Anduril founder foresees a ‘Star Trek’-style future for U.S. defense technology

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Donning his iconic-yet-casual Hawaiian button-down shirt, Anduril founder Palmer Luckey is visibly excited about America’s technology and defense future.

In an exclusive interview on « Mornings with Maria » Tuesday, Luckey applauded both public and private sector funding for initiatives like President Donald Trump’s Golden Dome and space intelligence.

« I think it’s encouraged spending on new national security priorities, ones that we probably should have been prioritizing a long time ago, » Luckey told FOX Business’ Maria Bartiromo.

« That’s where we need to be looking forward to, » he added. « And I think it is going to look pretty ‘Star Trek.’ »

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Luckey – who founded Anduril Industries in 2017 to radically transform U.S. defense technology – reacted positively to President Trump’s plan for the Golden Dome missile defense system that aims to block a variety of threats posed by China and Russia.

Star Trek members looking to the right and Palmer Luckey wearing a Hawaiian shirt split image

Anduril founder Palmer Luckey analyzes America’s defense future in an exclusive « Mornings with Maria » interview. (FOXBusiness)

Trump said last month that the total cost of the project will be $175 billion and that Republicans’ reconciliation package for tax-cut legislation will also include $25 billion in spending to start construction on the Golden Dome.

« A lot of what you’re seeing with Golden Dome goes back to the Reagan [era] with trying to build the Star Wars Defense Initiative type of technologies, » Luckey explained, « the idea of really being able to protect the homeland from missile attacks, from aircraft attacks, from drone attacks. »

« The technology makes it much more feasible than it was decades ago. And so, I’m seeing not just more spending on the government side, I am already seeing a lot more spending on the private side, » he continued.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) updated a previous analysis of space-based interceptors (SBI) against threats from regional powers, such as North Korea, to review the impact of lower launch costs on such systems. It found that the lowest-cost alternative would be about $161 billion, while the highest-cost alternative would be $542 billion.

« I don’t think that the Golden Dome is going to be as expensive as people think that it is, » Luckey countered. « And I think that it’s going to be much more effective than the critics would have you believe. »

According to the defense innovator, « nothing’s changed since Star Trek, » and « space is still the final frontier. »

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« It is where a lot of the battles of the future are going to start… I strongly believe that the Republican Party, in particular, needs to have a very clear vision for what our space-based military capabilities look like, not next year, but 20 years from now, 50 years from now, 100 years from now, » Luckey said.

« We need to protect freedom of navigation in space, freedom of communication in space… More or less doing exactly what the United States Navy does on Earth, but in a growing space economy. »

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FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.