9 July 2026
The successful launch of an air delivery drone, known as Aladdin, from a C-130J Hercules has demonstrated how emerging technologies can be rapidly integrated into Air Force capability.
Conducted during Exercise Jericho Dawn in Cultana, South Australia, the launch marked a milestone for Air Force innovation by moving a prototype capability beyond the laboratory and into a military operating environment.
As technology advances at an unprecedented pace, maintaining a competitive edge depends on Defence’s ability to quickly identify, test and field new capabilities. The successful integration of Aladdin represents a tangible step towards that objective.
Exercise Jericho Dawn aimed to speed up the transition of new technologies from concept to operational use. To achieve this, the exercise brought together Air Force, industry and academia to test a range of maturing systems in realistic field conditions.
Officer in Charge of Exercise Jericho Dawn Wing Commander Keirin Joyce said the exercise existed to challenge conventional approaches and rapidly explore solutions to emerging capability needs.
“Air Force, like any service, has gaps and opportunities that it needs to tackle every year and that’s Jericho’s job to identify those gaps, identify where there are opportunities and to go challenge them,” Wing Commander Joyce said.
The centrepiece of the activity was Aladdin.
'Aladdin brings a whole range of new capabilities to Defence and potentially into the civil sector for search and rescue, disaster relief, military resupply, tactical resupply and support to land elements.'
Launched from the back of a C-130J Hercules, Aladdin is a low-cost uncrewed aerial system. It is capable of delivering up to 35 kilograms of communication equipment, relief supplies and other critical payloads with pinpoint accuracy on land or at sea.
Stabilising mid-air and landing safely, Aladdin demonstrated its ability to deploy from a military platform and deliver supplies in austere environments.
Being no bigger than a wheelie bin, this capability has the potential to solve a growing operational challenge – delivering critical supplies across increasingly contested and logistically complex places.
Wing Commander Paul Hay, rapid capability development project manager for Aladdin, said the system created new options for commanders while reducing pressure on high-demand assets.
“Aladdin brings a whole range of new capabilities to Defence and potentially into the civil sector for search and rescue, disaster relief, military resupply, tactical resupply and support to land elements,” Wing Commander Hay said.
“It also enables us to autonomously land parts on a ship underway at sea.”
For Exercise Jericho Dawn, this outcome represented more than the successful launch of a drone. It demonstrated the increasingly important ability to integrate and operationalise innovation to ensure the future force adapts as quickly as the strategic environment demands.