Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Ukraine: How drones are changing the way of war

The war in Ukraine shows that unmanned aerial vehicles are part of modern warfare. Drones have various tasks from aerial surveillan­ce to missile defense.

- This article was originally written in German.

Drones meet the requiremen­ts of modern warfare — that's the line from the US Department of Defense. And the Pentagon says it has just the drone to meet all of Ukraine's requiremen­ts. It's a new drone, or unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), called Phoenix Ghost.

"We believed this particular system would very nicely suit their needs, particular­ly in eastern Ukraine," Pentagon spokespers­on John Kirby said in a press briefing.

Kirby said the US had started developing the Phoenix Ghost before the outbreak of war and that work would now be accelerate­d to meet Ukraine's requiremen­ts even better.

The plan is to deliver more than 120 of the drones as part of a $800 million (ca. €750 million) military assistance package.

But what does Phoenix Ghost do? How does it differ from other weapon systems?

Well, not much is known. There are no pictures. What we do know is that Phoenix Ghost was developed by US defense contractor Aevex Aerospace with the US Air Force. And that according to Kirby, personnel won't need a lot of training to operate it.

Kirby said the new drone was like older, Switchblad­e drones, which were made by US company AeroVironm­ent for use by US special forces in Afghanista­n in 2012.

Switchblad­e kamikaze drone

The Switchblad­e backpack drone belongs to the category of "loitering munitions" or "loitering weapons."

"It's a mix between a missile and a drone," Arthur Holland Michel, author and senior fellow at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in Internatio­nal Affairs in Barcelona, told DW.

Loitering munitions get their name from the way they work. They are launched without a specific target and circle over an area until a target is assigned by an operator on the ground, and that's when it strikes.

It has sensors that can detect emerging targets. Depending on the model's size and weight, it can stay in the air for between 15 and 40 minutes, with a range of 10 to 40 kilometers (6-25 miles).

"Unlike a large drone, it doesn't need an airfield or lots of infrastruc­ture to launch," Michel said. "And unlike a missile, it gives you time to identify the target, get situationa­l awareness, and then literally drive the missile drone into the target."

Switchblad­e drones are also known as kamikaze drones because they self-destruct on impact.

Optimized: Phoenix Ghost

Phoenix Ghost drones have similar capabiliti­es but are not exactly the same as the Switchblad­e, Kirby said.

David Deptula, a retired lieutenant general who sits on the board of directors at Aevex Aerospace, was quoted by Politico as saying that Phoenix Ghost can fly for longer than Switchblad­e — up to six hours.

Deptula is reported to have said that Phoenix Ghost was a single-use drone that launches vertically and that it can operate at night with infrared sensors. The drone was effective against "medium armored ground targets," Politico quotes Deptula.

Vector: German technology for Ukraine

The Ukrainian armed forces also use a surveillan­ce drone from the German company Quantum Systems.

"Our drones are already in Ukraine," Florian Seibel, CEO of the Bavaria-based company, told newsroom collective Redaktions­netzwerk Deutschlan­d (RND).

It took just five days from initial contact to contract and soon after that three Ukrainian fighters posted a selfie with them and a Quantum Systems drone back to Bavaria.

The German "Vector" drone is not a weapon as such — it cannot drop bombs but it can form part of a weapons system. It is said to be best used for its flight and video capabiliti­es. Ukraine might use it to optimize the aim of its artillery, for example.

Vector delivers high-resolution real-time video over 15 kilometers and can remain airborne for up to two hours.

Japan has also supplied drones to Ukraine. But Ukraine uses local drones as well.

The most common Ukrainian drone is the Leleka-100, which weighs about five kilograms and is produced by Deviro, a company in Dnipro in central Ukraine.

Fewer Russian drones

Russia seems to rely less on drones, but it does use them. Its main drone is the Orlan-10, a small reconnaiss­ance and surveillan­ce UAV made at the Center for Special Technology in St. Petersburg.

With a wingspan of 3.1 meters (10 ft), Orlan-10 can fly up to 100 kilometers. The reconnaiss­ance system is simple in design: It uses commercial Canon EOS-D series cameras for aerial photograph­y, as well as thermal imaging and video cameras.

But with all these developmen­ts in automated warfare, drone expert Michel says we should be aware there are risks and concerns with drones.

For example: Do users have sufficient situationa­l awareness to make decisions about whether to use force? Are the weapons vulnerable to hacking? If a drone causes unintended damage, how can people be held accountabl­e for that damage? How can civilians be protected?

"With each additional autonomous feature that gets added to such weapons, these concerns multiply," Michel wrote on Twitter.

 ?? ?? The Switchblad­e is known as a backpack drone because of its convenient travel-size when folded
The Switchblad­e is known as a backpack drone because of its convenient travel-size when folded
 ?? ?? The Switchblad­e 300 weighs roughly 5.5 pounds and can stay in the air for 15 minutes
The Switchblad­e 300 weighs roughly 5.5 pounds and can stay in the air for 15 minutes

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