An uncomfortable reality is quickly reshaping modern defense doctrine: Today’s asymmetric warfare is no longer determined by standing army size but by economics.
State and non-state actors have learned to exploit the greatest asset of advanced militaries – their budgets – and turn it into a weakness by strangling them through wars of economic attrition rather than seeking strategic victories on the battlefield.
No domain exposes the cost-exchange imbalance more prevalently than anti-drone defense.
How ‘successful’ interceptions can weaken defenses
Until recently, detecting, tracking, and intercepting an enemy drone was written off as a strategic success. A downed drone meant mission accomplished. That is no longer the case because somewhere off-radar, hundreds, even thousands, of cheap replacement drones are already being assembled. Meanwhile, logistics teams scramble to resupply missile defense systems.
With each disposable drone launched, even the most advanced and well-funded militaries are being choked by financial pressure. Success can no longer be measured by whether an interception occurs. It must be measured by the cost-effectiveness of the interception, its repeatability, and ultimately, its sustainability.
The problem is not that modern counter-UAS arrays fail to stop drones. In most cases, they perform exactly as they were designed. The problem is that defenses are routinely sacrificing the most expensive parts of their systems in order to take down the cheapest of targets. That means that even mission success can leave defenses weaker, depleting costly systems at high rates.
Real-world cost-exchange in practice
In September 2025, when Russian-made drones penetrated Polish airspace, NATO forces were able to down some of the drones using American-made AIM-9 and AIM-120 missiles, at a price of roughly $1 million each. The drones themselves, in this case, were unarmed and likely deviated from their intended courses. Each drone is estimated to have cost up to $20,000, according to the Defense Express Media & Consulting Company. Even before accounting for fuel and maintenance, the cost imbalance was stark.
In a more familiar combat theater, US warships intercepted dozens of Houthi-made drones over the Red Sea during the Israel-Hamas War. The Navy spent around $2.1 million on each advanced interceptor missile, while the Houthi drones targeted by those missiles are estimated to have cost no more than $2,000 each. According to Politico, one US Department of Defense official acknowledged the problem bluntly: "Even if we do shoot down their incoming drones, [it] is in their favor.”
For Israel, a country with finite interceptor stockpiles and continuous threat exposure from multiple fronts, sustainability becomes just as important as lethality.
A doctrine built for a different threat
For decades, air defenses were built on the assumption that aerial threats would be rare, high-value targets that could justify advanced interception capabilities. Drones have completely eroded this doctrine in a matter of years.
For most counter-Unmanned Aircraft System (C-UAS) defenses, the interceptor itself is the most complex and expensive component in the engagement, while the drones being intercepted are often built to be expendable. Each interception now becomes a trade: Neutralize the drone now, but risk a weaker defense afterwards. This is where the cost-effectiveness war is quietly being lost. Modern air defenses don’t fail because of technical shortcomings; they fail because they cannot sustain their own success.
Interestingly enough, modern militaries apply a core principle elsewhere: Preserve the platform, expend the effector. Aircraft return to base after deploying munitions; vessels port and set sail after launching cruise missiles, and small arms are reused for years after shooting thousands of rounds of ammunition. The expensive asset is protected, and the consumables are designed to be cheap and replaceable (a million-dollar missile begins to look trivial compared to the $100 million F-35). Now, modern drone defenses are beginning to incorporate this principle, often out of necessity rather than doctrinal restructuring.
Preserve the platform, expend the effector
Interceptor drones have quickly become a tool of choice for modern militaries. However, treating these platforms as single-use assets misunderstands their role.
Drones are quickly becoming sophisticated systems, incorporating AI, autonomous detection, and integrating into broader command-and-control technologies. Although one-way interceptor drones have seen operational success, the lack of scalability will only hinder future air defenses. The resourceful approach is to shift expendability away from the platform and onto the effector, and this is where net-based interceptions fundamentally change the economics of counter-drone defense.
Instead of destroying the target and your interceptor in the process, net-based interceptions reframe the engagement. Your cheap, expendable net becomes the consumable, and your expensive drone platform survives, reloads, and redeploys. The result is not just a lower cost per interception, but a more stable defense posture. Net technology also utilizes a non-explosive kinetic approach, unlocking both safe and effective interception capabilities with an enduring and scalable C-UAS doctrine.
Net-based interceptions will not replace high-end missile defense layers essential in mitigating ballistic or cruise missile threats. Nor should they. But they are emerging as a critical middle-layer correction to an unsustainable cost curve. As FPV drones increasingly penetrate countermeasures and ambush individual soldiers in the field, as demonstrated in Ukraine, nets have shifted from niche tools to necessary last lines of defense.
Counter-drone defense is no longer a question of whether a system can intercept a target – most can; the question is now becoming whether the system can keep intercepting without eroding its own ability to defend. In environments where drone threats are persistent rather than sporadic, endurance becomes as decisive as precision.
Winning the cost-exchange war requires more than just tactical success. The future of counter-drone defenses will not be defined by what they thwarted once, but what they can afford to continue thwarting.