South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Creative use of drones helps to lift Ukraine

Devices counter Russia’s advantage in artillery, tanks

- By Andrew E. Kramer

POKROVSKE, Ukraine — A private in the Ukrainian army unfolded the rotors of a common hobby drone and, with practiced calm, attached a grenade to a device that can drop objects and was designed for commercial drone deliveries.

After takeoff, the private, Bohdan Mazhulenko, who goes by the nickname Raccoon, sits casually on the rim of a trench, as green fields pocked with artillery craters scroll by on his tablet.

“Now we will try to find them,” he said of the Russians.

For years, the United States has deployed drones in the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n, and Turkish drones played a decisive role in fighting between Azerbaijan and Armenia in 2020.

But these were large, expensive weapons. Ukraine, in contrast, has adapted a wide array of small craft ranging from quadro-copters, with four rotors, to midsized fixedwing drones, using them to drop bombs and spot artillery targets.

Ukraine still uses advanced military drones supplied by its allies for observatio­n and attack, but along the front line, the bulk of its drone fleet are off-the-shelf products or hand-built in workshops around Ukraine — a myriad of inexpensiv­e, plastic craft adapted to drop grenades or anti-tank munitions.

It’s part of a flourishin­g corner of innovation by Ukraine’s military, which has seized on drone warfare to counter Russia’s advantage in artillery and tanks. Makeshift workshops experiment with 3D-printed materials, and Ukrainian coders have

made workaround­s for electronic countermea­sures the Russians use to track radio signals. The fixed-wing Punisher, a high-end military drone manufactur­ed in Ukraine, can strike from more than 30 miles away.

Ukraine has long embraced drone warfare to try to achieve a technologi­cal edge as it fought as an underdog against Russianbac­ked separatist­s in the war in the country’s east. Before Russia’s invasion in February, Ukraine’s military bought Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 drones, the most lethal pilotless craft in the country’s arsenal. In a sign of appreciati­on, one Ukrainian woman named her baby boy Bayraktar.

In a bit of innovative marketing that earns some money too, the Ukrainian company that makes the Punisher drone allows people to pay about $30 to send a written message on the bombs it drops. The

ploy taps into people’s anger at Russia, said Yevhen Bulatsev, a founder of the company, UA Dynamics, which donates the drones to the military.

After Russia invaded, the United States and European allies donated strike and observatio­n drones to Ukraine, including the Switchblad­e, an American munition that hovers over a battlefiel­d until a tank or other target comes into view, then dives down to blow it up.

Out in the fields and tree lines of eastern Ukraine, drones have become ubiquitous on the Ukrainian side, outnumberi­ng, soldiers say, Russia’s arsenal of pilotless craft. Drones have almost wholly replaced reconnaiss­ance patrols and are used daily to drop ordnance.

The Ukrainians call the drones buzzing back and forth over no-man’s-land “mosquitoes.” And on a recent, sweltering summer

afternoon at a position dug into a tree line of oak and acacia, a drone strike was the only military action, other than distant artillery shelling.

“You don’t always find personnel, but you can hit trenches or equipment,” Mazhulenko said as he sent the drone off to find a target. The battery allows it to hover for about 10 minutes.

Mazhulenko’s controller beeped. Russian electronic countermea­sures had jammed the drone’s signal. On autopilot, the drone tried to fly back to the Ukrainian position. The private regained control and sent it toward Russian lines again.

“Come on, come on, Raccoon, drop it,” Mazhulenko’s comrades urged, watching the screen over his shoulder.

The radio crackled from another Ukrainian position that heard the buzzing, and Mazhulenko’s group radioed back not to worry — it is

“our mosquito.”

A Russian trench came into view. But the signal went down again. Out of battery, he guided the drone back, catching it in the air with one hand, then pulling the detonator from the grenade. Such flights are repeated several times a day.

Drones are a significan­t bright spot for the Ukrainian army. Russia has an effective observatio­n drone, the Orlan-10, used to direct artillery fire at Ukrainian targets, but no effective, long-range strike drone akin to the Bayraktar — a notable shortcomin­g for a major military power. Russian troops also fly consumer drones but have fewer of them, Ukrainian soldiers say.

The Russian army instead leans on blunt force, deploying legacy heavy weaponry like artillery and tanks, and has been less nimble in adapting consumer technology to the battlefiel­d. It also lacks the flow of small commercial drones donated by nongovernm­ental groups and even relatives and friends of soldiers that have poured to Ukrainian frontline units.

Mazhulenko’s steady hand notwithsta­nding, rigging a hobby drone to drop explosives is a nervewrack­ing task.

Preparing the grenade to explode at its target requires dismantlin­g safety features. On the most common type of grenade used by Ukrainian drone operators, three safety devices, including a small metal plate protecting the firing pin from accidental­ly striking the primer, are taken out and thrown away. This is done with hacksaws and pliers in workshops.

Accidents have happened, said Taras Chyorny, a drone armorer working in Kyiv, recalling colleagues who had lost fingers while handling the grenades. He has experiment­ed with various makeshift detonators and settled on a nail molded into Play-Doh kneaded into the shape of a nose cone. The downside: The grenade might explode if dropped while handling.

“It’s better to do it in an atmosphere that is calm,” he said of the tinkering.

The end result is a black tube, like a fat cigar. The Ukrainians glue on aerodynami­c fins — sometimes made from a 3D printer — to cause the grenade to drop straight down, improving accuracy.

Small adaptation­s to tactics, designs of the explosive, flight patterns and launch and retrieval have all improved over the past five months, according to a commander in an Azov unit that flies drones, who used the nickname Botsman.

“There’s a boom in experiment­ation,” he said. With the risk of drones buzzing over their positions at any time, he said, Russian soldiers “cannot eat and cannot sleep. The stress leads them to make mistakes.”

 ?? DAVID GUTTENFELD­ER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ukrainian troops practice attaching a dummy bomb to the undercarri­age of a Punisher, a high-end fixed-wing military drone manufactur­ed in Ukraine, on July 25 in an open field on the outskirts of Kyiv.
DAVID GUTTENFELD­ER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Ukrainian troops practice attaching a dummy bomb to the undercarri­age of a Punisher, a high-end fixed-wing military drone manufactur­ed in Ukraine, on July 25 in an open field on the outskirts of Kyiv.

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