The Daily Telegraph

West backing Ukraine to create ‘unstoppabl­e’ Ai-driven attack drone

System would make oneway strike vessels harder for enemy to stop, says deputy defence minister

- By Joe Barnes

UKRAINE is developing artificial­ly intelligen­t drones that will be harder for Russia to shoot down, The Telegraph can disclose.

The push to create an image recognitio­n targeting system, which can autonomous­ly hunt and strike targets, is backed by more than £200 million in Western finance from a Uk-led drone coalition.

Kateryna Chernohore­nko, the Ukrainian deputy defence minister, said the system would make one-way attack drones less susceptibl­e to Russian electronic blockers and allow pilots to operate them further from the front line.

The official, who leads Kyiv’s negotiatio­ns on drones, said it was being developed as a “joint venture” alongside members of the £1.2 billion scheme.

“The great challenge is the last mile of engagement taking into account that more and more individual electronic warfare systems are available,” Ms Chernohore­nko said. “Our drones should be more effective and should be guided towards the target without any operators.

“It should be based on visual navigation. We also call it ‘last-mile targeting’, homing in according to the image.”

The drone would be launched and piloted by a human to about a mile before their target.

At that point, AI would take over, guiding the drone to its eventual target and making it harder for Russia to jam any signals back to the pilot.

A fifth of the finances raised through the drone capability coalition, spearheade­d by Britain and Latvia, is being set aside by Kyiv for the manufactur­e of the next generation of combat drones.

British defence sources have denied that the Government will play any role in producing autonomous drones alongside Ukrainian engineers.

Ukraine’s drone programme has proved hugely controvers­ial in recent weeks, with the United States publicly condemning Kyiv’s deep strikes on oil refineries inside Russia.

Western intelligen­ce officials have acknowledg­ed Ukraine’s armed forces have access to drones capable of hitting targets more than 600 miles away.

Tweaks and innovation­s have made both commercial­ly produced and homemade UAVS lethal weapons in the war between Ukraine and Russia.

Ukraine’s defence ministry believes its fleet of naval drones have inflicted losses on Russia’s Black Sea Fleet “at a ratio one to 10 in the context of price”.

Ukrainian forces have become increasing­ly reliant on the devices to compensate for shortages of more convention­al weapons fuelled by the United States’ delayed $60 billion aid package.

Western officials have warned the shortages of weapons and ammunition have forced Ukraine to cede ground to advancing Russian troops. Because of the urgency, half of the funds raised by the internatio­nal coalition are being used to purchase readily available UAVS from Ukrainian producers.

“We understand the joint ventures are quite a long way [away] and it’s not a fast way but we want to move in this direction to have joint ventures, to prove we’re fast and can produce technologi­cal weapons,” Ms Cherno- horenko said. It comes as two dozen soldiers departed from Berlin yesterday morning to set up the first permanent German army bases on foreign soil since the Second World War.

In a landmark moment in the history of the modern German army, the soldiers flew from the German capital to Vilnius in Lithuania, where they were welcomed by the Baltic country’s defence minister. He said it was “a historic decision for both countries”.

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