US Air Force Will Obliterate Tesla Cybertrucks in Unprecedented Military Test
Hello everyone. I didn’t have “military-grade Cybertruck demolition derby” on my 2025 bingo card, but here we are. The United States Air Force has decided that the best use of two Tesla Cybertrucks isn’t parading them around as some space-age recruitment prop, nor turning them into high-speed base runabouts, but rather obliterating them with precision-guided munitions. Because why not? When your defense budget looks like the inventory of a particularly greedy MMO guild, you might as well spend some of it seeing what happens when a Hellfire missile meets stainless steel pretension.

The Purchase That Sounds Like a Side Quest
Apparently, the Air Force picked up two of these polygon-shaped electric tanks as part of a larger order of 33 vehicles earmarked for the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. This is where the experimental fireworks happen, often in partnership with SOCOM—the folks who specialize in turning “that’s impossible” into “hold my beer and watch this.” The idea is to simulate what future enemies might roll onto the battlefield. And yes, according to their partially redacted report (which sounds like a militarized DLC patch note), it’s “probable” that adversaries could employ Cybertrucks in combat zones. That’s probably the nicest thing anyone’s said about the Cybertruck in years—Tesla PR take note.
Why the Cybertruck Specifically?
We’re told—straight from the bureaucratic horse’s mouth—that nothing else in the market compares. Its unpainted stainless steel, angular design, and 48V electrical architecture apparently land it in an exotic category of its own. You have to love the irony: the same features touted in overproduced launch events as “revolutionary” are now being itemized by the military as reasons to blow the thing sky-high.
And to be fair, there’s a point here. A vehicle with silent electric mobility, reinforced structure, and a look that makes every Fallout fan grin is basically begging to be tested as a modern insurgent toy. The Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov allegedly already paraded some around—with “aftermarket modifications” involving, you guessed it, guns. At this point, I’m expecting the next Fast & Furious spin-off to double as a NATO training manual.
From Tech Icon to Target Dummy
Musk’s 2019 big-reveal fantasy was all about an unbreakable, sci-fi pickup—invulnerable windows (spoiler: they weren’t), futuristic edges you could cut bread with, and an implied promise that it would survive the apocalypse. Now, the Air Force seems hellbent on fulfilling half that prophecy by simulating the apocalypse on it in a missile testing ground. Let’s call it catharsis-through-explosives: the part of every doctor’s prescription the pharmaceutical companies just won’t fund.
If it’s plausible an enemy might use it, the military will train to destroy it. Even if it’s your favorite collectible toy.
A Shift in Target Practice Philosophy
For decades, the military’s target lineup looked like a used car lot in the rough part of town—Toyota Hiluxes, patched-together SUVs, and whatever insurgents were plain crazy enough to drive. Now, the philosophy is changing. In the same way late-game enemies in your favorite RPG stop showing up in rags and start wearing enchanted armor, modern armies are training to counter high-tech civilian products. Because yes, the global market means that what’s in your driveway today could be in a warzone tomorrow. Just with fewer cupholders and more explosives strapped to the frame.
Between Sensible and Absolutely Bonkers
This is where it gets entertainingly absurd. On one hand, yes, it’s logical to prepare for unconventional threats. On the other, we’re now designing training missions around the possibility of “enemy electric luxury pickups.” What’s next? Drone kamikaze Roombas? Insurgent teams fielding armored Pelotons? At some point, this feels less like strategic foresight and more like a brainstorm session someone forgot to stop after the third drink.
Conclusion: The Future Is… Weird
There’s a poetry to the image: a vehicle once pitched as the height of personal freedom and invincibility, reduced to molten scrap in a missile range somewhere in the desert. It sums up the bizarre intersection where consumer tech meets military necessity—where a status symbol can just as easily become shrapnel. Do I think it’s practical? Yes. Do I think it’s ridiculous? Also yes. Much like the Cybertruck itself, this whole exercise is an improbable mix of genius and meme.
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is entirely my opinion.


Article source: Está a punto de ocurrir algo inédito en EEUU: un caza está apuntando a dos Tesla Cybertruck para hacerlos volar por los aires, https://www.xataka.com/magnet/esta-a-punto-ocurrir-algo-inedito-eeuu-caza-esta-apuntando-a-dos-tesla-cybertruck-para-hacerlos-volar-aires