San Diego-based Shield AI unveiled the X-BAT, an autonomous, runway-independent VTOL fighter designed to counter China’s strategy of striking U.S. airpower on the ground. The AI-piloted jet, powered by the company’s Hivemind autonomy, is built to operate without GPS or constant comms, take off vertically, reach 50,000 feet, and fly more than 2,000 nautical miles. The compact airframe is intended to launch from ships or austere island sites, with three airframes fitting in the deck space of one legacy fighter, and to remain “affordable and attritable” relative to fifth-generation jets. Shield AI targets combat readiness by 2029 and says pricing aligns with the Air Force’s Collaborative Combat Aircraft initiative, pitching a “distributed airpower” model where unmanned systems outnumber manned platforms. The company is in discussions with the Air Force, Navy and allied partners. The concept aims to erode the PLA’s anti-access/area-denial advantage built on long-range missiles like the DF-21D and DF-26 by restoring flexibility and complicating targeting. Lethal decisions would retain a human-in-the-loop, according to the company.
Related articles:
– Anti-access/area denial
– DF-21
– DF-26
– Kratos XQ-58 Valkyrie





























