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Anduril Unveils EagleEye, an AI Helmet Echoing Ukraine’s Battlefield Reality

Anduril Unveils EagleEye, an AI Helmet Echoing Ukraine’s Battlefield Reality

Anduril Industries, an American company, is developing a combat helmet that processes information, visualizes the battlefield, and assists real-time decision-making—technology that could complement Ukraine’s existing systems.

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At the AUSA 2025 defense expo in Washington, California-based defense contractor Anduril Industries unveiled EagleEye, an AI-powered mixed-reality helmet designed to reshape how soldiers perceive and process information during combat operations.

According to the company’s presentation, soldiers equipped a with high-resolution head-up display (HUD), spatial audio, wide-angle sensors, and an embedded AI processor, could be able to display friendly positions, real-time drone feeds, and algorithmic recommendations directly onto their visor.

The helmet is a wearable command interface—a system claimed to be built to turn frontline soldiers into connected nodes in a wider digital network.

According to Anduril, the first 100 prototypes will be delivered to selected US Army units in 2026.

Ukraine’s Special Forces have begun using advanced systems that follow this approach

Earlier this year, Ukrainian Special Operations Forces began fielding ENVG-B night vision systems, developed by US firm L3Harris.

These advanced goggles combine thermal imaging with augmented reality overlays, allowing operators to see in darkness, smoke, and complex terrain—while keeping weapon sights and navigation cues directly in their field of view.

Crucially, ENVG-B is designed for integration. It connects to other systems, including weapons and digital battle networks—similar to EagleEye, but with a more limited scope.

EnvG, EagleEye, and Delta show how battlefield systems are becoming connected

EagleEye operates as part of Anduril’s Lattice—a real-time sensor network and command system that processes and shares battlefield intelligence across connected units, according to Anduril Industries.

Ukraine already uses a domestically developed system with comparable functions: DELTA, a digital command-and-control platform developed in combat and deployed across the Armed Forces since 2022.

DELTA fuses data from drones, satellites, and reconnaissance teams into a single operational picture. It uses AI to detect threats, automate reporting, and streamline coordination between units.

In October 2025, NATO selected DELTA to control over 100 unmanned systems during its largest autonomous warfare exercise—demonstrating the system’s integration into allied defense frameworks.

Earlier at the same AUSA 2025 defense expo, Oshkosh Defense showcased the X-MAV—an autonomous, off-road launcher designed to carry four Tomahawk cruise missiles.

While current discussions between Washington and Kyiv focus on the potential transfer of Tomahawk missiles, platforms like the X-MAV could one day serve as the kind of mobile launcher Ukraine needs for deep, precise strikes.

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