Ukrainian forces launched almost 17,000 ground drone logistics and medical evacuation missions in June alone. That number is expected to increase, with a concomitant rise in defense and attack missions carried out by ground drones that can hold position at the front for a week without a battery charge. Again, this is not some theoretical exercise: it is a plan being made operational. JL
Tereza Pultarova reports in IEEE Spectrum and Namar Hlamazda reports in Gwara Media:
Tereza Pultarova reports in IEEE Spectrum and Namar Hlamazda reports in Gwara Media:
In April, April, Ukraine’s President Zelenskyy signed an order to procure 50,000 UGVs for Ukraine’s military by the end of 2026. In June, Ukrainian troops conducted more than 16,600 logistics and evacuation missions using ground drones. Ukraine’s goal is to transfer 100% of frontline logistics to robotic systems. More than 22,000 ground drones have already been contracted for 2026. But this is “the year of the assault UGV.” Ukrainian tactics combine UGVs with real-time surveillance from aerial drones. Recon data are then used by remote operators who guide UGVs as they stalk, corner, and shoot to kill. Ground robots can be controlled from as far as 100 kilometers away using Starlink, or networked radios. UGVs can lurk in position for up to one week without needing a battery charge. "We can replace many troops with sensors, service robots and UGVs, and will not need as many for logistics. At some point, we could have only robots in the kill zone.”























