Updated
Updated · Israel Hayom · May 31
US Marines Test MADIS 30mm Drone Defense in Philippines as $11,250 Shells Undercut $430,000 Missiles
Updated
Updated · Israel Hayom · May 31

US Marines Test MADIS 30mm Drone Defense in Philippines as $11,250 Shells Undercut $430,000 Missiles

7 articles · Updated · Israel Hayom · May 31
  • US Marines used MADIS in a Philippines drill to engage fixed-wing drones with 30mm cannon rounds, machine guns and Stinger missiles, rehearsing a tiered response that saves missiles for last.
  • About $11,250 in five proximity-fuzed 30mm shells can down one drone, compared with roughly $430,000 for a Stinger, $100,000 for a Coyote interceptor and $1 million for an AIM-120.
  • The two-vehicle MADIS setup pairs radar, electronic warfare and jamming with cannons and missiles so commanders can choose the cheapest effective option if jamming fails.
  • Hundreds of thousands of precision-fuzed shells may be needed to make that approach viable at scale, but US industry has limited production lines for the electromechanical fuses.
  • Northrop Grumman and L3Harris are expanding capacity as the Pentagon pushes cheaper counter-drone defenses for theaters such as the South China Sea and the Middle East.
As adversaries deploy faster jet-powered drones, are new U.S. cannon defenses already becoming obsolete?
How will new U.S. anti-drone systems in the Philippines reshape the South China Sea's military balance?
Is a 'cheaper bullet' a winning strategy against an enemy's endless supply of mass-produced drones?

2025: MADIS Transforms Marine Corps Air Defense—Operational Debut, Strategic Impact, and the End of Unsustainable Drone Defense Costs

Overview

The Marine Air Defense Integrated System (MADIS) marked a major milestone in early 2025, making its operational debut during live-fire exercises in Hawaii and its first deployment at the international Balikatan 2025 exercise. Fielded in December 2024, MADIS represents a crucial step in the Marine Corps' modernization efforts. Its first live-fire event took place in January 2025 at the Pohakuloa Training Area on Hawaii’s Big Island, marking the first time the system was fired on a Hawaiian island. This training allowed commanders and experts to discuss MADIS’s operational value and its ongoing fielding process.

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