Avalor AI enables real-time coordination during Live Fire Exercise
Avalor AI enables real-time coordination during Live Fire Exercise
Feb 11, 2025
Feb 11, 2025



Avalor AI successfully supported the Royal Netherlands Army during Caribbean Djokja, a field exercise on Curaçao involving over 120 soldiers of the 13th Delta Company, 11 Airmobile Brigade. Held across varied terrain and harsh tropical conditions, the exercise focused on improving combat techniques, applying new technologies, and optimizing unit-level cooperation.
Avalor’s software platform, Nexus, provided a unified ground control interface for both RSTA (Reconnaissance, Surveillance, and Target Acquisition) and fire support missions. Seamlessly integrated with multiple European UAS - including systems from DeltaQuad, Quantum Systems, Airvolute, and Tective Robotics - Nexus enabled intuitive control and rapid deployment in real-world conditions. Connectivity was powered by resilient tactical mesh networks via Silvus Technologies and Doodle Labs.
“Caribbean Djokja gave us the opportunity to co-develop in the field,” said Maurits Korthals Altes, CEO of Avalor AI. “Working side-by-side with the soldiers allowed us to iterate overnight, validating features in the hands of real users.”
Under the guidance of the Royal Netherlands Army’s Uncrewed Systems CD&E team, Avalor engineers collaborated directly with operators to test and refine a layered UAS concept, enabling tactical units to experiment with new tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) while maintaining operational tempo.
The exercise showcased the strength of a trusted partnership between industry and the armed forces: agile, interoperable, and shaped by end-user feedback.
Avalor AI successfully supported the Royal Netherlands Army during Caribbean Djokja, a field exercise on Curaçao involving over 120 soldiers of the 13th Delta Company, 11 Airmobile Brigade. Held across varied terrain and harsh tropical conditions, the exercise focused on improving combat techniques, applying new technologies, and optimizing unit-level cooperation.
Avalor’s software platform, Nexus, provided a unified ground control interface for both RSTA (Reconnaissance, Surveillance, and Target Acquisition) and fire support missions. Seamlessly integrated with multiple European UAS - including systems from DeltaQuad, Quantum Systems, Airvolute, and Tective Robotics - Nexus enabled intuitive control and rapid deployment in real-world conditions. Connectivity was powered by resilient tactical mesh networks via Silvus Technologies and Doodle Labs.
“Caribbean Djokja gave us the opportunity to co-develop in the field,” said Maurits Korthals Altes, CEO of Avalor AI. “Working side-by-side with the soldiers allowed us to iterate overnight, validating features in the hands of real users.”
Under the guidance of the Royal Netherlands Army’s Uncrewed Systems CD&E team, Avalor engineers collaborated directly with operators to test and refine a layered UAS concept, enabling tactical units to experiment with new tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) while maintaining operational tempo.
The exercise showcased the strength of a trusted partnership between industry and the armed forces: agile, interoperable, and shaped by end-user feedback.