Summary and Key Points: The Army’s future M1E3 Abrams is being shaped by a battlefield where drones, top-down anti-armor weapons, and dispersed ambush teams punish slow, predictable armor.
-The goal is a lighter, roughly 60-ton tank that moves faster and deploys more easily—without giving up Abrams-level survivability.

M1E3 Tank at the Detroit Auto Show. Image Credit: 19FortyFive.

M1E3 Tank at the Detroit Auto Show. Image Credit: 19FortyFive.

M1E3 Tank at the Detroit Auto Show. Image Credit: 19FortyFive.
-That means new sensors, stronger active protection with better overhead coverage, and built-in counter-drone tools ranging from interceptors and APS effects to electronic warfare and AI-assisted targeting.
-A diesel-electric hybrid concept could add silent mobility and more onboard power for sensors and computing, while manned-unmanned teaming could extend reconnaissance, resupply, and strike options.
-The goal seems simple: survive and fight in the drone age.
M1E3 Abrams Is Coming: How the Army Plans to Build a Drone-Proof Tank
The U.S. Army’s future M1E3 tank will need to address a bevy of new threats. The 60-ton tank will have to deal with drone attacks from the air, top-down anti-tank guided missiles, hit-and-run ambushes from dispersed groups of armed soldiers, and long-range enemy missiles and tank rounds, among other dangers.
To counter these threats, the platform will require new sensors and countermeasures. Several key areas of focus could include on-board electrical power; weight and mobility; vulnerability to anti-armor weapons; obstacles to deployability; and measures to counter the drone threat.
Abrams Upgrades
The Abrams tank is an invaluable armored asset that has achieved numerous historic battlefield successes. It first showed its power when it dominated Iraqi T-72s during the Gulf War. The tank wields a massive psychological deterrent effect. In general, heavy tanks are a key platform for taking and holding enemy territory, as was again demonstrated in Ukraine.
The Abrams has also shown its versatility. Its auxiliary power units (APUs) are designed to increase on-board power to support sensing, computing, and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR). Add-on armor kits improve survivability, and the Abrams can now fire an advanced multi-purpose 120-mm round able to combine multiple blast effects into a single munition.
For these and many other reasons, the Abrams tank is likely here to stay for many years. Its growing ability to network with unmanned systems and improve survivability with top-down protections, drone launching, and AI-enabled sensing, targeting and computing, is especially significant. Tanks are often distinguished by the range and fidelity of their thermal sights, which and the Abrams’ allowed them to target Iraqi tanks before they were ever detected themselves
The later M1A2 SEP v3 was engineered with third-generation forward-looking infrared targeting technology, which brought breakthrough range and resolution to the platform.
The Abrams, in short, has been continually updated over the course of many years to address deficits, new liabilities, and emerging technical challenges. The M1E3’s development no doubt integrates the latest lessons learned from battlefields such as that in Ukraine.

At the Detroit Auto Show, 19FortyFive visited the new M1E3 tank. Image Credit: 19FortyFive.com.

M1E3 from the Detroit Auto Show. Taken by 19FortyFive.com on 1/17/2026.
The upcoming platform is expected to be much faster—it is lighter, at 60 tons—and therefore better suited for expeditionary operations. A smaller, lighter, faster tank could maneuver through urban areas, transit over bridges existing Abrams cannot handle, and pass through narrowly configured passageways. Ideally, the M1E3’s lighter weight can be achieved without comprising the classic survivability of the Abrams tanks—perhaps using lightweight composite armor materials or a new generation of active protection systems (APSs).
C-UAS on Tanks
Speed itself is a survivability-enhancing characteristic, and it’s likely the M1E3 is engineered with advanced, hemispheric APS better positioned to counter drone attacks and top-down anti-armor strikes. Counter-unmanned aerial system (C-UAS) capabilities must be a leading priority while designing the M1E3—tanks have been decimated in Ukraine by drones able to loiter then attack from the air. C-UAS technologies under consideration likely include kinetic interceptor missiles, APS-fired rounds to stop incoming munitions, and possibly lasers designed to incinerate or disable drones.
It is nearly certain that the M1E3 also will operate with new generations of electronic warfare. Advanced systems can now help deconflict the spectrum, identify enemy signatures and radio frequency signals, and jam, disable, or even take over attacking drones. High-powered microwave weapons are also emerging as a key area of counter-drone research. It would not be surprising to learn that the M1E3 operates with AI-enabled C-UAS and threat-oriented computing able to find, verify, and validate targets, then instantly matches the data with a countermeasure or effector. During the recent unveiling of the tank in Detroit, Army Chief of Staff General Randy George said AI figures prominently in the M1E3.
Hybrid Electric Tank
By operating with a diesel-electric hybrid engine, the M1E3 will not only be more fuel-efficient and silent, but it also will benefit from added on-board electrical power generated by the diesel-electric engine. This will bring added power to support electronics, sensors, targeting, and AI-enabled computing without needing to add APUs.
Manned-Unmanned Teaming
Perhaps the most significant upgrade for the M1E3 will be its ability to operate with robotic unmanned platforms and drones able to deliver ammunition, conduct highly critical reconnaissance and ISR in hostile areas, and even launch attacks when directed by a human to do so. This would greatly improve survivability and could enable the M1E3 to operate as an extremely lethal, forward-operating, multi-domain command and control platform.
About the Author: Kris Osborn
Kris Osborn is the President of Warrior Maven – Center for Military Modernization. Osborn previously served at the Pentagon as a highly qualified expert in the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army—Acquisition, Logistics & Technology. Osborn has also worked as an anchor and on-air military specialist at national TV networks. He has appeared as a guest military expert on Fox News, MSNBC, The Military Channel, and The HistoryChannel. He also has a Master’s Degree in Comparative Literature from Columbia.