Ukrainian troops put together to launch a drone in japanese Ukraine on April 30. All through the battle, Ukraine has carried out modern drone assaults by no means seen earlier than in fight.
Genya Savilov/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
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Genya Savilov/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
Ukraine’s current assault on Russian warplanes was audacious, modern and unprecedented. Ukraine’s stealthy strike was carried out with small drones, hidden in vans parked close to a number of Russian air bases.
But Operation Spider’s Internet, orchestrated by the SBU intelligence service, was additionally a part of a recurring theme: Ukraine retains inventing new methods to wage battle with drones, and commonly catches Russia unexpectedly.
“The Ukrainians are the ones innovating and trying these daring and creative attacks. And then the Russians are left scrambling to figure out how to defend against it, and prevent another one,” mentioned Kelly Grieco, who research the air battle on the Stimson Middle assume tank in Washington.
Ukraine has additionally pioneered the usage of drones within the waters of the Black Sea. Final month, a Ukrainian sea drone shot down a Russian warplane — the primary time the sort of assault has been recorded.
Michael Kofman, with Carnegie Endowment for Worldwide Peace in Washington, typically travels to Ukraine and is all the time struck by the tempo of change in drone warfare.
“My experience, going back to Ukraine numerous times during this war, this typically evolves around every 3 to 4 months,” mentioned Kofman.
Ukraine pioneered sea drones a few years in the past. They had been primarily jet skis filled with explosives and guided by distant management. These drones — and extra subtle fashions that adopted — proved so efficient that Russian warships not enterprise wherever close to Ukraine’s Black Coastline.

Ukrainian explosives consultants and law enforcement officials look at components of a Shahed 136 navy drone following an air-attack in Kharkiv on June 4, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Picture by SERGEY BOBOK / AFP) (Picture by SERGEY BOBOK/AFP by way of Getty Photographs)
SERGEY BOBOK/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
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SERGEY BOBOK/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
Monitoring Russian floor troops
Ukraine’s drones are additionally creating large issues for Russia’s floor forces. When the troops collect in massive numbers for an operation, Ukrainian drones are nearly sure to identify them and assault.
“It is becoming harder to move because drones are providing eyes on the battlefield,” mentioned Grieco. “It’s not just being seen, but it’s also very quickly you’re able to act on it. You find lots of people saying, ‘If you move on the battlefield in Ukraine, you’re dead.'”
Russia has many extra troops than Ukraine and is gaining floor incrementally. However Michael Kofman says Ukraine’s drones play a important position in limiting this Russian benefit.
“They add a huge force multiplier,” mentioned Kofman. “This makes it such that the Russian advances on the battlefield come at a very high cost.”
Within the early days of the battle, artillery brought about a lot of the deaths and accidents. Now, he says, it is drones.
“I think it became quite clear [last year] that drones were starting to be responsible for a higher share of the battlefield casualties,” he mentioned.
Ukrainian officers say drones inflict round 70 % of the casualties suffered by each militaries.

A Ukrainian firefighter responds to a drone strike within the northeastern metropolis of Kharkiv on Thursday. Each side have ramped up drone assaults. Russia has fired greater than 400 drones at Ukraine on two separate nights previously week, the biggest numbers within the battle.
OLEKSANDR MAGULA/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
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OLEKSANDR MAGULA/AFP by way of Getty Photographs
Russia builds its personal arsenal
The Russians started the battle with a restricted drone arsenal. However because the Ukrainians hammered them, the Russians realized they wanted assist — and quick.
“There is a history between the Russians and the Iranians in regards to collaboration on military items,” mentioned Omar al-Ghusbi, with the Middle for Superior Protection Research, a Washington analysis institute. He simply wrote an in depth report on the Russia-Iran drone partnership.
Early within the battle, the Russians started shopping for an Iranian drone, the Shahed 136. The Iranian mannequin is taken into account serviceable, however with limitations. It is propeller pushed, comparatively loud and gradual, and typically described as a lawnmower within the sky.
However the primary downside was Iran wasn’t making practically as many as Russia wished. So Russia paid Iran for the expertise, and commenced making a Russian model domestically, generally known as the Geran.
“The most groundbreaking, revolutionary thing about the Geran is the mass production capability as well as the capability of striking targets at a long range,” mentioned al-Ghusbi.
Each international locations mass produce drones
Ukraine says it made greater than 1 million drones final 12 months and plans to construct nicely over 2 million this 12 months. The Russians haven’t supplied numbers, however Ukrainian officers say Russia is catching up shortly and is more likely to produce the same quantity.
On many nights, each international locations now unleash greater than 100 assault drones at one another. Prior to now week, Russia has fired greater than 400 drones at Ukraine on two separate nights — the biggest numbers recorded by both facet.
Each side shoot down, or electronically jam, most incoming drones. However even when 10 or 20 % get by means of, they’ll trigger in depth injury. That is very true in Ukraine, the place many Russian drones strike civilian areas.
“I think it is overwhelming Ukraine’s defensive systems,” mentioned al-Ghusbi. “If you’re launching hundreds of drones, that requires a lot of people on a lot of different weapons systems monitoring the skies.”
Earlier than this battle, drones had been costly, high-end {hardware} with just a few specialised makes use of, however weren’t the primary battlefield weapon.
Now, they’re low cost, disposable, mass-produced weapons reshaping the Russia-Ukraine battle — and lots of extra conflicts but to return.