Warsaw turns to Ukraine for drone warfare expertise
Digest more
With little chance of NATO membership for Ukraine, the country’s Western allies have bought into an alternate strategy for helping it repel Russia: invest billions in Ukraine’s weapons industry so it can better defend itself.
The United States should follow Ukraine’s creative destruction in terms of drone warfare if it wishes to remain powerful.
“The incident highlighted what many experts see as a dangerous, ‘pre-drone age mindset’ within the U.S. military,” wrote David Hambling in a National Security Journal article titled “The U.S. Army Looks Lost in the Drone Age.”
A Ukrainian company says it's developing a new fiber-optic drone with a range of up to 100 kilometers. This would be a major upgrade for what has emerged as one of the most important weapons in the war. Fiber-optic FPV drones are immune to electronic ...
Most American soldiers lack the know-how for fighting with unmanned systems, and while the US has excelled at building large, expensive weaponry, it is in many ways unprepared to quickly produce large quantities of small,
The goal of FUZE is to finance early investment in innovative technology that could swiftly be brought from tech firm designers to troops.
More than 500 Soldiers, Army engineers and industry representatives witnessed live-fire munitions fired from small unmanned aerial systems at a U.S.
CAMP ATTERBURY, Indiana–The Pentagon has been talking about rapidly scaling up drone forces for years—efforts that so far have produced interesting new prototypes and lively demonstrations. But while the services conduct experiments using small numbers ...
Recent footage from Ukraine reveals a dramatic shift in modern warfare, showcasing how innovative, low-cost weapons are upending traditional military power. In a striking display of tactical evolution, a kamikaze drone from Ukraine's Combat Group K-2 ...
Drones buzzed overhead as Oklahoma National Guard Soldiers and Airmen maneuvered strategically through a wooded