It will protect Polish military bases and critical infrastructure.” An agreement worth millions was signed
“The Sentinel drone system, supported by AI, will become the new eye of the Polish army, protecting military bases and critical infrastructure,” said Szymon Kupaj, President of the Management Board of Farada Group, on the occasion of signing the contract with WITU.
The President of the Management Board of Farada Group, Szymon Kupaj, announced on the Linkedin platform that the company supported by JRH ASI has signed an agreement with the Military Institute of Armament Technology (WITU). As we read, a “Sentry drone system” worth millions of zlotys will be developed, which, supported by AI, will become the new eye of the Polish army, protecting military bases and critical infrastructure.
In turn, the JRH ASI profile emphasizes that tests will begin at the Autonomous Systems Center (OSA) of the Polish Army at the same time. This is where decisions are made about what equipment will be included in the Polish army. The completion of work on the order is scheduled for mid-fourth quarter of 2026. As explained, “the Sentry system is a platform integrating unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) with advanced data analytics.”
Sentinel drone system for the army. Farada Group and JRH ASI signed an agreement with WITU
“The system is intended to protect critical infrastructure, including military bases, in an almost completely autonomous manner. SENTRY, resistant to electronic warfare, is designed to work in conditions of severe communication disruptions. Full control over data transmission and encryption guarantees cybersecurity. The platform provides AI analysis of data thanks to algorithms that distinguish threats from false alarms in real time,” we read.
Farada offers the G1 road on its website. The company boasts that “it is an innovative unmanned system based on a hybrid airframe system with a pulling propeller and four multi-rotor power units that enable vertical take-off and landing.” Flight time is 1.5 hours; climb speed of three to four meters per second; and cruising speed between 85 and 90 km/h.
