U.S. Air Force awards CCA production contracts to General Atomics and Anduril

The U.S. Air Force has moved its Collaborative Combat Aircraft program into production with contracts for General Atomics and Anduril. The FQ-42A and FQ-44A now shift from prototype status to the first operational build phase, ending the contest for Increment 1 hardware.

The service is buying semi-autonomous wingmen to extend range, survivability, and sensor reach for crewed fighters, while preserving a dual-vendor structure that keeps competition alive and industrial risk split. The initial target is more than 150 combat-capable aircraft by the end of the decade, with the wider fleet set to scale toward roughly 1,000 over time.

The award puts America’s CCA concept on a production clock, not a demonstration timeline.