After repeated delays and technical failures, Swiss military officials contemplate cancelling major drone procurement project with Israeli company Elbit.

"We have reached a point where the question arises as to whether the famous last straw has broken the camelâs back."
"These two milestones were not met either."
The Swiss militaryâs patience has officially hit a breaking point. In a stunning reversal of long-standing policy, the Department of Defence, Civil Protection and Sport (DDPS) is now actively contemplating the termination of its major drone procurement project with Israeli manufacturer Elbit. For years, officials maintained that cancellation was simply out of the questionâa non-starter in the complex world of international arms deals. That narrative has now shattered.
National Armaments Director Urs Loher delivered the bombshell announcement to Swiss public radio (SRF), declaring that the project has reached a critical juncture. "The famous last straw has broken the camelâs back," Loher asserted, signaling a dramatic shift in tone from the federal administration. This is no longer just about delays; it is a crisis of confidence. The admission marks a rare moment of public frustration for the Swiss procurement authorities, who typically operate with reserved discretion. By openly floating the option of abandonment, Bern is sending an unmistakable signal: the era of endless extensions is over, and the Swiss Armed Forces are no longer willing to be held hostage by underperformance.
At the heart of this procurement disaster lies a critical technological failure: the automatic landing system. This specific component, essential for the safe operation of the drones in Switzerland's complex alpine topography, has become the project's Achilles' heel. Elbit Systems has not just missed a deadline; they have struck out repeatedly, failing to meet three separate, critical milestones.
The chronology of failure is damning. The system was originally due for delivery in September. When that date passed without results, the DDPS granted an extension until January. That deadline also evaporated. In a final attempt to salvage the timeline, a "last chance" deadline was set for September 30. Once again, Elbit failed to deliver. "These two milestones were not met either," Loher stated bluntly. This pattern of non-delivery suggests deep-seated technical or logistical issues within the program. For a Swiss military that prides itself on precision and reliability, relying on a partner that cannot adhere to a thrice-extended schedule has become strategically untenable. The failure to deliver the landing system renders the entire drone fleet effectively grounded, turning a multi-million franc investment into expensive static displays.
Cancelling a defense contract of this magnitude is never a clean break; it is a declaration of legal war. Urs Loher is under no illusions about the chaos that will ensue if the plug is pulled. He explicitly warned that Elbit will "certainly come with counterclaims," setting the stage for a high-stakes international legal battle. The Swiss government is now weighing the cost of a non-functional drone fleet against the cost of a protracted courtroom saga.
The outcome of such a dispute remains alarmingly uncertain. While the DDPS has clear evidence of missed deadlines, international procurement contracts are notoriously complex, often filled with clauses that can drag arbitration out for years. Taxpayer money is now at significant risk. If Switzerland proceeds with cancellation, it faces not only the loss of the funds already sunk into the project but also the potential for massive legal fees and damages. The government is effectively trapped between a rock and a hard place: continue to wait for a system that may never work, or engage in a legal dispute that could freeze procurement funds for the foreseeable future. It is a high-risk gamble where the only guarantee is friction.
Beyond the legal and bureaucratic nightmare, the potential cancellation leaves a gaping hole in Switzerlandâs defense architecture. Modern warfare and border security are increasingly defined by aerial surveillance capabilities. The intention behind purchasing these drones was to modernize the Swiss Army's reconnaissance abilities, providing real-time data crucial for monitoring national borders and critical infrastructure. If this program is scrapped, the Swiss Armed Forces are back to square one.
This delay creates a dangerous capability gap. While neighboring nations rapidly advance their unmanned aerial systems, Switzerland risks falling behind due to procurement paralysis. The "last straw" Loher refers to is not just about a contract; it is about national security readiness. Abandoning the Elbit deal would necessitate a new tender process, likely adding years to the timeline before a viable alternative takes to the Swiss skies. As the DDPS deliberates its next move, the pressure is mounting to find a solution that ensures the Swiss military isn't left blind in an era where aerial supremacy is paramount.