Ukraine, war and drones
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Russia, Ukraine and drones
Digest more
Eighty years after total war transformed the continent, European countries are making big bets on new instruments of annihilation.
For the first time in history, the convergence of kinetic and information warfare, both powered by AI, is on full display, offering a glimpse into the future of global conflict. This new reality is forcing military strategists, technologists, and policymakers to confront a host of new challenges.
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I flew drones on Ukraine's fiercest battlefield. The last few months laid bare the limits of today's drone warfare.
Sgt. Dimko Zhluktenko, a commander of a drone team, told Business Insider what it was like flying in the heavy fog that Russia used to its advantage.
While military forces around the world scramble to develop and deploy new drone tech, the U.S. Navy performed an important first-time test in mid-December.
A new goldrush is ahead as President Trump proposes a massive hike in defence spending. It is not just a choice of buying jets or drones, but using the strengths of each.
Ukraine burns through small drones like belts of ammunition — fed, fired, and reloaded. Piloted from behind the front lines, drones hunt on the battlefield. This summer, Ukraine’s drone production increased 900 percent to 200,000 per month from 20,000 ...
Frontline areas in Ukraine resemble the Battle of the Somme, if it were a deadly laser-tag game from hell. All the accoutrements of twentieth-century war are there, just with a modern twist. The tanks wear wire cages like hats and resemble something out of ...
The Department of War is accelerating its push into unmanned systems, moving beyond experimentation toward large-scale production, streamlined acquisition and integrated doctrine. From mass-producing low-cost attack drones to expanding counter-unmanned ...
Russia's leading film studio and several regional historical museums are buying drones and military-capable electronic equipment for use in Ukraine in what appears to be an unusual example of cultural institutions being forced to spend budget funds on the ...