The OAS Stack: How Ondas Built a System-of-Systems
Architecture analysis of the most ambitious autonomous systems acquisition strategy in defence
The Acquisition Strategy
Ondas Holdings didn't build a drone company. They built a system-of-systems integrator — acquiring best-in-class companies across every domain layer rather than building vertically.
This is architecturally significant because it means each subsidiary maintains its own engineering DNA while OAS provides the integration fabric.
Why This Architecture Wins
The traditional defence prime model (Lockheed, Raytheon) builds everything in-house. OAS inverts this: acquire the best, then integrate at the protocol level.
The OAS stack is not a portfolio of companies — it is a single system where each subsidiary is a module that can be replaced, upgraded, or extended without rebuilding the whole.
The Integration Challenge
The risk is integration complexity. Each acquisition brings its own protocols, data formats, and operational assumptions. Palantir AIP serves as the orchestration layer that bridges these differences.
What This Means for Investors
The OAS stack position is unique: no other company owns detection (Sentrycs), response (Iron Drone), persistence (World View), ground presence (Roboteam), and connectivity (FullMAX) under one roof with a Tier-1 prime contractor (Mistral) to access DoD contracts.