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Drone crashes and severed fingers at a $13 billion Silicon Valley military startup
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Drone crashes and severed fingers at a $13 billion Silicon Valley military startup

ARY News · Jun 5, 2026, 2:54 PM

Key takeaways

  • Add ARY News on Google AAResize NEW YORK: A year ago, Ryan Tseng, the head of U.S. defense tech startup Shield AI, announced his company had turned a new page.
  • Get a look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets with the Morning Bid U.S.
  • Shield AI acquired the V-BAT, a vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) unmanned aircraft designed for military uses, when it bought Martin UAV in 2021.

Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.

Add ARY News on Google AAResize NEW YORK: A year ago, Ryan Tseng, the head of U.S. defense tech startup Shield AI, announced his company had turned a new page. After a drone crash incident that partially severed a U.S. Navy official’s fingers during a test of its V-BAT drone, Shield AI had addressed safety concerns with new landing gear and warning stickers near the propeller. “(The) aircraft is, tip to tail, just a radically better airplane,” Tseng told Forbes last year.

Get a look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets with the Morning Bid U.S. Now it’s happened again.

A Romanian Navy official’s hand was caught in a V-BAT propeller on May 12 during a Shield AI ​training exercise on a boat off the Texas coast – severing two of her fingers and fracturing a third, a spokesperson for Romania’s Ministry of National Defence told Reuters.

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