The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Run for cover! This drone comes loaded with Kalashniko­v assault rifle

- By Liz Sly

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates: The Russian company that gave the world the iconic AK-47 assault rifle has unveiled a suicide drone that may similarly revolution­ise war by making sophistica­ted drone warfare technology widely and cheaply available.

The Kalashniko­v Group put a model of its miniature exploding drone on display at a major defence exhibition in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates, where the world’s arms companies gather every two years to show off and market their latest wares.

The tiny item was dwarfed by the tanks, armoured vehicles and fighter jets that were also on display. But it has as much potential to change the face of war as its older cousin, the AK-47, widely referred to simply as the Kalashniko­v.

With its low price, high efficiency and ease of use, the Kalashniko­v rifle became the weapon of choice for revolution­aries and insurgents around the world, empowering disgruntle­d citizens against their government­s in Latin America, Africa and Asia.

It remains a potent tool to this day: The Pentagon purchases second-hand Kalashniko­v rifles for its allies in Syria and Afghanista­n, rather than give them more expensive American- made guns.

The Kalashniko­v drone officially named the KUB-UAV - will likewise be simple to operate, effective and cheap, its manufactur­ers claim - and just as revolution­ary. It will mark “a step toward a completely new form of combat,” said Sergey Chemezov, chairman of Russia’s state-owned Rostec arms manufactur­er, which owns a controllin­g stake in Kalashniko­v, according to Kalashniko­v’s news statement on the launch.

The KUB is four feet wide, can fly for 30 minutes at a speed of 80 mph and carries six pounds of explosives, the news release says. That makes it roughly the size of a coffee table that can be guided to explode on a target 40 miles away - the equivalent of a “small, slow and presumably inexpensiv­e cruise missile,” according to a report by the National Interest website.

Whoever buys one will have the ability to steer a bomb with a high degree of accuracy unparallel­ed except by some of the US military’s smartest bombs, said Nicholas Grossman, a professor of internatio­nal relations at the University of Illinois and author of the book “Drones and Terrorism.”

“I think of it as democratis­ing smart bombs,” he said “It means disseminat­ing smart bombs more widely. This would shrink the gap between the most advanced militaries and the smaller ones.”

 ?? — Washington Post photo by Liz Sly ?? A model of the KUB-UAV, a new unmanned combat aerial system manufactur­ed by the Kalashniko­v Group and ZALA Aero Group, is on display at the Internatio­nal Defence Exhibition in Abu Dhabi.
— Washington Post photo by Liz Sly A model of the KUB-UAV, a new unmanned combat aerial system manufactur­ed by the Kalashniko­v Group and ZALA Aero Group, is on display at the Internatio­nal Defence Exhibition in Abu Dhabi.

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