DEPLOYDatabase

Safety record

United States Army safety record

DEPLOY has no incidents on file for United States Army. This rolls up incidents attached directly to United States Army, to its models, and to its deployments (operated or manufactured): the same graph as the company page's safety-record summary, shown here with full sourcing and exposure context.


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Machine-readable surfaces

Incidents

No incidents on record for United States Army. Absence of a recorded incident is not proof of a clean operating history; it reflects what DEPLOY has tracked and verified to date.

Exposure

DEPLOY does not have exposure data (deployment-hours, miles driven, or rides given) on file for United States Army's 7 recorded deployments. This is a genuine data gap, not a rounding to zero: no incident count above can be turned into a defensible rate without it. NHTSA's SGO dataset itself does not publish exposure denominators, and there is no standardized, regulator-verified nationwide source for AV fleet mileage or ride counts today. Where a company self-publishes a mileage figure, it is not independently audited and is not shown here as DEPLOY-verified data.

Common questions

What is United States Army's safety record?
DEPLOY has no incidents on file for United States Army. This reflects the incidents DEPLOY has tracked and verified to date, drawn primarily from NHTSA's Standing General Order crash-reporting program and press coverage; it is not a safety guarantee, and absence of a recorded incident is not proof of a clean operating history.
Is United States Army safer than a human driver?
DEPLOY does not have exposure data (miles driven or hours operated) on file for United States Army, so no per-mile or per-hour safety rate can be computed from this registry today. This is a documented industry-wide data gap, not unique to DEPLOY: NHTSA's own SGO dataset does not publish exposure denominators alongside crash counts. Any rate comparison you see elsewhere may rely on a company's self-published mileage figures, which are not independently audited.
Does DEPLOY redact or omit crash details for United States Army?
No. DEPLOY does not redact incident narratives. Where a source narrative is itself incomplete (for example, a NHTSA SGO filing redacted as confidential business information), DEPLOY states that plainly rather than filling the gap. See "A note on NHTSA's crash-reporting data" below.

Full company record: United States Army