WHEN KYIV-BORN ENGINEER Yaroslav Azhnyuk thinks in regards to the future, his thoughts conjures up dystopian photographs. He talks about “swarms of autonomous drones carrying different autonomous drones to guard them in opposition to autonomous drones, which are attempting to intercept them, managed by AI agents overseen by a human normal someplace.” He additionally imagines flotillas of autonomous submarines, every carrying a whole lot of drones, instantly rising off the coast of California or Nice Britain and discharging their cargoes en masse to the sky.
“How do you shield from that?” he asks as we converse in late December 2025; me at my quiet residence workplace in London, he in Kyiv, which is bracing for one more wave of missile attacks.
Azhnyuk just isn’t an alarmist. He cofounded and was previously CEO of Petcube, a California-based firm that makes use of sensible cameras and an app to let pet house owners keep watch over their beloved creatures left alone at residence. A self-described “liberal man who didn’t even obtain army coaching,” Azhnyuk modified his thoughts about growing military tech within the months following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. By 2023, he had relinquished his CEO position at Petcube to do what many Ukrainian technologists have completed—to assist defend his nation in opposition to a mightier aggressor.
It took some time for him to determine what, precisely, he needs to be doing. He didn’t be a part of the army, however by pals on the entrance line, he witnessed how, out of desperation, Ukrainian troops turned to off-the-shelf shopper drones to make up for his or her nation’s lack of artillery.
Ukrainian troops first started utilizing drones for battlefield surveillance, however inside just a few months they discovered the best way to strap explosives onto them and switch them into efficient, low-cost killing machines. Little did they know they had been fomenting a revolution in warfare.
The Ukrainian robotics firm The Fourth Legislation produces an autonomy module [above] that makes use of optics and AI to information a drone to its goal. Yaroslav Azhnyuk [top, in light shirt], founder and CEO of The Fourth Legislation, describes a developmental drone with autonomous capabilities to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.Prime: THE PRESIDENTIAL OFFICE OF UKRAINE; Backside: THE FOURTH LAW
That revolution was on show final month, because the U.S. and Israel went to warfare with Iran. It quickly turned clear that assault drones are being extensively utilized by either side. Iran, for instance, is relying closely on the Shahed drones that the nation invented and that are actually additionally being manufactured in Russia and launched by the 1000’s each month in opposition to Ukraine.
An intensive evaluation of the Center East battle will take a while to emerge. And so to grasp the course of this new approach of warfare, look to Ukraine, the place its subsequent part—autonomy—is already beginning to become visible. Outnumbered by the Russians and going through more and more subtle jamming and spoofing geared toward inflicting the drones to veer astray or fall out of the sky, Ukrainian technologists realized as early as 2023 that what may actually win the warfare was autonomy. Autonomous operation means a drone isn’t being flown by a distant pilot, and due to this fact there’s no communications hyperlink to that pilot that may be severed or spoofed, rendering the drone ineffective.
By late 2023, Azhnyuk got down to assist make that imaginative and prescient a actuality. He based two firms, The Fourth Law and Odd Systems, the primary to develop AI algorithms to assist drones overcome jamming throughout last method, the second to construct thermal cameras to assist these drones higher sense their environment.
“I moved from making units that throw treats to canines to creating units that throw explosives on Russian occupants,” Azhnyuk quips.
Since then, The Fourth Legislation has dispatched “greater than 1000’s” of autonomy modules to troops in jap Ukraine (it declines to provide a extra particular determine), which could be retrofitted on present drones to take over navigation in the course of the last method to the goal. Azhnyuk says the autonomy modules, value round US $50, enhance the drone-strike success fee by as much as 4 occasions that of purely operator-controlled drones.
And that’s only the start. Azhnyuk is one in every of 1000’s of builders, together with some who relocated from Western international locations, who’re making use of their abilities and different assets to advancing the drone expertise that’s the defining attribute of the warfare in Ukraine. This eclectic group of startups and founders contains Eric Schmidt, the former Google CEO, whose firm Swift Beat is churning out autonomous drones and modules for Ukrainian forces. The frenetic tempo of tech improvement helps a scrappy, progressive underdog maintain at bay a a lot bigger and better-equipped foe.
All of this improvement is careening towards AI-based programs that allow drones to navigate by recognizing options within the terrain, lock on to and chase targets with out an operator’s steerage, and finally alternate data with one another by mesh networks, forming self-organizing robotic kamikaze swarms. Such an assault swarm could be commanded by a single operator from a protected distance.
In accordance with some experiences, autonomous swarming expertise can also be being developed for sea drones. Ukraine has had some notable successes with sea drones, which have reportedly destroyed or broken around a dozen Russian vessels.
The Skynode X system, from Auterion, gives a level of autonomy to a drone.AUTERION
For Ukraine, swarming can resolve a serious drawback that places the nation at an obstacle in opposition to Russia—the dearth of personnel. Autonomy is “the one most impactful protection expertise of this century,” says Azhnyuk. “The second this occurs, you shift from a manpower problem to a manufacturing problem, which is rather more manageable,” he provides.
The autonomous warfare future envisioned by Azhnyuk and others just isn’t but a actuality. However Marc Lange, a German protection analyst and enterprise strategist, believes that “an inflection level” is already in view. Past it, “issues can be so dramatically totally different,” he says.
“Ukraine fairly quickly realized that if the operator-to-drone ratio could be shifted from one-to-one to one-to-many, that creates nice economies of scale and an incredible price alternate ratio,” Lange provides. “The second one operator can launch 100, 50, and even simply 20 drones without delay, this fully modifications the economics of the warfare.”
Drones With a View
For some time, jammers that sever the radio hyperlinks between drones and operators or that spoof GPS receivers had been in a position to present pretty dependable protection in opposition to human-controlled first-person-view assault drones (FPVs). However as autonomous navigation progressed, these digital shields have step by step turn out to be much less efficient. Defenders should now take care of unjammable drones—ones which can be connected to hair-thin optical fibers or which can be able to finding their way to their targets with out exterior steerage. On this rising wrestle, the defenders’ observe information aren’t very encouraging: The standard countermeasure is to attempt to shoot down the attacking drone with a service weapon. It’s hardly ever profitable.
A truck outfitted with signal-jamming gear drives below antidrone nets close to Oleksandriya, in jap Ukraine, on 2 October 2025.ED JONES/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
“The attackers acquire an immense benefit from unmanned programs,” says Lange. “You’ll be able to have a drone pop up from wherever and it could wreak havoc. However from autonomy, they acquire much more.”
The self-navigating drones depend on image-recognition algorithms which have been round for over a decade, says Lange. And the mass deployments of drones on Ukrainian battlefields are enabling each Russian and Ukrainian technologists to create huge datasets that enhance the coaching and precision of these AI algorithms.
A Ukrainian land robotic, the Ravlyk, could be outfitted with a machine gun.
Whereas uncrewed aerial automobiles (UAVs) have obtained essentially the most consideration, the Ukrainian army can also be deploying dozens of various sorts of drones on land and sea. Ukraine, scuffling with the scarcity of infantry personnel, started engaged on changing a portion of human troopers with wheeled ground robots in 2024. As of early 2026, 1000’s of floor robots are crawling throughout the grey zone alongside the entrance line in Jap Ukraine. Most are used to ship provides to the entrance line or to assist evacuate the wounded, however some “killer” floor robots fitted with turrets and remotely managed machine weapons have additionally been examined.
In mid-February, Ukrainian authorities launched a video of a Ukrainian floor robotic utilizing its thermal digicam to detect a Russian soldier at the hours of darkness of the night time after which kill the invader with a spherical from a heavy machine gun. Thus far these robots are principally managed by a human operator, however the makers of those uncrewed floor automobiles say their programs are able to fundamental autonomous operations, akin to returning to base when radio connection is misplaced. The objective is to allow them to swarm in order that one operator controls not one, however a complete herd of mesh-connected killer robots.
However Bryan Clark, senior fellow and director of the Heart for Protection Ideas and Expertise on the Hudson Institute, questions how rapidly floor robots’ skills can progress. “Floor environments are very tough to navigate in due to the terrain it’s important to handle,” he says. “The road of sight for the sensors on the bottom automobiles is admittedly constrained due to terrain, whereas an air car can see every thing round it.”
To realize autonomy, maritime drones, too, would require navigational approaches past AI-based image recognition, probably primarily based on star positions or digital alerts from radios and cell towers which can be inside attain, says Clark. Such applied sciences are nonetheless being developed or are in a comparatively early operational stage.
How the Shaheds Bought Higher
Russia just isn’t lagging behind. In reality, some analysts imagine its autonomous systems could also be barely forward of Ukraine’s. For an excellent instance of the Russian army’s fast evolution, they are saying, contemplate the long-range Iranian-designed Shahed drones. Since 2022, Russia has been utilizing them to assault Ukrainian cities and different targets a whole lot of kilometers from the entrance line. “At first, Shaheds simply had a body, a motor, and an inertial navigation system,” Oleksii Solntsev, CEO of Ukrainian protection tech startup MaXon Programs, tells me. “They was once imprecise and fairly silly. However they’re turning into increasingly more autonomous.” Solntsev based MaXon Programs in late 2024 to assist shield Ukrainian civilians from the rising menace of Shahed raids.
A Russian Geran-2 drone, primarily based on the Iranian Shahed-136, flies over Kyiv throughout an assault on 27 December 2025.SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
First produced in Iran in the 2010s, Shaheds can carry 90-kilogram warheads up to 650 km (50-kg warheads can go twice as far). They cost around $35,000 per unit, in comparison with a few million {dollars}, at the very least, for a ballistic missile. The low price permits Russia to fabricate Shaheds in excessive portions, unleashing total fleets onto Ukrainian cities and infrastructure almost every night.
The early Shaheds had been in a position to attain a preprogrammed location primarily based on satellite-navigation coordinates. Even one in every of these early fashions may incessantly overcome the jamming of satellite-navigation alerts with the assistance of an onboard inertial navigation unit. This was basically a dead-reckoning system of accelerators and gyroscopes that estimate the drone’s place from continuous measurements of its motions.
Within the Donetsk Area, on 15 August 2025, a Ukrainian soldier hunts for Shaheds and different drones with a thermalimaging system connected to a ZU23 23-millimeter antiaircraft gun.KOSTYANTYN LIBEROV/LIBKOS/GETTY IMAGES
Ukrainian protection forces discovered to down Shaheds with heavy machine weapons, however as Russia continued to innovate, the every day onslaughts began to turn out to be increasingly effective.
At this time’s Shaheds fly sooner and better, and due to this fact are harder to detect and take down. Between January 2024 and August 2025, the variety of Shaheds and Shahed-type assault drones launched by Russia into Ukraine per 30 days increased more than tenfold, from 334 to greater than 4,000. In 2025, Ukraine discovered AI-enabling Nvidia chipsets in wreckages of Shaheds, in addition to thermal-vision modules able to locking onto targets at night time.
“Now, they’re interconnected, which permits them to alternate data with one another,” Solntsev says. “Additionally they have cameras that enable them to autonomously navigate to things. Quickly they are going to have the ability to inform one another to keep away from a jammed area or an space the place one in every of them received intercepted.”
These Russian-manufactured Shaheds, which Russian forces name Geran-2s, are considered extra succesful than the backyard selection Shahed-136s that Iran has these days been launching in opposition to targets all through the Center East. Even the comparatively primitive Shahed-136s have completed appreciable injury, in accordance with press accounts.
These Shahed successes could accrue, at the very least partially, from the truth that the USA and Israel lack Ukraine’s lengthy expertise with fending them off. In simply two days in early March, upward of a thousand drones, principally Shaheds, had been launched in opposition to U.S. and Israeli targets, with hundreds of them reportedly finding their marks.
One assault, caught on videotape, exhibits a Shahed destroying a radar dome on the U.S. navy base in Manama, Bahrain. U.S. forces had been understood to be attempting to fend off the drones by placing launch platforms, dispatching fighter plane to shoot them down, and through the use of some extraordinarily pricey air-defense interceptors, together with ones meant to down ballistic missiles. On 4 March, CNN reported that in a congressional briefing the day earlier than, high U.S. protection officers, together with Secretary of Protection Pete Hegseth, acknowledged that U.S. air defenses weren’t maintaining with the onslaught of Shahed drones.
Russian V2U assault drones are outfitted with Nvidia processors and run computer-vision software program and AI algorithms to allow the drones to navigate autonomously.GUR OF THE MINISTRY OF DEFENSE OF UKRAINE
Russia can also be beginning to subject a more recent technology of assault drones. Considered one of these, the V2U, has been used to strike targets within the Sumy area of northeastern Ukraine. The V2U drones are outfitted with Nvidia Jetson Orin processors and run pc-imaginative and prescient software program and AI algorithms that enable the drones to navigate even the place satellite tv for pc navigation is jammed.
The sale of Nvidia chips to Russia is banned below U.S. sanctions in opposition to the nation. Nevertheless, press experiences recommend that the chips are attending to Russia via intermediaries in India.
Antidrone Programs Step Up
MaXon Programs is one in every of a number of firms working to fend off the nightly drone onslaught. Inside one 12 months, the corporate developed and battle-tested a Shahed interception system that hints on the sci-fi future envisioned by Azhnyuk. For a system to be able to reliably defending in opposition to autonomous weaponry, it, too, must be autonomous.
MaXon’s answer consists of floor turrets scanning the sky with infrared sensors, with extra enter from a community of radars that detects approaching Shahed drones at distances of, usually, 12 to 16 km. The turrets hearth autonomous fixed-winged interceptor drones, fitted with explosive warheads, towards the approaching Shaheds at speeds of practically 300 km/h. To spice up the possibilities of profitable interception, MaXon is also fielding an airborne anti-Shahed fortification system consisting of helium-filled aerostats hovering above the town that dispatch the interceptors from a better altitude.
“We are attempting to extend the extent of automation of the system in comparison with present options,” says Solntsev. “We want automated detection, automated takeoff, and automated mid-track steerage in order that we will information the interceptor earlier than it could itself flock the goal.”
An interceptor drone, a part of the U.S. MEROPS defensive system, is examined in Poland on 18 November 2025.WOJTEK RADWANSKI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
In November 2025, the Ukrainian army introduced it had been conducting profitable trials of the Merops Shahed drone interceptor system developed by the U.S. startup Project Eagle, one other of former Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s Ukraine protection ventures. Just like the MaXon gear, the system can function largely autonomously and has to date downed over 1,000 Shaheds.
What Works within the Lab Doesn’t Essentially Fly on the Battlefield
Regardless of the progress on either side, analysts say that the form of robotic warfare imagined by Azhnyuk received’t be a actuality for years.
“The software program for drone collaboration is there,” says Kate Bondar, a former coverage advisor for the Ukrainian authorities and at present a analysis fellow on the U.S. Center for Strategic and International Studies. “Drones can fly in labs, however in actual life, [the forces] are afraid to deploy them as a result of the danger of a mistake is just too excessive,” she provides.
Ukrainian troopers watch a GOR reconnaissance drone take to the sky close to Pokrovsk within the Donetsk area, on 10 March 2025.ANDRIY DUBCHAK/FRONTLINER/GETTY IMAGES
In Bondar’s view, highly effective AI-equipped drones received’t be deployed in giant numbers given the present costs for high-end processors and different superior parts. And, she provides, the extra autonomous the system must be, the dearer are the processors and sensors it will need to have. “For these low cost assault drones that fly solely as soon as, you don’t set up a high-resolution digicam that [has] the decision for AI to see correctly,” she says. “[You install] the most affordable digicam. You don’t need costly chips that may run AI algorithms both. Till we will obtain this steadiness of technological sophistication, when a system can conduct a mission however on the lowest value potential, it received’t be deployed en masse.”
Whereas present AI programs are doing an excellent job recognizing and following giant objects like Shaheds or tanks, consultants query their means to reliably distinguish and pursue smaller and extra nimble or inconspicuous targets. “After we’re moving into extra particular questions, like can it distinguish a Russian soldier from a Ukrainian soldier or at the very least a soldier from a civilian? The reply is not any,” says Bondar. “Additionally, it’s one factor to trace a tank, and it’s one other to trace squaddies driving buggies and bikes which can be shifting very quick. That’s actually difficult for AI to trace and strike exactly.”
Clark, on the Hudson Institute, says that though the AI algorithms used to information the Russian and Ukrainian drones are “fairly good,” they depend on data offered bysensors that “aren’t ok.” “You want multiphenomenology sensors which can be ready to take a look at infrared and visible and, in some circumstances, totally different elements of the infrared spectrum to have the ability to determine if one thing is a decoy or actual goal,” he says.
German protection analyst Lange agrees that proper now, battlefield AI image-recognition programs are too simply fooled. “If you happen to compress actuality right into a 2D picture, a number of issues could be simply camouflaged—like what Russia did lately, after they began drawing birds on the again of their drones,” he says.
Autonomy Stays Elusive on the Floor and at Sea, Too
To make Ukraine’s rising uncrewed floor automobiles (UGVs) equally self-sufficient can be an excellent better activity, in Clark’s view. Nonetheless,
Bondar expects main advances to materialize inside the subsequent a number of years, even when people are nonetheless going to be a part of the deci-sion-making loop.
A cellular electronic-warfare system constructed by PiranhaTech is demonstrated close to Kyiv on 21 October 2025.DANYLO ANTONIUK/ANADOLU/GETTY IMAGES
“I believe in two or three years, we may have fairly good full autonomy, at the very least in good climate circumstances,” she says, referring to aerial drones in particular. “People will nonetheless be within the loop for some years, just because there are such a lot of unpredictable conditions once you want an intervention. We received’t have the ability to totally depend on the machine for at the very least one other 10 or 15 years.”
Ukrainian defenders are apprehensive about that autonomous future. The increase of drone innovation has come hand in hand with the event of subtle jamming and radio-frequency detection programs. However a number of that innovation will turn out to be out of date as soon as the pendulum swings away from human management. Ukrainians received their first style of coping with unjammable drones in mid-2024, when Russia started rolling out fiber-optic tethered drones. Now they should brace for a menace on a a lot bigger scale.
An experimental drone is demonstrated on the Brave1 defense-tech incubator in Kyiv.DANYLO DUBCHAK/FRONTLINER/GETTY IMAGES
“At this time, we’ve got a state of affairs the place we’ve got numerous alerts on the battlefield, however within the close to future, in possibly two to 5 years, UAVs will not be going to be sending any alerts,” says Oleksandr Barabash, CTO of Falcons, a Ukrainian startup that has developed a wise radio-frequency detection system succesful of unveiling exact places of enemy radio sources akin to drones, management stations, and jammers.
Final September, Falcons secured funding from the U.S.-based dual-use tech fund Green Flag Ventures to scale manufacturing of its expertise and work towards NATO certification. However Barabash admits that its system, like all applied sciences fielded in Ukrainian warfare zones, has an expiration date. As an alternative of radio-frequency detectors, Barabash thinks, the following R&D push must concentrate on passive radar programs able to figuring out small and fast-moving targets primarily based on the sign from sources like TV towers or radio transmitters that propagate by the surroundings and are mirrored by these shifting targets. Passive radars have a major benefit within the warfare zone, in accordance with Barabash. Since they don’t emit their very own sign, they’ll’t be that simply found by the enemy.
“Lively radar is emitting alerts, so if you’re utilizing lively radars, you’re goal No. 1 on the entrance line,” Barabash says.
Bondar, alternatively, thinks that the elevated onboard compute energy wanted for AI-controlled drones will, by itself, generate sufficient electromagnetic radiation to stop autonomous drones from ever working fully undetectably.
“You’ll be able to have full autonomy, however you’ll nonetheless have programs onboard that emit electromagnetic radiation or warmth that may be detected,” says Bondar. “Batteries emit electromagnetic radiation, motors emit warmth, and [that heat can be] seen in infrared from distant. You simply have to have the proper sensors to have the ability to determine it upfront.” She provides that that takeaway is “how succesful modern detection programs have turn out to be and the way technically difficult it’s to design drones that may reliably function within the Ukrainian battlefield surroundings.”
There Will Be Nowhere to Conceal from Autonomous Drones
When autonomous drones turn out to be a regular weapon of warfare, their menace will lengthen far past the battlefields of Ukraine. Autonomous turrets and drone-interceptor fortification would possibly quickly dot the perimeter of European cities, significantly within the jap a part of the continent.
A hard and fast-wing drone is examined in Ukraine in April 2025.ANDREWKRAVCHENKO/BLOOMBERG/GETTY IMAGES
Nefarious actors from everywhere in the world have carefully watched Ukraine and brought notes, warns Lange. At this time, FPV drones are getting used by Islamic terrorists in Africa and Mexican drug cartels to combat in opposition to native authorities.
When autonomous killing machines turn out to be broadly out there, it’s doubtless that no metropolis can be protected. “We’d see nets above metropolis facilities, defending civilian streets,” Lange says. “In each case, the West wants to begin performing comparable kinetic-defense improvement that we see in Ukraine. Very fast iteration and testing cycles to search out options.”
Azhnyuk is worried that the historic defenders of Europe—the United States and the European international locations themselves—are falling behind. “We’re at risk,” he says. Whereas Russia and Ukraine made main strides of their drones and countermeasures over the previous 12 months, “Europe and the USA have progressed, within the best-case state of affairs, from the winter-of-2022 expertise to the summer-of-2022 expertise.
“The hole is getting wider,” he warns. “I believe the following few years are very harmful for the safety of Europe.”
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