CBC Edition

Drones are key in Ukraine's fight against Russia. Now it wants 1 million more of them

- Geoff Nixon

The Ukraine-Russia war has become a proving ground for what drones can do in conflict.

Ukrainian forces have used small, first-person view (FPV) drones to blow up Russian tanks on their soil and longer-range devices to damage military aircraft in Russia. Drone attacks this winter have hit oil refineries deep inside Russian territory, as well as a major steel fac‐ tory. Explosives-laden naval drones have slammed into Russian ships.

With the war now in its third year, Ukraine is leaning hard into drones as a combat strategy, ramping up its do‐ mestic production and counting on allies to deliver one million of them in the next 12 months.

Why? Because these rela‐ tively cheap, flexible tools are helping stave off the advance of Russian troops by target‐ ing opposing soldiers.

FPV drone operators fly them along the front lines so they can hone in on and hit the opposing forces, said Samuel Bendett of CNA, a se‐ curity think-tank in Arlington, Va.

"Individual soldiers are not safe on the battlefiel­d," he said.

But that's just as true for

Ukrainian soldiers, who must avoid the threat posed by Russia's own drones.

WATCH | Canada-built drones earmarked for Ukraine:

A need 'to tilt the bal‐ ance'

Two weeks ago, Canada announced it will send more than 800 drones to Ukraine that can spot targets "at long range" - and also strike them.

Yet that's just a small frac‐ tion of the drones Ukraine wants to have on hand.

A group of Western na‐ tions - including Latvia, Ger‐ many, the United Kingdom and the Netherland­s - aims to send one million drones, including small FPV drones, to Ukraine by the end of next February.

Latvian Defence Minister Andris Spruds has said Ukraine needs these tools "to tilt the balance" in the war, particular­ly when it's strug‐ gling to acquire the ammuni‐ tion it needs to fight back against Russia.

How likely is it that Ukraine will get the million drones it's seeking? It de‐ pends on who you ask.

"I think it's a good target to have, as Ukraine has used drones to make up for muni‐ tions," Alexander Lanoszka, an associate professor of po‐ litical science at the Univer‐ sity of Waterloo in Ontario, said via email.

But Lanoszka pointed out that European allies have so far failed to deliver promised amounts of ammunition to Ukraine.

Bendett said the headline number of one million is not inconceiva­ble as Ukraine is already producing a variety of drones, including thou‐ sands of units that can be used to strike targets at a dis‐ tance.

He said with that many drones, Ukraine could poten‐ tially launch tens of thou‐ sands of them at targets each month - and even if half or more failed, that would still leave a whole lot of drones doing damage.

More drones, more pi‐ lots

Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine's minister for digital transforma­tion, recently told Reuters that Kyiv had or‐ dered production of 300,000 drones in 2023 - and onethird of those were sent to the front.

He said that number did not include the additional and "significan­t contributi­on" of equipment from volunteer groups.

Private organizati­ons have also helped train many of the drone pilots working on the front lines.

One of them is the Dronarium Academy, which helps people learn how to fly drones, understand their lim‐ itations and use them in bat‐ tle.

"The war has definitely changed us," founder Ruslan Bieliaiev said in an emailed statement, noting the Dronarium started its work in 2017.

"From the very beginning, it became clear to us that this is a new format of war and drones would play one of the decisive roles."

Bieliaiev said thousands of pilots have trained on sev‐ eral types of drones over the course of the war with Rus‐ sia. The students span all branches of the Ukrainian forces, he said.

The future is now

Col. Kristen Thompson, a U.S. air force military fellow at the Council on Foreign Re‐ lations, credits Ukraine's nim‐ ble use of drones with helping it hold its own against Russia.

"Ukraine's ability to ac‐ quire and crowdsourc­e com‐ mercial drone technology, tactically modify drones in the field based on real-time feedback and alter tactics to defeat anti-drone systems have proved to be crucial to its war effort," Thompson wrote in a recent analysis.

It's expected drones will continue to be a key part of Ukraine's war effort for some time to come. Last month, President Volodymyr Zelen‐ skyy announced the creation of a new drone-focused branch of the military.

Mykola Bielieskov, a re‐ search fellow at Ukraine's Na‐ tional Institute for Strategic Studies, predicts this move will help the military get a more accurate picture of how drones work best in battle. In a report last month, he writes it could also make it easier to co-ordinate the training of drone pilots.

Military minds outside the country have also been watching what's happening on the Ukrainian battlefiel­d to inform their own thinking on conflict and drones.

Last month, the U.S. army said it would stop trying to develop a next-generation scout helicopter - despite having spent $2 billion US on its efforts to date - because events in Ukraine had made the project obsolete.

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