Navy projects 30-plus unmanned vessels in Indo-Pacific

Summary

Navy officials said the Indo-Pacific could have more than 30 medium unmanned surface vessels by 2030.

Why this matters

The projection outlines how the Navy expects to expand unmanned operations in the Indo-Pacific, a region central to U.S. military planning. It also indicates how future force structure and maintenance plans may shift as unmanned systems take a larger role.

The U.S. Navy said its fleet of medium-sized unmanned surface vessels in the Indo-Pacific could grow from about four now to more than 30 by 2030.

Speaking Monday at the Sea-Air-Space Conference, Capt. Garrett Miller, commodore of Surface Development Group 1, said that based on the Navy’s 2045 force vision, “people can expect to see over 30 medium USVs in the Indo-Pacific.”

Miller said the projection applied only to the Indo-Pacific. “The service is ‘figuring out’ what those numbers will look like elsewhere,” he said during a panel on uncrewed maritime systems.

The four medium unmanned surface vessels previously deployed to the Indo-Pacific for five months in 2024 were Sea Hunter, Sea Hawk, Mariner, and Ranger. All four are still being used to develop the Navy’s unmanned surface vessel program.

At the Surface Navy Association’s 38th National Symposium in early 2026, Miller announced the creation of three unmanned surface vessel divisions and said Sea Hawk and Sea Hunter were scheduled to deploy this year.

He said the Navy was pursuing an approach that would let it expand the fleet faster than with other types of vessels.

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