Turkey’s 104 Kamikaze Sea Drone Program Takes Shape: Aselsan Tufan, STM Yaktu, and Havelsan Swarms Are Coming to the Navy

Turkey’s 104 Kamikaze Sea Drone Program Takes Shape: Aselsan Tufan, STM Yaktu, and Havelsan Swarms Are Coming to the Navy
Yazı Özetini Göster
Summary: The Presidency of Defense Industries (SSB) has initiated the procurement of a total of 104 kamikaze unmanned surface vehicles (USV) for the Turkish Navy with a program approved in February 2026. ASELSAN will produce 40 Tufan, STM will produce 32 Yaktu, and HAVELSAN will produce 32 platforms; the system will form 26 tactical units in quadruple swarms. Sea trials will start in June 2026, with the main delivery planned for 2027.

According to information reported by Defense Express (en.defence-ua.com), Turkey’s kamikaze USV program has officially gained a framework with the procurement of 104 units approved by SSB in February 2026 and allocated to three main domestic companies. The contract, divided into 40 vehicles for Aselsan, 32 for STM, and 32 for Havelsan, elevates the Turkish Navy’s surface unmanned strike capability to brigade level in a single move. The design philosophy of the system is based on the quadruple “swarm” concept; 104 vehicles mean 26 tactical swarms operating simultaneously.

AT A GLANCE
Total procurement: 104 kamikaze USVsDecision date: February 2026 (SSB)
ASELSAN: 40 TufanSTM: 32 Yaktu
HAVELSAN: 32 units (model not yet announced)Swarm doctrine: 4-vehicle tactical unit
Sea trials: June 2026Fleet integration: 2027

Background: From Albatros to Tufan and Yaktu

According to statements supported by SSB published by Anadolu Agency since 2023, Turkey’s first major breakthrough in the kamikaze USV field was the ALBATROS-S developed by Aselsan. In a series of tests conducted in the Black Sea in October 2023, the ALBATROS-S destroyed a target ship within a swarm of eight vehicles; marking the world’s first recorded joint swarm attack by a USV and UAV. The Tufan in the new program is a relatively large platform in this line: 8.5 meters long, with a maximum speed of approximately 90 km/h, a range of 370 km, and capable of carrying a Mk 82 class 250 kg equivalent warhead. The STM Yaktu, with its compact 5.8-meter hull, is positioned as a model suitable for faster mass production, lower radar signature, and sudden attack missions in narrow waters.

Visual of the unmanned surface vehicle swarm doctrine
USV Mariner — an unmanned surface vehicle reflecting the international context of the kamikaze USV swarm doctrine. Source: U.S. Navy / Wikimedia Commons (PD-USGov).

Details: Production Sharing of the Program

According to technical comparisons featured in Daily Sabah’s defense pages and analyses dedicated to the Turkish USV series by Interesting Engineering, the sharing among three firms directs the systems towards different mission profiles. Aselsan’s Tufan is designed for open sea ambush missions with a heavy strike role for large-tonnage submarines; STM Yaktu is tailored for short-range, fast, and low-cost operations in crowded bay/channel environments; while the Havelsan platform is being optimized for a different tactical concept that has not yet been shared with the public. The table below summarizes the comparative table.

ParameterASELSAN TufanSTM YaktuHAVELSAN
Order quantity403232
Length8.5 m5.8 m
Speed~90 km/hSimilar (compact)
Range~370 kmNear sea
Warhead~250 kg (equivalent to Mk 82)Not disclosed
Swarm size4 vehicles4 vehicles4 vehicles

NATO and Regional Context: The Age of USVs in the Black Sea and Eastern Mediterranean

As highlighted in Breaking Defense’s analyses of Baykar K2 and STM AI-guided kamikaze drones in recent months, swarm attacks with unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) have become a fundamental naval warfare doctrine in the Black Sea after 2022. While Ukraine’s Magura and Sea Baby type USVs have inflicted serious losses on Russian naval elements in Sevastopol, NATO’s eastern flank is eager to rapidly integrate this concept into its inventory. Turkey’s move with 104 platforms represents not only a national scale initiative but also signifies a new layer of attack awaiting tasks on the NATO Black Sea front. Within the framework of the Blue Homeland doctrine, fleet defense, EEZ protection, and security of port approach lines in the Eastern Mediterranean will also be allocated to these swarms.

What Does This Mean for Turkey?

This program is a concrete validation of the superiority that the Turkish defense industry has achieved in maritime unmanned systems worldwide. The domestic USV series, which started with ARIDA, ULAQ, and MARLIN; has now been enhanced with striking capacity through ASELSAN ALBATROS and now Tufan, along with STM Yaktu. The fact that three main domestic companies share the same program — a rarity in a sector dependent on foreign suppliers — proves the maturity of Turkey’s domestic production ecosystem. The independence achieved by KAAN in the 5th generation air dimension, SİPER in strategic air defense, and BAYKAR and TUSAŞ in the UAV segment is now crowned with the Aselsan-STM-Havelsan trio in surface unmanned platforms. The mass production of 104 platforms elevates Turkey to the position of the first country within the NATO alliance to possess an advanced USV swarm doctrine.

On a strategic level, the meaning is clear: Turkey is gaining the capability to deter enemy large surface elements in both the Black Sea and the Eastern Mediterranean in a balanced and cost-effective manner. The “strike from afar, retreat” understanding of the Blue Homeland doctrine is being realized with 104 AI-supported platforms. Additionally, this program serves as a significant reference for Turkish firms’ export lines: parties such as Gulf countries, Pakistan, and Indonesia have entered the official bidding process for Tufan and Yaktu.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main difference between Tufan and Yaktu? Tufan is an 8.5-meter long heavy strike platform designed for open sea missions. Yaktu, on the other hand, is more compact at 5.8 meters; optimized for narrow waters and rapid operations.

What does swarm doctrine mean? Units of four vehicles operate together, share autonomous tasks, continue the swarm mission even if some are downed, and approach targets from multiple fronts simultaneously.

Why is the name of the Havelsan model secret? Havelsan’s USV has different architecture for its front equipment and mission systems; the company seems to have postponed the official announcement until after the 2026 IDEF or SAHA Expo.

Which classes of ships will these USVs be derived from? The frigates of the İstif class (TCG İstanbul), MILGEM corvettes, and LST class landing ships are considered the main materiel platforms; dock-based operations are also included in the scenarios.

Is the program export-oriented? The first phase is for the Turkish Navy; however, contracts maintain the flexibility to establish new production lines in case of foreign demand for ASELSAN and STM.

Conclusion

The Turkish kamikaze USV program, consisting of 104 platforms, is not just a procurement decision but a doctrinal turning point. The events in the Black Sea have proven that swarm unmanned surface attacks are the asymmetric weapon of 21st-century naval warfare. Turkey is strengthening both its national defense and export line by bringing this concept to the field under a single supply contract with three domestic companies.

Sources

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Posts