Army conducts first-person-view lethal drone training

written by Robert Dougherty | March 30, 2026

A drone operated by an Australian Army soldier conducts low-level manoeuvres during the Modify and Operate Attack Drone (FPV) Course at Puckapunyal Military Area, Victoria. (image: SGT Nicole Dorrett)

Australian Defence Force personnel have operated first-person drones with simulated lethal payloads under new small uncrewed air system training targeted for integration across the Australian Army.

The comprehensive training continuum is reportedly designed to get soldiers ready to take the capability back to their home units and across the wider Australian Army. Soldiers operated UAS through first-person-view goggles at Puckapunyal Military Area field range in Victoria.

This content is available exclusively to Australian Aviation members.
Login
Become a Member
To continue reading the rest of this article, please login.

or

To unlock all Australian Aviation magazine content and again unlimited access to our daily news and features, become a member today!
A monthly membership is only $5.99 or save with our annual plans.
PRINT
$49.95 for 1 year Become a Member
See benefits
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
PRINT + DIGITAL
$99.95 for 1 year Become a Member
$179.95 for 2 years Become a Member
See benefits
  • Unlimited access to all Australian Aviation digital content
  • Access to the Australian Aviation app
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
  • Access to our Behind the Lens photo galleries and other exclusive content
  • Daily news updates via our email bulletin
DIGITAL
$5.99 Monthly Become a Member
$59.95 Annual Become a Member
See benefits
  • Unlimited access to all Australian Aviation digital content
  • Access to the Australian Aviation app
  • Australian Aviation quarterly print & digital magazines
  • Access to In Focus reports every month on our website
  • Access to our Behind the Lens photo galleries and other exclusive content
  • Daily news updates via our email bulletin

“This training today is part of a suite of training on small uncrewed air systems (SUAS) or drones,” according to Captain Andrew Dunn-Lobban, of Army’s Land Combat College, and senior instructor for the course.

“The first course we conducted was ‘Employ Multi-Role Drones’ where trainees are taught to employ stabilised drones predominantly as a reconnaissance platform, but also as a platform to drop munitions or for carrying other payloads,” Captain Dunn-Lobban said.

“The next course we conducted is ‘Modify and Operate Attack Drones (FPV)’ where trainees produce, modify and fly attack drones, getting them to the point where they can employ these in the field at range to strike targets.

 
 

“The instructors are almost all from 2RAR (2nd Battalion, the Royal Australian Regiment), which reflects that they have made some great strides with their drone capability. They recently came off Operation Kudu where they were directly mentored by Armed Forces of Ukraine drone specialists and we are leveraging that battlefield experience to give the best possible instruction to trainees.

“We will refine what works and does not work, and rapidly scale these courses across Army. For example, the trainees from 5/7RAR (5th/7th Battalion, the Royal Australian Regiment) will take this capability back to their unit, and within weeks, test this on a combined arms exercise.”

One of the trainees on the course, Corporal Samuel De Koning, said: “I was panelled on this course with no previous experience with flying drones either inside or outside Defence. For trainees, there is a massive learning curve, but now I am aware of the capability and the effects that SUAS can deliver.

“It is quite obvious from observing other conflicts going on around the world that drones are not just the future of warfare, it is present warfare and we need to adapt quickly.”

Want to see more stories from trusted news sources?
Make Australian Aviation a preferred news source on Google.
Click here to add Australian Aviation as a preferred news source.

You need to be a member to post comments. Become a member today!
Momentum Media Logo
Most Innovative Company
Copyright © 2007-2026 MOMENTUMMEDIA