The Saudi company "AirShield" develops the "BARQ" system to confront drone threats
BARQ System
The BARQ system is an advanced Saudi air defense system dedicated to the rapid physical interception of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The system was developed by AirShield, a company specialized in defense technology, and was officially unveiled during the World Defense Exhibition (WDS) 2026 in Riyadh. The system represents a technical response to the weaknesses of conventional defense systems, focusing on neutralizing low-cost pathfinders with high economic and technical effectiveness.
The concept and technical innovation classify "Park" as a short-range interception system based on physical collision (Kinetic Interception) instead of electronic warfare or traditional explosive missiles.
Additive manufacturing (3D printing)
The concept and technical innovation classify "Park" as a short-range interception system based on physical collision (Kinetic Interception) instead of electronic warfare or traditional explosive missiles.
The Barq interceptor aircraft are manufactured using advanced 3D printing technologies. This strategy provides competitive advantages that include:
- Production speed: Significantly reduce the time required for manufacturing.
- Design flexibility: The ability to quickly modify and update the interceptor design to keep pace with evolving air threats.
- Quantitative production: Supporting the armed forces’ ability to scale up operations during crises to confront “saturation attacks.”
Operational characteristics
The system is based on a technical architecture that combines artificial intelligence and flight biomechanics:
The system is based on a technical architecture that combines artificial intelligence and flight biomechanics:
- AI Guidance: The system has the ability to track and engage targets completely autonomously in the final stages, reducing the burden on the human operator and allowing multiple simultaneous targets to be engaged.
- Lift-disabling warhead: Instead of using explosive fragments, “Barq” uses a patented warhead that disrupts the lift and flight control surfaces of the enemy drone, causing it to lose its dynamic stability and fall immediately.
- Reduced collateral damage: Thanks to the “lift disable” mechanism, the system reduces the spread of debris and air explosions, making it ideal for protecting energy facilities, oil and gas fields, and border areas.
Flexibility and deployment platforms
The "Park" system features a multi-platform publishing concept, as it can be launched from:
- Fixed ground platforms to protect military bases.
- Systems mounted on armored vehicles (such as HEET) for field support.
- Air and sea platforms to provide integrated defense layers.
Strategic analysis
According to defense analysts, the Barq system occupies an intermediate position (modular layer) in the air defense architecture, bridging the gap between:
- Electronic measures: which may fail against pre-programmed paths or with variable frequencies.
- Expensive defensive missiles: which are considered economically infeasible when used against cheap drones
Static
Mobile
Classification: Direct kinetic interception (Hard-Kill / Kinetic)
Range: 3 – 4 kilometers
Mission: Final interception of targets in the final phase of the engagement (last line of defence).
Capabilities
1- Solid fuel rocket engine
AP composite solid propellant rocket engine — sealed cartridge, sub-second ready, local sovereign supply chain.
2-Dual warhead
A latex-based lift-disrupting warhead (cloud with ~60 m range and urban safe) for targeting reconnaissance and surveillance (ISR) drones, or a high explosive (HE) warhead for confirmed suicide threats.
3- Fire and forget
Ballistic trajectory · Without seeker, without in-flight guidance, and without radio communication (RF) link. Resistant to electronic jamming and phishing.
4- Quad radar with a 360° angle
Four 90° radar sectors provide complete coverage of the internal defense range, with the ability to detect small quadcopter aircraft with a low radar signature (RCS) up to a range of 10 km.
5-Engagement engine
The command and control (C2) system evaluates the intercept geometry for each threat trajectory, then selects the optimal launch platform and direction for engagement.
6-Very low cost
Two orders of magnitude (2 decimal places) lower cost than conventional SAM responses, re-balancing the economics of engagement against dense drone swarms.
Final interdiction within range, at a cost tailored to the nature of the threat.
Barq is the final stage interceptor within the AirShields system — a short-range missile launched from land, vehicles or sea platforms, carrying either a soft latex-based Lift-Disruptor payload (cloud with ~60 m range and urban safe) or a high-explosive (HE) warhead to counter confirmed suicide threats.
Guidance is based on a deliberately simplistic philosophy: “fire and forget” — no seeker and no in-flight guidance. The result is complete immunity to jamming, electronic deception and electronic warfare (EW), with a cost per launch two orders of magnitude lower (two decimal places) than conventional SAM responses.
The combat configuration follows the AirShields standard: four 90° radars, a command and control (C2) node, a x88 electro-optical (EO) camera, and two launch cells, all integrated via the Sphere system. It has a speed of Mach 0.7, and a range of 3–4 km — specifically designed for inland defense.
Threats being addressed
Suicide drones (Kamikaze UAV) · Reconnaissance and surveillance drones (ISR Drone) · Elements of drone squadrons · Small loitering munitions.
Operating environment
Military bases · Border areas · Oil and gas facilities · Open terrain · Military convoy escort · Inland urban surroundings.
Force composition
4× radars (90° for each radar, 10 km range)
1× command and control node (C2)
1× EO electro-optical camera with 88× zoom (10 km range)
2× launch systems
2× lightning launch cells.
Decision making loop
Monitoring → Classification → Operator Approval → Automated Release Within 6–10 seconds.
New missile from the company
Shaheen
A high-speed hybrid interceptor missile combining a missile and a drone, designed to intercept loitering munitions and long-range air threats.
Kinetic/hybrid interception (missile-drone)
Range: 15 km
Mission: High-speed strategic interception of long-range air threats
Capabilities
1- Solid missile booster: A solid-fuel booster propels the structure to high speed during the acceleration phase, reaching a thrust speed of Mach 1.9.
2-Electric streamlined flight: Electric propulsion handles the smooth flight phase, within a fixed-wing drone structure in one integrated platform.
3-Infrared (IR) thermal seeker: A downstream cryogenic thermal seeker with a tracker powered by Edge AI. It does not rely on a continuous radio frequency (RF) connection, which gives it a high ability to resist electronic interference.
4-Mid-course guidance (GPS + INS): GPS guidance supported by inertial navigation reference (INS). Semi-autonomous engagement, designed to operate effectively in high-jammage and electronic contention environments.
5- 360° quad radar: A standard radar grid of 4 x 90° sectors (radar screen), supported by an electro-optical (EO) camera with 88x magnification, handles detection, target tracking and track hand-off (Track Hand-off).
6-Sovereign manufacturing: KSA-manufactured airframe and electronics. Designed for high-value / high-speed threats.
Electronic structure and systems manufactured within the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Designed to address high-value, high-velocity threats.
Overview · Mission and threat
Shaheen is a hybrid hypersonic missile within the AirShields system — a drone powered by a missile, not a traditional missile.
The process begins with a propulsion phase via a solid-fuel rocket booster, which accelerates the structure to a speed of up to Mach 1.9 (supersonic), and then the platform transitions to a fixed-wing aerodynamic flight phase using electric propulsion.
In the final stage, guidance is done via a cooled infrared thermal seeker powered by an Edge AI (Edge AI) tracker. The middle of the path relies on GPS + INS guidance without the need for a continuous wireless connection, which provides high resistance to interference and operation in contested electronic environments.
The combat configuration follows the AirShields standard: four 90° radars, a command and control (C2) node, a x88 electro-optical camera, and two launch cells. It has a range of approximately 15 km, with a 1.5–2.5 kg fragmentation warhead, and is designed to intercept loitering munitions, high-speed drones, and long-range aerial threats.
Threats being addressed
(Loitering munitions · High-speed drones · Long-range air threats · Strategic defense scenarios.)
Operating environment
Defending strategic sites, air bases, oil fields, royal complexes, and depth areas in open terrain.
Deployment Tactical layer
An interception layer dedicated to protecting strategic sites within a multi-layered air defense environment.
Decision making loop
Detect → Track → Sphere Classification → Operator Approval → Launch · Within 20–35 seconds.
The company recently updated its website and posted information about its new and even old products
This is the website link for anyone who would like to know more details and the rest of their products:
https://airshields.ai/index.html#overview