The defence-tech land grab has a new front, and it sits above the drones and sensors that get the headlines.
Comand AI, a Paris startup building AI software for military command, has raised a €32mn Series A led by Blossom Capital, with a strategic investment from Sweden’s Saab and renewed backing from Expeditions. The round was announced at Eurosatory, one of the world’s largest defence exhibitions.
The company works on what the industry calls C2, command and control, the software that sits above sensors, drones, and weapons and turns a flood of data into decisions. Its platform, Prevail, is built around what it describes as a “digital command staff” of specialised AI agents, each handling a function from mission analysis to after-action review.
The pitch, in founder Loïc Mougeolle’s words: “We are moving from a battlefield governed by words to a battlefield governed by mathematics.” With Prevail, the company says, a single laptop becomes a command node that can coordinate manned units and drone swarms alike, while a human still makes every final call.
The gap the giants left open #
The competition is fierce and far richer. Helsing, the German defence-AI company, has raised at an $18bn valuation; Anduril recently closed a round at $61bn. Both work in adjacent territory, but neither is focused squarely on the command layer.
That is the gap Comand AI is aiming at, and it has one thing the giants cannot claim there: Prevail has been deployed with operational units in France, Germany, Ukraine, and other allied nations over the past year, giving it live battlefield feedback at the decision layer. The company is not specific about how extensive those deployments are.
It is still a crowded field. Anduril has Lattice, Palantir has Maven, Helsing has Altra, and Shield AI has Commander, all circling the same prize. A €32mn round is small money against those names.
The Saab deal, and the sovereignty angle #
Saab’s involvement is the part that signals more than the cheque. Rather than build command software itself, the Swedish prime is backing a startup to do it.
The two will develop new software for GlobalEye, Saab’s airborne early-warning aircraft, and work on a next-generation C2 ecosystem with Prevail integrated. It pairs Swedish defence hardware with French AI, a deliberately European combination.
That framing matters because Europe’s most prominent C2 deployment is American. NATO has rolled out Palantir’s Maven, and officials have openly noted the lack of a homegrown alternative, even as Palantir’s standing in Europe wobbles. Comand AI is positioning itself, with Saab, as exactly that alternative.
The funding will push Prevail across NATO markets and into new domains, with air already underway and maritime due before year-end. The bet for the next three years is narrow and high-stakes: when the dust of the defence-AI rush settles, who controls the decision layer.
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