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Draganfly Selected to Provide Draganfly Flex FPV Drones and Training to US Air Force Special Operations Command Units in Partnership with DelMar Aerospace

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Draganfly Inc. just scored a major win, landing a contract to supply their Flex FPV drones and specialized training to U.S. Air Force Special Operations Command (AFSOC) units, in tandem with DelMar Aerospace. Announced from Tampa on February 2, 2026, this deal underscores the accelerating integration of cutting-edge drone tech into elite military ops—think precision strikes, real-time ISR (intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance), and tactical overwatch that could make SOCOM teams even deadlier in denied environments. Draganfly’s Flex FPV lineup, known for its lightweight agility, low-latency video feeds, and modular payloads, isn’t just hobbyist gear; it’s battle-ready, with ruggedized designs that thrive in contested airspace.

For the 2A community, this isn’t peripheral drone chatter—it’s a frontline signal of how small, agile UAS are blurring lines between military might and civilian self-defense tools. Pro-2A innovators have long championed FPV drones as the eyes in the sky for ranchers spotting intruders, hunters scouting terrain, or armed citizens gaining situational awareness without exposing themselves. Draganfly’s military vetting elevates civilian access: as SOCOM refines these platforms, tech trickles down faster via commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) models, dodging red-tape-heavy procurement. We’ve seen it before with AR-15 platforms and suppressors—Uncle Sam adopts, prices drop, and suddenly every red-blooded American has game-changing gear at their fingertips.

The implications? Heightened regulatory scrutiny is inevitable, with anti-2A forces eyeing drone bans under public safety pretexts, much like bump-stock hysteria. But this AFSOC nod flips the script, validating FPV drones as essential for national security—and by extension, individual liberty. 2A patriots should stock up on Flex-compatible kits now, train like SOCOM (Draganfly’s programs are gold for that), and push back against FAA overreach. In an era of asymmetric threats, owning the skies isn’t just for spec ops anymore; it’s your Second Amendment right evolving with tech. Eyes up, America—drones are the new frontier.

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