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Cyborg Cockroach Swarms Deployed for NATO Reconnaissance

  • Writer: tech360.tv
    tech360.tv
  • Mar 2
  • 3 min read

German defence technology startup SWARM Biotactics has deployed programmable cyborg insect swarms for reconnaissance, providing them to paying NATO customers, including German military forces. This move takes a seemingly fictional concept from experiments to operational field use.


Gloved hands hold two hornets with attached tiny devices. The setting is a lab with a green and white background.
Credit: Linkedin/SWARM Biotactics

In a statement dated February 25, Chief Executive Officer Stefan Wilhelm confirmed the company’s systems have undergone field-testing and validation in both European and U.S. operating environments. Wilhelm stated, "One year ago, this didn’t exist. Today, we deploy programmable cyborg insect swarms, field-tested and operational with paying NATO customers."


This announcement follows earlier disclosures in July 2025 that the Kassel-headquartered firm was developing insect-based reconnaissance platforms. These platforms use live cockroaches fitted with miniature electronic modules, now confirmed to be in real-world validation phases with actual defence customers.


Robotic bugs race on a marked grey track indoors. White lines and black blocks are visible. People stand in the blurred background.
Credit: SWARM Biotactics

The company states its platforms combine living insects with bioelectronic neural interfaces, onboard sensors, edge artificial intelligence processing, and secure communications links. Electrical stimulation facilitates guided movement, and swarm autonomy software allows multiple units to function as a coordinated system.


Wilhelm elaborated, "What you’re seeing is real. Living organisms, controlled through bioelectronic neural interfaces, carrying sensors, edge AI, and secure comms. Moving as a coordinated unit. Scaling through breeding, not factories."


The insects carry compact "backpacks" that integrate control electronics, sensing devices, and encrypted short-range communication modules. These payloads enable real-time data collection and transmission in areas inaccessible to conventional drones or ground robots.


Unlike traditional unmanned systems using mechanical propulsion, the company’s method leverages insects’ natural locomotion, adding digital command and sensing capabilities. This biological basis permits movement through confined, cluttered, or structurally compromised spaces with minimal acoustic and visual signatures.


SWARM Biotactics has developed a full-stack architecture encompassing neural interface hardware, swarm autonomy software, modular payload integration, and mission-control systems. Wilhelm asserted, "No other company in the Western world is building this."


The company has also confirmed raising about USD 15.36 million, including a previously disclosed EUR 10 million seed round and EUR 3 million in pre-seed financing. This capital supports expansion across Germany and the United States.


Germany has launched a broader initiative to accelerate defence innovation, specifically in artificial intelligence and autonomous systems. This involves increasing defence spending and integrating startups into national procurement.


In early 2026, European leaders also articulated a desire to strengthen indigenous defence capabilities. This desire arises amid debates about strategic autonomy following tensions over U.S. policy toward Greenland, accelerating discussions about Europe’s role within NATO.


While the EU strives for strategic autonomy, homegrown defence firms like SWARM Biotactics are expected to receive support and the right environment to develop their technologies. Wilhelm framed the company’s approach as distinct from conventional robotics development. He stated, "We’re not building a better drone. We’re building a different scaling law for physical intelligence — one where capability compounds through biology, not engineering complexity."


Autonomous systems development has traditionally concentrated on aerial drones, ground vehicles, and maritime platforms. Conversely, biologically integrated systems have largely stayed within laboratory research phases.


SWARM Biotactics noted that other nations are also investing in bio-robotics for military applications. Wilhelm warned, "Meanwhile, adversaries are investing heavily in bio-robotics for military applications. The capability gap is real, and it’s closing — from the other side."


With confirmed field tests, paying defence customers, and continued funding, the startup’s insect-based platforms represent a new category of reconnaissance technology with widespread implications.

  • SWARM Biotactics has deployed programmable cyborg insect swarms for NATO reconnaissance.

  • The systems have undergone field-testing and validation in European and U.S. operating environments.

  • Platforms combine living insects with bioelectronic neural interfaces, sensors, and secure communications for guided movement.


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