Current:Home > MyUkraine’s 24/7 battlefield drone operation: Reporter's Notebook -FutureFinance
Ukraine’s 24/7 battlefield drone operation: Reporter's Notebook
View
Date:2025-04-17 12:08:42
Drone warfare in Ukraine is quickly evolving, according to Robert “Madyar,” a former Ukrainian businessman who now commands one of the country’s best known military drone regiments.
The “UAV Birds of Madyar” operation started off with a handful of commercial off-the-shelf drones in the early days of the war, which began in February 2022.
“We wanted to see who was shooting at us and killing us,” “Madyar” explained to ABC News during an interview at his command center in a secret location in eastern Ukraine.
Today, his soldiers, who sit in front of a wall of screens inside the regiment’s headquarters, can, at any one time, tap into dozens of separate live drone video feeds. Each one gives his soldiers a view of the frontlines in their sector.
One of the men, Denys, describes himself as “the bridge” between different military components, feeding information to Ukrainian intelligence, artillery units and troops on the ground.
A short drive away, hidden in a narrow strip of woodland is one of the regiment’s mobile reconnaissance units.
Their van is parked among the trees and sheltered from view from enemy drones by a large green camouflage net.
Inside the back of the van is another array of screens. Some are tablet-sized, some are the size of a large-screen TV.
The team repeatedly flies its fixed-wing propeller-propelled UAV, complete with a high-resolution camera, over the Russian lines.
The drone has a range of about 20 miles, easily enough to fly well beyond enemy positions.
Meanwhile, back inside their van, the men then scour the drone’s video feed, hunting for high-value enemy targets such as Russian artillery pieces or trucks loaded with ammunition.
The reconnaissance teams fly their drones day and night, logging the coordinates of each potential target, together with an image, on an interactive map.
One single mission can yield as many as 30 separate targets, one soldier boasts, and the information about a target is sent to the unit’s commanders “as quickly as possible,” he adds.
“Because while those cars, vehicles and tanks are still there, we can hit them,” he says.
Information about a very high value target might be passed to Ukrainian artillery units operating nearby.
However, the UAV Birds of Madyar regiment also has its own attack drone units, which, like the reconnaissance teams, are hidden in woodland in the same area of the battle zone.
Engineering companies in Ukraine are constantly designing and manufacturing new types of drones to use in the war, like the Punisher drone.
The Punisher has a range of 25 miles and can carry five and a half pounds of explosive inside a small bomb, which is attached to the underside of the drone.
The small bomb isn’t enough to destroy a Russian armored vehicle, however the aim is to render it inoperable by causing enough damage.
Before each mission, the coordinates of a target are programmed into the drone and the payload is released as it flies overhead.
Unlike other drones, the Punisher does not emit an electronic signal which enemy units could detect, say the soldiers.
In flight it is silent and, and like many drones, hard to spot once it is airborne.
However, electronic jamming by Russian forces sometimes prevents the Punisher from dropping its payload at the right moment, which can cause it to miss its target.
ABC News watched as a Punisher drone dropped its small bomb over a Russian checkpoint as it missed the main target area and failed to cause any damage.
The drone team showed us other videos, which, according to the soldiers, showed Punisher drones earlier that morning accurately dropping their payload onto Russian military vehicles.
The Ukrainian UAV regiment also attaches explosives to First-Person View (FPV) drones.
An FPV drone pilot wears a headset which gives him or her the view from the drone’s camera, allowing the drone to be flown and maneuvered at high speed.
The Ukrainian military flies FPV drones, packed with explosives, into a target and it detonates on impact. The drone reconnaissance unit showed ABC News another video showing fire, smoke and destruction across an area of woodland. The Ukrainian soldiers said it showed the aftermath of an FPV drone attack on a Russian artillery piece, which had been destroyed the previous night.
The reconnaissance teams and attack drone teams rely on Starlink satellites for their communications.
“Lots of things have been said about Elon Musk,” Commander Robert “Madyar” tells us. “But without Starlink, we would have lost the war.”
However, producing the most efficient reconnaissance and attack drones, with the best network of military experts to operate them is only part of the challenge because the ability of the Russian military to jam and spoof drones is also a real problem.
Jamming is when a transmission-blocking signal is used to disrupt communications between a drone and its pilot. Spoofing is when someone emits a signal, confusing your drone and taking control of it remotely by impersonating its remote control.
Commander Madyar said access to more Western jamming and spoofing technologies were needed to help Ukraine win the drone battle, and, ultimately, the war.
As one of his colleagues put it, “whoever wins the tech race, wins the war.”
Several Ukrainian commanders have warned that Russia has a large stock of its explosive attack Lancet drones which are proving to be a big threat to Ukrainian forces during its counteroffensive.
Meanwhile, Ukraine is increasing its own production of reconnaissance and attack drones.
However, the bombs for the Punisher drones are “still being produced by our experts in a garage,” drone commander Robert Madyar said.
Madyar, a former millionaire grain trader with a passion for deep sea fishing, said the continuation of Western military support for Ukraine would be key and he vowed that his team, made-up of people who were only in non-military professions before the war, would “keep fighting to the last breath.”
“If we have to move to the Carpathians (mountains in western Ukraine) and be partisans there, then this is what we will do”, he told ABC News. “But this will mean that the Russian army will be at the gate of NATO. This is what we are fighting for.”
veryGood! (12)
Related
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Why we love Bards Alley Bookshop: 'Curated literature and whimsical expressions of life'
- Powerful ethnic militia in Myanmar repatriates 1,200 Chinese suspected of involvement in cybercrime
- Terrorism suspect who escaped from London prison is captured while riding a bike
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis apologize for ‘pain’ their letters on behalf of Danny Masterson caused
- Complex cave rescue looms in Turkey as American Mark Dickey stuck 3,200 feet inside Morca cave
- Mysterious golden egg found 2 miles deep on ocean floor off Alaska — and scientists still don't know what it is
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Mary Kay Letourneau and Vili Fualaau's Daughter Is Pregnant With First Baby
Ranking
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Russia is turning to old ally North Korea to resupply its arsenal for the war in Ukraine
- Prince Harry arrives in Germany to open Invictus Games for veterans
- Japan’s foreign minister to visit war-torn Ukraine with business leaders to discuss reconstruction
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Unpacking Kevin Costner's Surprisingly Messy Divorce From Christine Baumgartner
- Crashing the party: Daniil Medvedev upsets Carlos Alcaraz to reach US Open final
- Governor suspends right to carry firearms in public in this city due to gun violence
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
Country singer Zach Bryan says he was arrested and briefly held in jail: I was an idiot
College football Week 2 highlights: Alabama-Texas score, best action from Saturday
The Secret to Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne's 40-Year Marriage Revealed
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Arab American stories interconnect in the new collection, 'Dearborn'
Tribal nations face less accurate, more limited 2020 census data because of privacy methods
Terrorism suspect who escaped from London prison is captured while riding a bike