Starsage system tests during joint exercises
In August 2025, the U.S. Air Force and Navy conducted groundbreaking tests of the Starsage tactical control system developed by Raft AI. During the large—scale joint exercises, the system was integrated into real fighters for the first time - the F-16, F/A-18 and F—35 - and provided pilots with tactical instructions that had previously been given only by ground air combat controllers.
This experiment was a crucial step towards integrating artificial intelligence into combat aviation control.
How AI replaces the ground controller
Traditionally, fighter pilots receive tactical instructions from ground-based air combat controllers during missions. They analyze data from radars, reconnaissance drones, and other sensors to determine where to go, where enemy aircraft are located, and what maneuvers to perform.
Starsage takes over this function: the system processes the data stream from all available sources in real time, builds a tactical picture and issues specific commands to the pilot — for example, "turn around 240 degrees", "accelerate" or "reset interference". At the same time, all processing takes place on board or at the nearest communication center, without delay.
Reduction of reaction time from minutes to seconds
According to the CEO of Raft AI, the Starsage system reduces the reaction time of pilots from a few minutes to just a few seconds. This is critically important in modern air combat, where the advantage is given to the one who makes decisions faster.
Artificial intelligence is able to analyze hundreds of parameters simultaneously — from the speed and altitude of targets to the electronic environment — and suggest optimal actions without overloading the pilot with information.
A step towards the network-centric warfare of the future
The Starsage test is part of the Pentagon's broader strategy to create a "network—centric" combat environment where all platforms — ground, air, sea, and space —exchange data in real time, and AI coordinates actions.
Starsage can become the basis for future "smart" command nodes that control not only individual fighters, but also groups of satellite drones operating in conjunction with manned aircraft.
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