According to a recent LinkedIn post from Anduril Industries, the company participated in the Ivy Sting 5 exercise with the U.S. Army’s 4th Infantry Division and industry partners, focusing on its Next Generation Command and Control (NGC2) data mesh. The post indicates the network’s scale was tripled, with real-time sharing of sensor, vehicle, and command data.
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The post highlights that the 4th Infantry Division deployed and used Anduril’s Lattice system across increasingly complex, larger-scale workflows. According to the description, Lattice appeared to function in communications-denied environments and to support cross-service workflows aimed at streamlining joint operations.
For investors, the exercise participation suggests growing traction of Anduril’s C2 and networking capabilities within front-line Army units. Demonstrated performance in contested settings could strengthen the company’s position in future Pentagon modernization and Joint All-Domain Command and Control procurement cycles.
If such capabilities are validated and scaled, Anduril may be better positioned to compete for multi-year software and systems-integration contracts. This could support recurring revenue opportunities and deepen its strategic relevance in the U.S. defense technology ecosystem, particularly in data fusion and autonomous systems integration.

