordinating with the Defense Logistics Agency to provide procurement pathways and to leverage FEMA funding for counter-UAS and air-domain awareness capabilities. The Defense.gov piece describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of this effort and notes ongoing collaboration with interagency partners. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Industry reporting indicates the marketplace remains in planning and testing rather than deployed. November 2025 coverage described a digital marketplace with no launch date yet, intended to enable testing, evaluation, and feedback cycles before deployment. Sources include Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025), Defense One (Nov 14, 2025), and GlobalSecurity (Dec 18, 2025). (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14; Globalsecurity 2025-12-18)
Current status: There is no evidence of a deployed marketplace or of interagency partners having direct access to data, feedback, and procurement options. Officials acknowledged that 'not there yet, but we are making measurable progress'. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Dates and milestones: A law-enforcement symposium on Dec. 11, 2025 highlighted progress; the broader push aligns with World Cup 2026 and 2028 Olympics planning. No launch date was announced for the marketplace; planning emphasizes testing and policy development for domestic deployment. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17)
Reliability note: The core claim rests on an official DoD communication, with corroboration from industry press reporting; timing remains uncertain, but multiple outlets describe a centralized marketplace as an active objective. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 07:09 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article states a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency and law enforcement access to data, feedback, and procurement options for counter-drone capabilities.
Evidence of progress: JIATF-401 under Army leadership is coordinating integration, testing, and policy development for a centralized marketplace. Public remarks in November 2025 described the marketplace as being developed with no launch date yet.
Status: No deployment has occurred as of late December 2025. DoD and allied outlets describe ongoing development rather than a live system.
Dates/milestones: December 2025 interagency symposium highlighted counter-UAS coordination, and an anticipated initial delivery of roughly $18 million in counter-sUAS capability to the southern border in January 2026.
Reliability of sources: Coverage from Defense.gov, Army.mil, Defense One, Breaking Defense, and MeriTalk consistently frames the marketplace as in development, with related programs progressing.
Verdict and follow-up: in_progress. Follow-up date: 2026-02-01.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 05:54 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Evidence of progress includes public statements from JIATF 401 and DoD coverage describing a centralized marketplace to access DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options across agencies. This concept has been highlighted in Defense.gov's December 2025 feature (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
As of 2025-12-23 there is no firm completion date; reporting describes ongoing development and planning rather than deployment.
Milestones referenced include the Project FlyTrap 4.5 exercise (Nov 10-21, 2025, Putlos, Germany) testing counter-UAS capabilities; the xTechCounterStrike results with four winners (Nov 17, 2025); and Defense One noting upcoming marketplace planning, illustrating progress toward the marketplace without a launch date.
Sources are a mix of official DoD reporting (Defense.gov) and defense industry outlets (Defense One, Breaking Defense), which corroborate the marketplace concept but vary in emphasis on timing; Defense.gov remains the primary source for policy details.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 05:05 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Evidence of progress includes explicit framing of the marketplace within the JIATF-401 effort and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA's grant program. The article notes that the marketplace would provide access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. It also acknowledges ongoing work with statements like "we are not there yet, but we are making measurable progress" toward integrating data and capabilities. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Present status as of 2025-12-23 shows the marketplace remains in development rather than deployed. Independent outlets quote JIATF-401 leaders framing it as a work in progress rather than a completed system (MeriTalk 2025-12-22; Defense News 2025-12-22). There is no published deployment date or explicit completion milestone in these reports. (MeriTalk 2025-12-22; Defense News 2025-12-22)
Notable related milestones include the August 2025 establishment of JIATF 401 to rapidly integrate counter-UAS capabilities, and a December 11, 2025 interagency symposium at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall focusing on interoperability and shared data. A December 22, 2025 Defense News report described planned data-sharing between JIATF 401 and the Golden Dome project to address larger drone threats; the same period notes FEMA's $250 million NOFO and DLA's contracting support to speed fielding. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Defense News 2025-12-22)
Reliability note: The principal claim comes from an official Defense.gov article, corroborated by coverage from MeriTalk and Defense News that describe ongoing development and data-sharing efforts. The sources are timely and specific about dates and participants, though they do not provide a deployed marketplace as of 2025-12-23. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; MeriTalk 2025-12-22; Defense News 2025-12-22)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 04:03 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 03:49 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
Defense.gov's Dec. 18, 2025 article frames the marketplace as a central element of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's work, designed to give interagency partners access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options.
Independent reporting in November 2025 described the marketplace as in planning and not yet deployed. Defense One (Nov. 14) notes no launch date, and Breaking Defense (Nov. 17) confirms it had not launched.
Key milestones include August 2025, when JIATF 401 was established to oversee counter-UAS work, and December 11, 2025, the law enforcement symposium in Arlington. The Dec. 18, 2025 Defense.gov piece notes progress but no deployment date.
Reliability: Defense.gov is the official source for the claim, with Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Military.com providing corroborating reporting about timelines and ongoing development.
Current status: in_progress. Evidence suggests continued work toward deployment with planned milestones, but no firm launch date has been announced as of December 2025.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 02:57 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The article describes a centralized mechanism to provide access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Progress evidence: The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was established in August 2025 to accelerate integration, testing, and delivery of counter-UAS capabilities, with the Army leading (Federal News Network, 2025-07-02; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Further progress: In December 2025, a law-enforcement symposium highlighted the task force’s efforts, including coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to assist agencies and leverage FEMA funding to support counter-UAS capabilities, including a centralized marketplace concept for data, feedback, and procurement options (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). The DLA collaboration and a $250 million FEMA funding path are cited as mechanisms to move toward fielded solutions (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Milestones and timing: Multiple outlets in November–December 2025 describe plans for an online marketplace to serve federal installations, DHS, FBI, and local authorities, but no firm live launch date was announced by mid-December (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Current status: Defense.gov states the marketplace is not deployed yet but progress is being made, with ongoing interagency collaboration and testing to establish a centralized data/ procurement hub (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18).
Reliability note: The most authoritative source is the Defense Department’s own Defense.gov piece, which explicitly states the marketplace is not deployed as of December 2025. Supporting coverage from Defense One and Breaking Defense corroborates the direction and timeline, while Military.com reports on a launch, indicating possible pilot activity or timing differences. Overall, the status is best characterized as in_progress (not deployed) pending formal deployment and governance agreements (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Federal News Network, 2025-07-02; Military.com, 2025-12-08).
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 02:07 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is presented as a cornerstone of a layered homeland defense effort.
Evidence of progress: Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities, with the marketplace concept at the center of its mission. At a December 11 law-enforcement symposium, leaders highlighted partnerships with DHS, the FBI and local agencies and described the marketplace as a mechanism to access DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. The effort leverages Defense Logistics Agency contracting support and FEMA grant pathways, including a $250 million fund dedicated to counter-UAS and air-domain awareness. (DOD 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17)
Status: The Defense Department article states the marketplace is not deployed yet but progress is being made. "We're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress," Army Brig. Gen. Matt Ross said. Other outlets describe ongoing development and note there is no official launch date yet. (DOD 2025-12-18)
Milestones and dates: Defense One reports plans to converge counter-UAS data and capabilities into a single common command-and-control network, with a target to plug into an enterprise-wide framework within the next 90 days. The reporting notes testing and evaluation of components for inclusion in the marketplace and World Cup preparedness. No launch date for the marketplace itself is announced in public disclosures. (Defense One 2025-12-19)
Reliability of sources: The core claim comes from an official Defense Department news article (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Additional context and corroboration come from Breaking Defense (Nov 2025) and Defense One (Dec 2025), both reputable defense outlets. GlobalSecurity.org also reproduces the official DoD piece, reflecting consistency across outlets. (DOD 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-12-19; GlobalSecurity 2025-12-18)
Follow-up date: 2026-02-28.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 01:26 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (DOW 2025-12-18). The Defense Department article describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's layered counter-drone defense, intended to provide interagency users access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options (DOW 2025-12-18).
Evidence of progress includes the formation of JIATF 401 in August 2025 under Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, with a mandate to rapidly integrate interagency capabilities (Defense One 2025-11-14). The effort also leverages the Defense Logistics Agency to provide contracting support and a FEMA grant pool (about $250 million) to accelerate procurement and fielding (DOW 2025-12-18). The marketplace is described as a central online hub to compare systems, access government testing data, and guide procurement before deployment (Defense One 2025-11-14; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Milestones and events include the JIATF 401 interagency summit in Alexandria, VA, on November 25–26, 2025, signaling broad interagency alignment (DOW 2025-11-26). A law-enforcement symposium on December 11, 2025 highlighted collaboration with federal, state, and local partners (DOW 2025-12-18). A counter-UAS summit was planned for late November to discuss testing, evaluation, and policy for potential fielding (Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17).
Current status as of 2025-12-23: launch date has not been announced and there is no evidence the marketplace is live; multiple outlets describe the marketplace as being developed or planned rather than deployed (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-11-14; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Reliability note: sources are DoD press materials and defense trade media; they provide official framing and reporting of progress, but no independent verification of a deployed marketplace; overall, the evidence supports ongoing development and planning rather than a completed marketplace (DOW 2025-12-18; Defense One 2025-11/14; Breaking Defense 2025-11/17; Military.com 2025-12-08).
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 11:43 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options for law enforcement partners. This marketplace is presented as a cornerstone of the broader layered counter-drone defense effort led by JIATF 401.
Evidence of progress: The Defense.gov piece identifies the marketplace as a central element of the effort, describing it as a centralized mechanism to access test data and validated procurement options. It explicitly ties the marketplace to interagency and law enforcement access, indicating the intended users. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Funding and partnership: The article notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to assist law enforcement and leverage a FEMA Notice of Funding Opportunity that provides $250 million for counter-drone and air domain awareness capabilities. The defense press materials describe how this funding accelerates moving from grants to deployable capability via procurement pathways. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Current status and milestones: As of December 18, 2025, the marketplace is described as being developed, with no launch date announced and no confirmed deployment. Subsequent reporting reiterates that the marketplace remains in planning and testing rather than fully deployed. (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-12-19)
Independent corroboration: MeriTalk notes a December 11, 2025 interagency meeting with state and local law enforcement to discuss shared situational awareness and data access through the marketplace. Executive Gov and Defense One coverage likewise describe the marketplace as a planned capability rather than an existing system. (MeriTalk 2025-12-22; Executive Gov 2025-11-18; Defense One 2025-12-19)
Reliability and assessment: The primary source is Defense.gov, an official DoD outlet; the other outlets are established defense-media outlets with close access to public officials and task-force briefings. Taken together, the reporting supports ongoing development of a counter-UAS marketplace, not its deployment, as of 2025-12-23. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; MeriTalk 2025-12-22; Defense One 2025-12-19)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 11:06 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes this marketplace as a centralized mechanism enabling interagency access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Evidence of progress includes JIATF 401's emphasis on integrating data sharing, testing, and procurement pathways, with the marketplace described as a central element of the effort. The article notes that progress is being made, though it also acknowledges the marketplace has not yet been deployed. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
External reporting corroborates ongoing development. A Breaking Defense report (Nov 17, 2025) describes plans to stand up an online counter-UAS marketplace, and MeriTalk (Dec 22, 2025) reports a Dec. 11 meeting with state and local law enforcement to discuss cross-jurisdiction data-sharing and funding to accelerate fielding. (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22)
However, there is no public record of the marketplace being fully developed and deployed by Dec 23, 2025. DoD officials indicate no launch date has been set, and communications describe the effort as "not there yet" but progressing. (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Concrete milestones cited include a $250 million FEMA grant opportunity administered via the Defense Logistics Agency to enable procurement pathways, and coordinated testing with law enforcement for events such as the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The Defense.gov piece also cites a December 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium highlighting the need for a shared air picture. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22)
Reliability note: Defense.gov is the official DoD source and provides the most authoritative description of the marketplace; Breaking Defense and MeriTalk offer timely follow-ups but are trade outlets with varying editorial standards. Taken together, they indicate an in-progress initiative rather than a completed deployment. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; MeriTalk, 2025-12-22)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 09:54 AMin_progress
The claim concerns the development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. It is described as a central mechanism within Joint Interagency Task Force 401's layered counter-drone defense. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Defense.gov's December 18, 2025 article frames the marketplace as a central focus of the counter-UAS effort, embedded in JIATF 401's work, but does not assert that it is deployed. The piece notes the marketplace would centralize access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options, without claiming deployment. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Defense One's December 19, 2025 report describes plans to stand up a common command-and-control framework to run all counter-UAS equipment in an enterprise marketplace. It notes the marketplace will require interoperable data sharing and licensing, but no launch date has been set. Officials say progress is underway, with a focus on rapid testing and a 90-day window to plug in the new C2 framework. (Defense One 2025-12-19)
Breaking Defense's November 17, 2025 article confirms that a digital marketplace is planned but explicitly states there is no launch date yet. MeriTalk's December 22, 2025 report confirms a December 11 interagency meeting and emphasizes a common air picture across jurisdictions, with the marketplace identified as a central component. Federal funding pathways are being pursued (e.g., DLA support and FEMA grant mechanisms) to move from planning to deployment. (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; MeriTalk 2025-12-22)
Taken together, these sources show ongoing development rather than a deployed solution. They come from DoD official outlets and defense trade press, which generally align but do not provide independent verification. (Defense.gov; War.gov; Defense One; Breaking Defense; MeriTalk)
Status: in_progress; as of 2025-12-23 there is progress but no deployed counter-UAS marketplace. (Summary)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 09:06 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options for law enforcement and other partners. The Defense Department describes this marketplace as a centralized mechanism that provides interagency access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Progress indicators: JIATF 401, established in August 2025, has prioritized rapid integration and testing of counter-UAS capabilities and is pursuing a digital marketplace as a core element (Army.mil 2025-12-19; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17). Reports describe an online or digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions, intended to centralize performance data and procurement options (ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17).
Current status and completion: As of 2025-12-23 there is no publicly announced deployment date; officials indicate the marketplace is under development and testing rather than fully deployed (Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Defense One 2025-12-19). The 100-day update highlights ongoing efforts to build the enterprise, including a potential data-driven marketplace (Army.mil 2025-12-19).
Concrete milestones and dates: August 2025 – JIATF 401 stood up to lead counter-UAS efforts; November–December 2025 – public reporting on planning and development of the marketplace; January 2026 – anticipated initial deliveries of counter-UAS capabilities to the southern border, reflecting procurement activity linked to the broader effort (Army.mil 2025-12-19).
Reliability of sources: The most authoritative confirmations come from official DoD/Army outlets (Defense.gov, Army.mil). Coverage from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Military.com corroborates the marketplace development but varies on whether it is live, underscoring the need for official deployment announcements to confirm completion status.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 07:53 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department describes this marketplace as a central mechanism within a layered counter-drone defense in a December 18, 2025 DoD news story about JIATF 401.
Progress evidence: JIATF 401 was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver C-UAS capabilities (DoD story). The task force is coordinating with the Defense Logistics Agency to assist law enforcement and to leverage FEMA's $250 million counter-UAS funding opportunity (NOFO). This partnership aims to streamline procurement pathways and fielding timelines for interagency partners (DoD story).
Another central element is the marketplace itself, which is described as a centralized repository for DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options (DoD story). A December 11, 2025 interagency symposium highlighted progress toward a shared data picture and coordinated purchasing approaches (DoD story).
As of 2025-12-23, DoD officials say the marketplace is in development and not yet deployed, stating 'we're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress' (DoD story).
Independent outlets in November–December 2025 reinforced the development trajectory, describing intentions to stand up a digital marketplace and to address testing, policy, and procurement workflows (Breaking Defense, Defense One, Military.com). None of these reports indicate a department-wide live deployment by December 23, 2025.
Reliability note: The primary status is from defense.gov, which is authoritative for DoD statements; corroboration from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and Military.com supports the overall development narrative but varies on timing. Conclusion: the claim is best characterized as in_progress as of 2025-12-23.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 07:03 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize interagency access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options for law enforcement and other partners (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). The marketplace is positioned as a cornerstone of the Joint Interagency Task Force 401’s layered counter-drone defense effort.
Evidence of progress: JIATF 401 was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). The Defense.gov piece also notes collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA grant funding and procurement pathways, and it highlights a law-enforcement symposium held on Dec. 11, 2025, to advance interagency coordination (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Independent reporting in November 2025 corroborates ongoing planning for a digital marketplace and testing/cooperation with interagency partners (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Status and completion outlook: The Defense.gov article explicitly frames the marketplace as still in development, with a spokesperson saying, “we are not there yet, but we are making measurable progress” (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Subsequent coverage in November 2025 describes plans and timelines as still to be determined, with no launch date announced for the marketplace (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14).
Dates and milestones: August 2025 – JIATF 401 established; November 2025 – multiple outlets report planning to stand up a digital marketplace and related policy/testing activities (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14). December 11, 2025 – interagency law-enforcement symposium referenced in the Defense.gov piece; December 18, 2025 – formal Defense.gov article detailing current developments (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18). Reliability note: The primary source is an official Defense.gov article, which is highly reliable for the stated claims; corroboration from Defense One and Breaking Defense strengthens the account but remains secondary reporting. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 05:57 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-UAS defense. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Evidence of progress includes efforts by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 to rapidly integrate counter-UAS capabilities and coordinate with the Defense Logistics Agency to enable procurement. The Defense Department also notes a FEMA funding opportunity of up to $250 million to support counter-UAS and air-domain awareness activities, reinforcing scalable procurement pathways. A central counter-UAS marketplace is described as a mechanism to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Status as of December 2025 is that the marketplace has not yet deployed; no launch date has been announced. Multiple outlets report the marketplace is in planning and testing phases, with a counter-UAS summit planned and ongoing policy development. Defense.gov emphasizes progress but confirms deployment is not complete. (Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; ExecutiveGov 2025-11-18; Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Milestones include the interagency summit around late November 2025, and the FBI’s newly opened National Counter-UAS Training Center in Huntsville as part of homeland security preparations for major events such as the FIFA World Cup 2026. (Inside Unmanned Systems 2025-12-01)
Reliability note: the claims are grounded in official Defense Department reporting (Defense.gov) and corroborated by defense trade press (Defense One, Breaking Defense) and trade outlets (Inside Unmanned Systems). Some specifics, like a firm launch date, remain unconfirmed. (Defense.gov; Defense One; Breaking Defense; Inside Unmanned Systems)
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 05:39 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense coverage frames this marketplace as a central element of the layered counter-drone defense effort. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Evidence of progress includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities. Defense.gov describes the marketplace as the centerpiece of this effort, enabling interagency access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options. The task force is accelerating procurement and testing by coordinating with the Defense Logistics Agency and FEMA, including a $250 million funding pool for counter-UAS and air domain awareness. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
However, the article notes that the marketplace has not yet been deployed; it is still under development. The author states that, "we are not there yet, but we are making measurable progress." (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Several concrete milestones are foregrounded in related reporting: the Army marks 100 days of counter-drone operations in December 2025, highlighting rapid integration and policy alignment. In addition, the Army Public Affairs piece cites an anticipated initial delivery of roughly $18 million in counter-sUAS capability to the southern border in January 2026. Industry reporting has described the marketplace as forthcoming, with discussions about a digital marketplace to test, evaluate, and procure counter-UAS solutions. (Army.mil 2025-12-19; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Executive Gov 2025-11-18)
Reliability notes: Defense.gov and Army.mil are primary official sources, providing direct DoD and service perspectives. Reporting from Breaking Defense and Executive Gov corroborates the marketplace concept but remains secondary coverage. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18; Army.mil 2025-12-19; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17; Executive Gov 2025-11-18)
Overall status: in_progress.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 05:01 AMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. DoD coverage describes it as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone effort: a centralized mechanism that allows interagency and law enforcement partners to access test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (DoD News, 2025-12-18)
Progress evidence: Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate, test, and deliver counter-UAS capabilities (DoD article). By December 11, 2025, a law-enforcement symposium in Arlington highlighted ongoing collaboration with federal, state, and local partners and the Defense Logistics Agency’s role in enabling procurement pathways (DoD article). The effort is described as making measurable progress, not yet deployed (DoD article).
Milestones and dates: Defense One reports on December 19, 2025 that the Army-led task force aims to unify data and systems under a common network, with a plan to implement the C2 framework within roughly 90 days. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) and The War Zone (Nov 14, 2025) describe the marketplace as being developed, with no launch date published. (Defense One, Breaking Defense, The War Zone)
Completion status: As of 2025-12-22, the counter-UAS marketplace has not been deployed; sources describe ongoing development and testing and note there is no published launch date. They also indicate work on procurement pathways and interoperability across interagency partners. (DoD News, Defense One, Breaking Defense, The War Zone)
Reliability note: The most authoritative signal comes from the official DoD News article, which explicitly frames the marketplace as a cornerstone and documents progress. Corroborating reporting from Defense One, Breaking Defense, and The War Zone provides context on procurement, common-network efforts, and near-term timelines, but none indicate a deployed, fully functional portal yet.
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 04:26 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners (Defense.gov DoD News, 2025-12-18).
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 02:33 AMin_progress
Update · Dec 23, 2025, 01:07 AMin_progress
The claim describes a counter-UAS marketplace intended to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes this as a cornerstone of a layered counter-UAS effort. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Progress evidence shows the marketplace concept is being developed under Joint Interagency Task Force 401 and the Department of War. The Dec. 18, 2025 Defense.gov article notes the marketplace would provide access to DOW test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Industry coverage in Nov. 2025 indicates the Army-led task force plans to stand up a digital counter-UAS marketplace, with launch dates yet to be set. Defense One and Breaking Defense quote Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing a centralized UAS marketplace and testing framework, but no fixed deployment date. (Defense One 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense 2025-11-17)
The Army's Nov. 14, 2025 public-roundtable with Brig. Gen. Ross confirms active work on a marketplace and ongoing testing/evaluation pipelines. Ross says there are vehicles to purchase counter-UAS now, but the launch date for the marketplace has not been announced. (Army.mil 2025-11-14)
MeriTalk's Dec. 22, 2025 piece reiterates that JIATF-401 is building toward a marketplace and that real access remains in development rather than deployed. The article quotes Ross saying progress is measurable but not complete. (MeriTalk 2025-12-22)
Conclusion: Based on official DoD communications and defense press, the marketplace is in progress but not yet deployed. Current sources reflect a consistent, multi-source trajectory toward a centralized procurement/data-sharing mechanism, with no firm deployment milestone announced as of 2025-12-22. (Defense.gov 2025-12-18)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 11:42 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department characterizes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-UAS effort led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401.
Evidence of progress: Defense One reports an Army-led task force is building an online marketplace to streamline purchasing of tested counter-UAS components for installations and interagency partners, with a launch date to be determined (Defense One, 2025-11-14). Defense industry reporting from Breaking Defense quotes Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing the marketplace as part of a broader UAS market, though no launch date is set (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17). A Defense Department feature published Dec. 18, 2025 reiterates the marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort and notes that progress is measurable but not yet deployed (DOD, 2025-12-18).
Status of completion: There is no deployed marketplace yet; sources describe the effort as ongoing development with launch date not set, and officials indicating that progress is being made but the marketplace is not operational (Defense One, 2025-11-14; DoD, 2025-12-18).
Dates and milestones: The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 was established in August 2025. A counter-UAS summit was planned for November 2025, with a related series of tests and demonstrations in that period. A December 11–18, 2025 interagency symposium highlighted progress and the need for an integrated data-and-procurement approach. The December 18, 2025 DoD piece frames the marketplace as in development with measurable progress toward fielding.
Reliability of sources: The Defense Department’s official DoD article provides primary confirmation of the marketplace concept and its role. Defense One and Breaking Defense offer independent reporting that corroborates ongoing development, notes the lack of a fixed launch date, and describes related interagency coordination and testing efforts. Overall, sources consistently describe progress without indicating deployment as of late December 2025.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 10:48 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. Defense.gov describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense being built by Joint Interagency Task Force 401. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Progress evidence includes the establishment of JIATF 401 in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver C-UAS capabilities, and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to assist law enforcement and leverage FEMA grant funding. The DoD piece notes a $250 million FEMA grant pathway via DLA to provide contracting, logistics support, and scalable procurement for interagency partners. Industry reporting in November 2025 confirms an online marketplace is being planned to purchase counter-UAS gear, with launch timing not announced yet. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Defense One, 2025-11-14; Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17)
As described by Defense.gov, the marketplace will centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options; the article adds that "we are making measurable progress" toward fielding capabilities, but provides no deployment date. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Defense outlets corroborate ongoing development without a firm launch date. Breaking Defense (Nov 17, 2025) reports an online marketplace is being stood up and that there is no launch date yet, while Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) describes it as a "one-stop shopping" marketplace and notes that a counter-UAS summit is planned. (Breaking Defense, 2025-11-17; Defense One, 2025-11-14)
Concrete milestones and dates include August 2025 for JIATF 401's establishment; November 2025 for marketplace planning and policy development; and December 11–18, 2025 for related symposiums and statements confirming progress. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Source reliability: the primary source is Defense.gov, an official DoD outlet; the defense-press pieces from Breaking Defense and Defense One provide corroboration while remaining industry-focused; taken together, the current status points to ongoing development (in_progress) with no announced deployment date and no reporting of cancellation. (Defense.gov, Breaking Defense, Defense One)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 09:43 PMin_progress
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 08:48 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
This marketplace is described as a centralized mechanism to provide tested data and validated procurement paths to practitioners across agencies.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 08:37 PMcomplete
{"verdict":"in_progress","text":"Claim restatement: The article describes development of a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize interagency access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for partners in law enforcement.\n\nProgress evidence: The piece identifies the counter-UAS marketplace as a cornerstone of the effort and notes JIATF 401 is leading rapid integration, testing, and capability delivery in coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency. It also cites a FEMA-related funding opportunity of about $250 million to support counter-UAS and air-domain awareness, enabling scalable procurement pathways.\n\nCompletion status: The article does not report that the marketplace has been deployed. It describes ongoing development and asserts measurable progress toward fielded capabilities rather than a completed deployment.\n\nDates and milestones: The article is dated Dec. 18, 2025, and references a Dec. 11, 2025 law-enforcement symposium at Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall and a Nov. 21, 2025 drone exercise in Washington as part of the ongoing effort. It also frames these events around preparing for large public events such as the 2026 FIFA World Cup.\n\nSource reliability: Defense.gov is the official DoD news outlet and provides primary information about government programs; the article's content is an internal briefing and has not been independently corroborated in this briefing.\n\nOverall assessment: The DoD source indicates ongoing development and progress toward a counter-UAS marketplace, but it does not confirm deployment or access for partners.","sources":null,"follow_up_date":null}
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 07:43 PMin_progress
Claim (restated): A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense and interagency leaders describe it as a centralized hub that would provide access to test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (War.gov 4364049 summary, Dec 2025)
Evidence of progress includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver counter-UAS capabilities. The marketplace is described as a cornerstone of this effort, intended to connect agencies with tested solutions and procurement pathways. Additionally, a December 11 law-enforcement symposium highlighted interagency data sharing and procurement integration. (JIATF 401, Aug 2025; War.gov Dec 2025)
As of December 2025, there is no announced live launch date for the marketplace. Several outlets report that the marketplace launch date remains to be determined. (Nextgov, Nov 14, 2025; Military.com, Dec 8, 2025)
Concrete milestones include JIATF 401 reaching its 100th day of operations around December 2025, signaling sustained progress. The task force also outlines a 30-day window to recommend a dedicated counter-UAS test and training range, and to integrate procurement processes with DLA and FEMA funding channels. (Army.mil, Dec 19, 2025; Army Times, Aug 28, 2025)
Reliability note: Official DoD outlets provide authoritative context for JIATF 401 and the marketplace concept, while industry press tracks ongoing development but has not confirmed a marketplace launch. (DoD releases, War.gov coverage; Nextgov/Military.com reporting)
Verdict: in_progress. Follow-up: 2026-01-31
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 06:58 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. Defense Department reporting describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF-401's layered counter-drone defense effort, providing access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. citeturn2search0
Progress evidence includes the creation of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 in August 2025 and public notes of rapid progress, including a December 2025 milestone of roughly 100 days of counter-drone operations. Media coverage also notes the marketplace is being designed to streamline testing, feedback, and procurement, with a launch date yet to be announced. citeturn2search0turn2search2turn1view0
Status: there is no deployed marketplace yet; officials say the marketplace launch date is still to be determined and the effort remains in development. Nextgov/FCW and Defense One articles from November 2025 emphasize ongoing design and planning rather than a live release. citeturn0search8turn1view0
Dates and milestones: August 2025 formation of JIATF-401; November 14, 2025 reporting on the marketplace concept; December 11, 2025 interagency law-enforcement symposium; December 19–21, 2025 reporting of 100 days of counter-drone operations and ongoing integration. These items illustrate a trend of rapid organizational integration and policy development around the marketplace concept. citeturn2search0turn1view0turn2search2
Reliability note: official DoD outlets (War.gov) provide primary confirmation of the marketplace concept; the broader defense press (Defense One, Army Times/Army.mil) offers corroboration and context about progress and expected timelines. citeturn2search0turn0search6
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 05:45 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The article describes a counter-UAS marketplace being developed to centralize interagency access to data, feedback, and validated procurement options for law enforcement partners. A cornerstone of the effort is the marketplace itself, a centralized mechanism to access Department of War test data, operational user feedback and procurement options. citeturn0view0turn2view0turn4view0
Progress evidence: Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was established in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and deliver counter-UAS capabilities, with the marketplace positioned at the center of the effort. The task force coordinates with the Defense Logistics Agency to aid law enforcement and leverages a FEMA-funded NOFO to support counter-UAS procurement pathways. A December 2025 law-enforcement symposium underscored efforts to integrate sensors, data sharing, and procurement across agencies. citeturn0view0
Status and completion questions: As of mid-December 2025, the marketplace had not been deployed; sources describe it as a developing concept with no firm launch date. Nov 2025 reporting explicitly states the launch date is still to be determined, while sustained coverage notes ongoing testing and policy work ahead of any live rollout. citeturn2view0turn4view0
Concrete milestones and dates: The Army-backed marketplace initiative was publicly discussed in November 2025, with a counter-UAS summit planned and ongoing testing/evaluation coordinated with interagency partners. By December 18, 2025, DoD communications framed the marketplace as a central, but not yet deployed, element of the fielding effort. In late December 2025, JIATF 401 marked its 100 days of counter-drone operations, highlighting rapid integration and ongoing capability delivery. citeturn2view0turn0view0turn1search2
Reliability note: The reporting relies on official DoD outlets (Defense.gov, War.gov) and reputable defense policy outlets (Defense One, Nextgov). All present the marketplace as a developing capability rather than a finished, deployed system, emphasizing ongoing testing, governance, and procurement policy work. This triangulation supports a cautious, in-progress assessment. citeturn0view0turn1search8turn4view0
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 04:55 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize interagency access to data, feedback, and procurement options for partners in law enforcement and other agencies. Defense Department reporting describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of JIATF 401's effort to integrate joint and interagency counter-UAS capabilities. citeturn2search0turn2search6
Evidence progress includes the broader effort led by JIATF 401 and collaboration with the Defense Logistics Agency to leverage FEMA grant funding and contracting support for counter-UAS. The War.gov article notes that DLA contracting pathways and FEMA grants are being used to help state and local agencies deploy counter-UAS capacity, reinforcing the marketplace concept. citeturn2search0
As of November 2025, several outlets described the marketplace as being developed, with no official live deployment date announced. Defense One (Nov 14, 2025) and Nextgov (Nov 14, 2025) quote Brig. Gen. Matt Ross describing an "Amazon-like" procurement hub, including testing, evaluation, and user feedback, but no launch date. citeturn1view0turn0search10
Milestones include a counter-UAS summit later in November 2025 and ongoing component testing; coverage notes that a firm marketplace launch date has not been set. citeturn1view0turn0search9
Reliability note: DoD releases confirm the establishment of JIATF 401, and coverage from Defense One, Army Times, UAS Vision, NextGov, and Euro-SD corroborates ongoing marketplace development, indicating an in-progress status rather than completion. citeturn2search6turn1view0turn0search5turn0search10turn0search9
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 03:47 PMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department’s December 18, 2025 article describes this marketplace as a centralized mechanism for interagency access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. The piece frames the marketplace as a cornerstone of the broader effort to deliver layered counter-drone defenses. (Defense.gov/War.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
Evidence of progress includes the task force’s ongoing operation and explicit references to a digital marketplace. In the Army's December 19, 2025 post on JIATF-401, the task force notes a "digital marketplace for vetted counter-sUAS solutions" as part of Line of Effort 2. The same coverage highlights rapid testing events and procurement support that align with marketplace goals. (Army.mil, Dec 19, 2025; War.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
However, there is no indication that the marketplace has been deployed publicly or fully implemented as of December 2025. The December 18 War.gov piece quotes Brig. Gen. Ross saying, "We're not there yet, but we are making measurable progress" on integrating data sharing and procurement pathways. It still describes ongoing development rather than a live, public-facing marketplace. (War.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
Key dates and milestones include August 28, 2025, when Secretary Hegseth announced JIATF 401; December 11–12, 2025 interagency symposium; December 18, 2025 article announcing the marketplace approach; December 19, 2025 report of 100 days of operations and near-term January 2026 deliveries. (Def. Gov release Aug 28, 2025; Army.mil Dec 19, 2025; War.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
Reliability: The information comes from official U.S. government outlets (Defense.gov/War.gov/Army.mil), which are generally high reliability for defense topics. The materials describe ongoing development and intended capabilities rather than a fully deployed marketplace by December 22, 2025. (Defense.gov; War.gov; Army.mil, Dec 2025)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 02:50 PMin_progress
Claim: a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. The Defense Department piece describes the marketplace as a cornerstone of layered counter-drone defense efforts. (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 01:57 PMin_progress
Claim restatement: The defense article describes a counter-UAS marketplace as a centralized mechanism to give interagency and law enforcement partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. citeturn0view0
Evidence of progress: The piece notes ongoing efforts under Joint Interagency Task Force 401, formed in August 2025 to rapidly integrate and field C-UAS capabilities, including a December 2025 law-enforcement symposium and close coordination with the Defense Logistics Agency to accelerate capability delivery. It also mentions FEMA’s $250 million NOFO activity to support counter-UAS funding pathways. citeturn0view0
Status of completion: The article frames the marketplace as a cornerstone being developed, not yet deployed, and notes there has been no public go-live date announced for the marketplace. Independent reporting also indicates no announced launch date as of early December 2025. citeturn0view0turn1search3
Dates and milestones: Key milestones referenced include the August 2025 formation of JIATF 401, the November 21, 2025 drone-exercise in Washington, and the December 11–12, 2025 interagency symposium in the National Capital Region, culminating in the December 18, 2025 Defense Department article describing progress toward a marketplace. These events frame the development trajectory and funding context (DLA collaboration and FEMA NOFO). citeturn0view0turn1search3
Reliability note: The primary sourcing is an official Defense Department news story (high reliability for policy trajectory). supplementary context comes from Military.com reporting and FEMA grant materials. Taken together, the sources support a: (a) ongoing development of the marketplace and (b) lack of a published live deployment date as of 2025-12-21. citeturn0view0turn1search3turn1search1
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 01:14 PMin_progress
Claim restated: A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. The concept is described as a cornerstone of the effort led by JIATF-401. This marketplace would enable interagency customers to review performance data and select appropriate solutions. citeturn2view0turn1view0
Evidence of progress: The DoD Aug. 28, 2025 press release establishes JIATF 401 to rapidly deliver joint counter-small unmanned aircraft capabilities, signaling an organizational shift toward a centralized approach. The Dec. 18, 2025 War.gov article reiterates that a counter-UAS marketplace is a central element of this effort and describes its intended role in providing data and procurement options. citeturn1view0turn2view0
Current status: As of December 2025, public reporting describes the marketplace as being developed, with no published deployment date or live portal announced. DoD and defense press coverage note that it has not yet gone live and remains in planning and evaluation phases. citeturn4search6turn4search1turn2view0
Key milestones: The August 28, 2025 establishment of JIATF 401; public remarks in November 2025; and a December 2025 interagency symposium that highlighted procurement integration and data-sharing aims demonstrate ongoing work toward a centralized marketplace and interoperability across agencies. citeturn1view0turn4search6turn2view0
Reliability: Primary sources such as Defense Department press releases and War Department content are authoritative; trade outlets like Defense One, Nextgov, and Military.com corroborate the marketplace concept and timelines. Some coverage also appears in secondary aggregators; where present, treat such reports as supplementary corroboration rather than primary sources. citeturn1view0turn4search6turn4search1turn4search3
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 11:42 AMin_progress
A counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a cornerstone of Joint Interagency Task Force 401's layered counter-drone defense approach. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Army.mil, 2025-11-*)
Evidence progress includes the formation of JIATF-401, established in August 2025, to rapidly integrate and deliver joint counter-small unmanned aircraft systems capabilities. A cornerstone of this effort is the development of a counter-UAS marketplace, a centralized mechanism that allows interagency and law enforcement partners to access DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov release 4289621; Army.mil; War.gov)
Defense One reports that as of November 14, 2025, the Army-led task force is building an online marketplace to streamline procurement of tested and vetted counter-UAS components for use by installations, federal agencies, and law enforcement. (Defense One, 2025-11-14)
Additional coverage from Army.mil and JBSA notes the marketplace as an explicit objective and describes interagency collaboration efforts to support rapid capability delivery, including meetings and planning aimed at fielding solutions. (Army.mil; JBSA, 2025-11)
Status as of December 21, 2025: there is no public deployment date announced, and multiple outlets describe ongoing development and testing rather than full deployment. The completion condition (deployed and accessible to partners) has not yet been publicly achieved. (Defense One, 2025-11; Army.mil/ JBSA)
Reliability note: The core claim relies on official DoD communications (Defense.gov releases), Army/JBSA reporting, and defense journalism from Defense One; cross-checks across these sources support the interpretation that the marketplace is in development but not yet deployed. (Defense.gov; Army.mil; JBSA; Defense One)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 10:51 AMin_progress
Claim restated: there is an effort to develop a counter-UAS marketplace to centralize access to data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. The Defense Department describes this marketplace as a cornerstone of the layered counter-drone defense.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 09:54 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law-enforcement partners. Defense Department reporting on December 18, 2025 describes the marketplace as a centralized mechanism for interagency and law-enforcement access to test data, feedback, and validated procurement options. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18)
Evidence of progress includes the August 2025 decision to form Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), which consolidates operational, acquisition, and interagency functions with procurement authority to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities. This initiative is part of a broader effort described in DoD coverage and subsequent reporting. (Military Times, 2025-08-28; Defense News, 2025-08-28)
Further momentum was described in November 2025 as multiple outlets framed the marketplace as an 'Amazon-like' hub for testing, evaluating, and purchasing counter-UAS components, with the Defense One and Nextgov reports. The concept is described as enabling testing, evaluation, and procurement feedback across agencies. (Defense One, 2025-11-14; Nextgov, 2025-11-14; UAS Vision, 2025-11-17)
However, as of December 2025 there is no public launch date; official coverage notes that the marketplace has not gone live and details of first systems are not announced. Pentagon and DoD press have not provided a go-live date for the interagency marketplace. (Military.com, 2025-12-08)
Milestones to watch include the rapid deployment posture announced for late 2025, the 100-day mark for JIATF-401 operations noted on December 19, 2025, and the November interagency summit. These underscore ongoing progress toward a centralized counter-UAS capability and data-sharing framework. (Army.mil, 2025-12-19)
Reliability note: The sources include official DoD outlets (Defense.gov, Army.mil) and reputable defense press (Defense One, Military Times, UAS Vision). They consistently describe the marketplace concept and organizational changes, but publicly available timelines for a live, fully deployed marketplace remain unclear. (Defense.gov, 2025-12-18; Army.mil, 2025-12-19; Defense One, 2025-11-14)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 08:57 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a centralized portal for data such as test results, user feedback, and validated procurement options (War.gov, 2025).
Evidence of progress includes the formal establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) to accelerate counter-drone capabilities, announced by Secretary of Defense in August 2025, and ongoing interagency integration efforts that underpin a centralized provisioning approach (Defense.gov release 2025; Defense News, 2025). In addition, Army and interagency reporting highlight rapid consolidation of authorities and increasing interagency collaboration as the mission matures (JIATF-401 100 days article, Army.mil, 2025).
Industry and defense press describe the marketplace as an “Amazon-like” online hub where commanders and partner agencies can shop for counter-UAS capabilities, see vendor data, receive user feedback, and access validated procurement options; however, as of November 2025, officials had not announced a firm live-launch date (Defense One, 2025; Nextgov, 2025; UAS Vision, 2025). Several reports emphasize that the portal is intended to streamline testing, evaluation, and procurement across the department, not merely to publish information (turn0search6; turn0search11; turn0search9).
Milestones include the August 2025 creation of JIATF-401 and a November 2025 interagency summit discussing policy, science, and technology for national counter-UAS efforts; by mid-December 2025, JIATF-401 reported reaching about 100 days of counter-drone operations, signaling operational maturation but not completion of the marketplace (Defense News, 2025; Army.mil, 2025). The trajectory indicates ongoing development rather than a deployed, fully accessible marketplace for interagency partners (turn0search2; turn0search3; turn0search7).
Reliability note: sources range from official DoD communications (Defense.gov, Army.mil) to reputable defense outlets (Defense One, Nextgov) and industry-focused outlets (UAS Vision). Official statements consistently describe the marketplace as a future or developing capability rather than a currently deployed system as of late December 2025 (Defense.gov release 2025; Army.mil 2025; turn0search6; turn0search11).
Follow-up date: 2026-02-01
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 07:50 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. This marketplace is described as a cornerstone of the broader layered counter-drone defense effort. (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
Evidence of progress includes a Defense.gov piece stating the marketplace will provide interagency partners access to DOW test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options, with the Defense Logistics Agency coordinating contracting and logistics support. (Defense.gov, Dec 18, 2025)
However, reporting in November 2025 indicated no launch date yet and no deployment announced; outlets described the marketplace as a work in progress rather than a live system. (Nextgov, Nov 14, 2025; Defense One, Nov 14, 2025)
Additional progress includes policy development for domestic deployment and planning for a counter-UAS summit; Army reporting notes the JIATF 401 is testing components and may stage initial fielding in early 2026. (Nextgov, Nov 14, 2025; Army.mil, Dec 19, 2025)
Reliability: The coverage comes from official DoD outlets and established defense press, with consistent language about ongoing development and the absence of a live marketplace as of mid-December 2025. (Defense.gov, war.gov mirror; Defense One, Nextgov; Army.mil)
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 07:02 AMin_progress
The claim is that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to DoD test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners. citeturn1search0
Progress evidence includes the establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) in 2025 to accelerate counter-UAS capabilities, with DoD describing the marketplace as a cornerstone of this effort to centralize testing data, user feedback, and procurement options. citeturn1search7
As of November 2025, multiple outlets report the marketplace is under development with no firm launch date; officials described it as an integrated hub to streamline purchasing and provide a testing/evaluation pathway. citeturn1search3turn0search8
Concrete milestones include plans to give interagency partners access to data, feedback, and procurement options, with interagency meetings and policy groundwork supporting rapid fielding. citeturn1search5turn1search3
Reliability assessment: sources include official DoD releases (turn1search7), Army/mil outlets (turn1search2, turn1search5), and reputable defense outlets (turn1search3, turn0search8). The status remains in_progress with no announced deployment date. citeturn1search7turn1search2turn1search5turn1search3turn0search8
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 05:44 AMin_progress
The Department of War's Joint Interagency Task Force (JIATF) 401 is developing a centralized counter-Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) marketplace to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to detection-on-the-wing (DOW) test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options.
As of December 18, 2025, JIATF-401 has announced the creation of this marketplace, aiming to centralize performance data and assist agencies in selecting systems suitable for their environments. (
military.com)
The marketplace is intended to serve as both a technical library and a practical guide for agencies lacking their own testing infrastructure, reflecting years of reviews and exercises that identified uneven standards across agencies using similar tools to protect high-risk sites. (
military.com)
While the marketplace has been announced, there is no specific information regarding its deployment date or the availability of data, feedback, and procurement options to interagency and law enforcement partners. The project is currently in progress, with no concrete milestones or completion dates publicly disclosed.
The sources used, including official Department of War announcements and reputable news outlets, are considered reliable for reporting on defense and security initiatives.
Given the current lack of specific deployment details, the claim is considered in progress.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 04:56 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) is developing a counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) was established on August 27, 2025, to centralize and coordinate DoD efforts in countering small unmanned systems. (
media.defense.gov)
As of December 18, 2025, the development of the C-UAS marketplace is underway, with no specific completion date announced.
The establishment of JIATF 401 and the ongoing development of the C-UAS marketplace indicate progress toward the promised centralized mechanism. However, the marketplace has not yet been fully deployed, and interagency and law enforcement partners have not yet gained access to the centralized data, feedback, and procurement options.
The sources used are official Department of Defense releases and memorandums, which are reliable and authoritative.
Given the current status, the claim is in progress, with no specific completion date provided.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 04:15 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) is developing a centralized counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) marketplace to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options.
The initiative is led by the Joint Counter-Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems Office (JCO), established in November 2019 to unify the DoD's approach to countering small UAS threats. (
media.defense.gov)
As of December 2025, the JCO continues to coordinate efforts across the DoD to develop and field counter-UAS technologies, but specific details about the marketplace's deployment are not publicly available.
The DoD's strategy for countering unmanned systems, released in December 2024, emphasizes the need for a unified approach to address the proliferation of unmanned systems, indicating ongoing efforts in this area. (
media.defense.gov)
The sources used are official DoD publications, which are generally reliable for information on defense initiatives.
Given the lack of specific public milestones regarding the marketplace's development, the claim is currently in progress.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 03:08 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) has initiated the development of a counter-unmanned aerial system (UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The Joint Interagency Task Force 401, established by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, is leading this effort. The task force aims to integrate expertise from multiple government agencies to counter UAS threats and restore control of the skies. (
defense.gov)
As of December 18, 2025, the task force has been formed, but specific details regarding the marketplace's development timeline and current operational status are not publicly available. The announcement indicates that the marketplace is a cornerstone of the effort, suggesting that its development is a key priority.
Given the recent formation of the task force and the lack of detailed public information, it is reasonable to conclude that the marketplace is still in the development phase. No concrete milestones or completion dates have been provided.
The sources used, including official DoD releases and statements from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, are considered reliable for information on DoD initiatives.
Due to the absence of specific completion dates or further updates, a follow-up on this topic in six months (June 2026) is recommended to assess progress.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 02:44 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) is developing a centralized counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) marketplace to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options.
The initiative is part of a broader strategy to counter the increasing threat of unmanned systems, as outlined in the DoD's classified Strategy for Countering Unmanned Systems signed by Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III on December 2, 2025. (
defense.gov)
While the specific timeline for the C-UAS marketplace's deployment is not provided, the DoD's commitment to delivering adaptable counter-UAS solutions more quickly and at scale indicates ongoing progress. (
defense.gov)
The DoD has established the Joint Counter-Small UAS Office and the Replicator 2 initiative to accelerate the development and fielding of counter-UAS capabilities, suggesting active efforts toward this goal. (
defense.gov)
The sources used are official DoD publications and statements, which are generally reliable for information on defense initiatives.
Given the lack of specific completion dates, the development of the C-UAS marketplace is currently in progress.
Update · Dec 22, 2025, 02:38 AMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense has initiated the development of a centralized counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) marketplace. This platform aims to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to test data, operational feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-drone technologies.
As of December 2025, the marketplace is under development, with no specific launch date announced. The initiative is led by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), which includes over 180 experts from agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), and the Department of Defense (DoD). (
gallery.modernengineeringmarvels.com)
The marketplace is designed to centralize performance data and assist agencies in selecting systems suitable for their specific environments, thereby reducing risks to aircraft, communications, and public safety networks. This effort addresses challenges like inconsistent testing standards and reliability issues that have previously hindered the adoption of counter-UAS systems across federal agencies. (
military.com)
While the exact timeline for the marketplace's deployment remains unspecified, the initiative reflects a significant commitment to enhancing the U.S. government's counter-drone capabilities. The platform is expected to streamline the procurement process and improve the integration of counter-UAS technologies across various agencies. (
defenseone.com)
The sources used in this report include official statements from the U.S. Department of Defense and reputable news outlets such as Military.com and Defense One. These sources are considered reliable for reporting on defense and security matters.
Given the current status of the marketplace's development, it is reasonable to anticipate further updates in the coming months. A follow-up on this topic is recommended in six months, around June 2026, to assess progress and any new developments.
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 08:44 AMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense has initiated the development of a centralized counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) marketplace. This platform aims to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to Department of War (DOW) test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-UAS technologies.
As of December 18, 2025, the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) is leading this initiative. The task force comprises over 180 experts from various federal agencies, including the Department of Homeland Security, FBI, FAA, and Department of Defense components. Their collective effort focuses on expediting the testing, fielding, and integration of counter-small UAS capabilities over a 36-month period. (
jbsa.mil)
The marketplace is designed to serve as both a technical library and a practical guide for agencies lacking their own testing infrastructure. It aims to centralize performance data and assist agencies in selecting systems that are suitable for their specific environments, thereby mitigating risks to aircraft, communications, and public safety networks. (
military.com)
While the exact launch date of the marketplace has not been publicly announced, the initiative is part of a broader three-year effort to deliver counter-small UAS capabilities to warfighters and enhance homeland security. The first summit of JIATF 401 was held on November 25, 2025, in Alexandria, Virginia, marking the commencement of this collaborative endeavor. (
jbsa.mil)
The sources utilized in this report include official statements from the U.S. Department of Defense and reputable news outlets such as Military.com and UAS Vision. These sources are considered reliable for providing accurate and up-to-date information on defense initiatives.
Given the ongoing nature of this development and the absence of a specified completion date, the current status of the claim is "in progress."
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 07:34 AMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense announced the development of a counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) marketplace aimed at centralizing access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The initiative is led by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), which includes over 180 experts from agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and various Department of Defense (DoD) components. (
gallery.modernengineeringmarvels.com)
As of December 18, 2025, the marketplace is in the development phase, with no specific launch date announced. The platform is designed to provide authoritative data on the performance of various counter-UAS systems, enabling users to select tools tailored to their operational environments. (
uasvision.com)
The marketplace aims to address challenges such as inconsistent testing standards and reliability issues that have previously hindered the adoption of counter-UAS technologies across federal agencies. (
military.com)
The sources used in this report include official statements from the U.S. Department of Defense and reputable news outlets, which are considered reliable for reporting on defense initiatives.
Given the current stage of development and the absence of a confirmed launch date, the project is considered to be in progress.
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 06:49 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) has initiated the development of a counter-unmanned aerial systems (UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The establishment of Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401) in August 2025 signifies a concerted effort to integrate resources and expertise across agencies to address UAS threats. (
media.defense.gov)
While the formation of JIATF 401 indicates progress, specific details regarding the counter-UAS marketplace's development timeline and current operational status are not publicly disclosed.
The DoD's Strategy for Countering Unmanned Systems, signed in December 2024, outlines a comprehensive approach to countering adversary UAS, emphasizing the need for centralized mechanisms like the proposed marketplace. (
media.defense.gov)
Given the classified nature of the strategy and ongoing developments, the exact completion date for the counter-UAS marketplace remains unspecified. (
media.defense.gov)
The sources utilized, including official DoD releases and fact sheets, are authoritative and reliable, providing accurate and up-to-date information on the DoD's initiatives.
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 05:41 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) announced the development of a counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The initiative aims to integrate skills across agencies to create a layered counter-drone defense system.
As of December 18, 2025, the marketplace is in the development phase, with no public evidence indicating its completion or deployment.
The projected completion date for the marketplace has not been specified, and no concrete milestones have been publicly disclosed.
The information is sourced from the official DoD announcement, which is considered reliable.
Given the lack of specific completion dates and milestones, the project is currently in progress.
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 04:52 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) has initiated the development of a counter-Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
As of December 18, 2025, the DoD has established a Joint Interagency Task Force to integrate skills and create a layered counter-drone defense. This task force is a collaborative effort aimed at enhancing the capabilities of various agencies in countering UAS threats.
The task force's formation and its focus on counter-drone defense indicate progress toward the development of the counter-UAS marketplace. However, specific details regarding the marketplace's deployment and the extent of access provided to interagency and law enforcement partners are not explicitly outlined in the available sources.
The available information does not specify concrete milestones or a projected completion date for the counter-UAS marketplace. The task force's ongoing activities suggest that development is in progress, but a definitive timeline for the marketplace's full deployment remains unclear.
The sources used, including official DoD releases and reports, are considered reliable for information on defense initiatives. However, the lack of detailed timelines and specific milestones in the available information indicates that the development of the counter-UAS marketplace is still underway.
Given the current information, the claim is in progress, with the task force's formation representing a significant step toward the establishment of the counter-UAS marketplace.
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 04:11 AMin_progress
The Department of Defense (DoD) has initiated the development of a counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) marketplace to centralize access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
As of December 18, 2025, the DoD has established a Joint Interagency Task Force to integrate skills and create a layered counter-drone defense.
The article does not specify the current status of the counter-UAS marketplace, such as whether it is in development, completed, or operational. No concrete milestones or dates are provided regarding its progress.
The article's reliability is high, as it is published on the official U.S. Department of Defense website.
Given the lack of detailed information on the marketplace's development and deployment, the claim is currently in progress.
Update · Dec 21, 2025, 02:41 AMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense announced the development of a counter-Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) marketplace aimed at centralizing access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The initiative is led by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), established to expedite the testing, fielding, and integration of counter-small UAS capabilities over a 36-month period. (
ausa.org)
As of December 18, 2025, the marketplace is in the development phase, with no specific launch date announced. The Pentagon has not disclosed when the marketplace will go live or which systems will be available first. (
military.com)
The marketplace aims to serve as both a technical library and a practical guide for agencies lacking their own testing infrastructure, reflecting years of reviews and exercises that identified uneven standards across agencies using similar tools to protect high-risk sites. (
military.com)
The reliability of the sources used is high, as they include official Department of Defense communications and reputable news outlets.
Given the current development status and lack of a specific launch date, the project is considered to be in progress.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 11:34 PMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) marketplace is currently being developed to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with centralized access to data, operational feedback, and procurement options. This initiative aims to streamline and enhance collaborative approaches in countering UAS threats, as highlighted in a recent Department of Defense article.
Evidence of progress includes the acknowledgment by the Joint Interagency Task Force of a dedicated effort towards the establishment of this marketplace. While the article mentions the integration of various skills and collaboration amongst agencies, specific milestones for the marketplace's operational launch were not provided, indicating ongoing development.
As of now, it is unclear if the marketplace has been fully deployed. The article hints at a foundational effort but does not confirm that the marketplace is already operational or accessible to the intended partners.
No specific dates were mentioned regarding the expected timeline for completion; however, further updates could clarify the stages of development. Given the claim's context, the absence of definitive operational dates suggests that the marketplace remains a work in progress at this time.
The sources used for this report include the Department of Defense article, which directly addresses the development efforts and objectives related to the counter-UAS marketplace. The credibility of this source is high due to its official nature and the involved agency's authority.
Due to the ongoing status of the project, a follow-up should take place in six months to evaluate any new developments or updates regarding the marketplace's deployment and its accessibility to partners.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 10:37 PMin_progress
The Department of War's Joint Interagency Task Force-401 (JIATF-401) is developing a centralized counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) marketplace to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to Department of War (DOW) test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options. (
war.gov)
As of December 18, 2025, JIATF-401 has been operational for over three months, successfully integrating across the department and within the interagency to deploy counter-drone capabilities. (
army.mil)
The C-UAS marketplace is a key component of this effort, aiming to centralize access to critical resources for law enforcement agencies. (
war.gov)
While the marketplace is under development, specific details regarding its launch date and the range of available resources are not yet publicly disclosed. (
military.com)
The information is sourced from official Department of War communications and reputable news outlets, ensuring a high level of reliability.
Given the ongoing development and lack of a specified completion date, the project is currently in progress.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 09:32 PMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense announced the development of a counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) marketplace aimed at centralizing access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The initiative is led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), established to expedite the testing, fielding, and integration of counter-small UAS capabilities over a 36-month period. The task force comprises over 180 experts from agencies including the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), FBI, FAA, and various Department of Defense components. (
gallery.modernengineeringmarvels.com)
As of December 2025, the marketplace is in the early stages of development, with no specific launch date announced. The Pentagon has not disclosed when the marketplace will go live or which systems will be featured first. (
military.com)
The marketplace aims to address challenges such as inconsistent testing standards and reliability issues that have previously hindered the adoption of counter-UAS systems across federal agencies. By centralizing performance data and providing vetted procurement options, the initiative seeks to streamline the acquisition process and enhance operational effectiveness. (
military.com)
The reliability of the sources used is high, as they include official statements from the U.S. Department of Defense and reputable news outlets like Military.com.
Given the current stage of development and the absence of a projected completion date, the claim is considered in progress.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 08:36 PMin_progress
The Department of War's Joint Interagency Task Force-401 (JIATF-401) is developing a centralized counter-unmanned aerial system (UAS) marketplace. This platform aims to provide interagency and law enforcement partners with access to Department of War (DOW) test data, operational user feedback, and validated procurement options for counter-UAS technologies. (
war.gov)
As of December 18, 2025, JIATF-401 has been operational for over 100 days, focusing on consolidating resources to deliver affordable counter-drone capabilities. Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, director of JIATF-401, emphasized the task force's mission to rapidly integrate across departments and within the interagency to deploy counter-drone capabilities. (
army.mil)
The marketplace is intended to serve as both a technical library and a practical guide for agencies lacking their own testing infrastructure. It aims to centralize performance data and assist agencies in selecting systems suitable for their specific environments, thereby reducing risks and accelerating fielding timelines. (
military.com)
While the marketplace has been announced and is under development, a specific launch date has not been publicly disclosed. The task force is planning a counter-UAS summit to discuss policy, science and technology, operations, and intelligence collection related to national counter-UAS efforts. (
nextgov.com)
The sources used in this report include official Department of War communications and reputable news outlets, which are generally reliable for reporting on defense and security matters.
Given the current stage of development and the absence of a confirmed launch date, the counter-UAS marketplace is considered to be in progress.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 07:30 PMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense announced the development of a counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) marketplace aimed at centralizing access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The initiative is led by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), established to expedite the testing, fielding, and integration of counter-small UAS capabilities over a 36-month period. The task force comprises over 180 experts from agencies including the Department of Homeland Security, FBI, FAA, and various Department of Defense components. (
gallery.modernengineeringmarvels.com)
As of December 18, 2025, the marketplace is in the development phase, with no specific launch date announced. The platform is intended to serve as both a technical library and a practical guide for agencies lacking their own testing infrastructure, aiming to streamline the procurement of counter-drone technology. (
military.com)
The marketplace will feature vetted performance data and safe-to-use options for environments where collateral damage is unacceptable, including non-kinetic effectors and low-collateral kinetic interceptors suitable for use around critical infrastructure. (
gallery.modernengineeringmarvels.com)
The reliability of the sources used is high, as they include official Department of Defense communications and reputable news outlets.
Given the current development stage and the absence of a specific launch date, the project is considered to be in progress.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 07:15 PMin_progress
The Department of Defense announced the development of a counter-unmanned aircraft system (C-UAS) marketplace aimed at centralizing access to test data, user feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
As of December 18, 2025, the marketplace is in the planning stages, with no specific launch date announced. The initiative is led by the Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401), which includes over 180 experts from agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security, FBI, FAA, and Department of Defense components. (
military.com)
The marketplace is intended to serve as both a technical library and a practical guide for agencies lacking their own testing infrastructure. It aims to provide a centralized hub where federal users can compare systems, access government testing data, and understand operational limitations before purchase or deployment. (
military.com)
While the marketplace is still under development, the U.S. Army has taken steps to accelerate the procurement of counter-drone technology. In November 2025, Fortem Technologies was selected as one of the first companies admitted to the Army's new Global Tactical Edge Acquisition Directorate (G-TEAD) Marketplace, streamlining the acquisition of their counter-UAS systems. (
businesswire.com)
The reliability of the sources used is high, as they include official Department of Defense announcements and reputable news outlets such as Military.com and Business Wire.
Given the current status of the marketplace's development, the claim is considered in progress.
Update · Dec 20, 2025, 08:32 AMin_progress
The claim states that a counter-UAS marketplace is being developed to centralize access to data, feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The U.S. Army has initiated the creation of a UAS and counter-UAS marketplace, aiming to provide a centralized platform for agencies to access performance data and procure counter-drone equipment. (
breakingdefense.com)
As of December 2025, the marketplace is in the development phase, with no specific launch date announced. The Pentagon has not disclosed when the marketplace will go live or which systems will be available first. (
military.com)
The Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF-401) is leading this initiative, with Brig. Gen. Matt Ross serving as the director. The task force aims to accelerate the integration of counter-UAS capabilities across various agencies. (
breakingdefense.com)
The reliability of the sources used is high, as they include official statements from the U.S. Department of Defense and reputable news outlets such as Military.com and Breaking Defense.
Given the current development stage and lack of a specific launch date, the project is considered to be in progress.
Update · Dec 19, 2025, 07:21 AMin_progress
The U.S. Department of Defense announced the development of a counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) marketplace aimed at centralizing access to test data, operational feedback, and procurement options for interagency and law enforcement partners.
The initiative is led by Joint Interagency Task Force 401 (JIATF 401), established to expedite the testing, fielding, and integration of counter-small UAS capabilities over a 36-month period. The task force includes over 180 experts from agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), and Department of Defense (DoD) components. (
gallery.modernengineeringmarvels.com)
As of December 2025, the marketplace is in the development phase, with no specific launch date announced. The Pentagon has not disclosed when the marketplace will go live or which systems will be featured first. (
military.com)
The marketplace aims to address challenges such as inconsistent testing standards and reliability issues that have previously hindered the adoption of counter-UAS systems across federal agencies. By centralizing performance data and providing vetted procurement options, the initiative seeks to streamline the acquisition process and enhance operational effectiveness. (
military.com)
The reliability of the sources used is high, as they include official statements from the U.S. Department of Defense and reputable news outlets.
Given the current development stage and lack of a specific completion date, the project is considered to be in progress.
Original article · Dec 18, 2025