Drones dominate Ukraine battlefield four years into fighting

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Thousands of precision drones roam the skies daily across an expanding “kill zone” along the 1,200km front.

Thousands of precision drones roam the skies daily across an expanding “kill zone” along the 1,200km front.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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KHARKIV REGION, Ukraine - Ukrainian tank platoon commander Valentyn Bohdanov remembers a time earlier in Russia’s war when heavy armour fought pitched battles like boxers trading punches in the ring.

Four years into the conflict, he says such showdowns are all but impossible.

Small but deadly “first-person-view” drones now dominate the skies above Ukraine’s battlefields, making it extremely risky for armoured vehicles to move, said the senior sergeant in Ukraine’s 127th Separate Heavy Mechanised Kharkiv Brigade.

“They won’t enter an open field: they’ll be peppered by FPV drones and stronger ones,” said the 36-year-old, who goes by the military call sign “Bodia”.

These days, his T-72 tank, which was captured from the Russians, remains hidden beneath webbing near the snowy frontline in the north-east region of Kharkiv – reduced, effectively, to a static piece of artillery.

Mr Bohdanov, who has served since early in

Moscow’s February 2022 invasion

, has seen traditional military tactics upended as technology has forced both sides to make new battlefield calculations.

Thousands of precision drones, often costing only several hundred dollars apiece, roam the skies daily across an expanding “kill zone” along the 1,200km front.

They are joined by a growing range of more powerful drones capable of flying farther and carrying heavier payloads.

The ever-present threat from the sky makes virtually any movement – from troop rotations and evacuations to tank assaults – increasingly deadly.

Drone-inflicted casualties have jumped from less than 10 per cent of the total in 2022 to up to 80 per cent in 2025, as much of the war has morphed into an “air battle of mutual denial”, according to a report by the French Institute of International Relations published in February.

It described the shift as part of “a new logic of warfare defined by speed of innovation, rapid adaptation, and seamless technological integration” that would include other technologies including artificial intelligence.

‘In the air all the time’

Mobile drone-hunting teams, like the one Reuters recently visited near the besieged eastern city of Kostiantynivka, are now commonplace.

Patrolling roads shrouded in anti-drone netting and littered with the charred remains of vehicles, members are on constant alert for drones ranging from FPVs to larger, long-range Shaheds.

They are tasked with defending supply routes critical for troops in a section of the front line where Russia is advancing.

Drone-hunter “Marine” of the 93rd Mechanised Brigade, who introduced himself by his call sign, recalled once seeing 54 drones attack a single target within one hour.

“Three would circle, another would attack while the others join,” he said. “They’re in the air like that all the time, not letting anyone get away.”

Many soldiers who have been directly under fire describe being overwhelmed by the speed and agility of FPVs.

Footage of their strikes now saturate social media on both sides.

Speaking in a military hospital in the north-eastern city of Kharkiv, Mr Andriy Meskov said he had been returning from an assignment when he and two comrades were attacked by drones that whizzed after them as they sought cover.

“We ran into a building, not really expecting that it would follow us,” said Mr Meskov, 42, himself a drone pilot in the 151st Separate Reconnaissance-Strike Battalion.

“The speed of a human being doesn’t compare to the speed of an FPV drone, so I didn’t even have time to pick up my rifle to shoot at it.”

Mr Meskov’s knee was shattered when a drone ricocheted off his helmet and exploded near his leg.

He was eventually evacuated for medical treatment on an unmanned ground vehicle.

Such ground drones are increasingly employed for tasks ranging from logistics to evacuations, to minimise casualties.

They carried out more than 7,000 missions in January, Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov said last week.

Ukraine plans to boost their production and procurement in 2026, he said.

Longer evacuation times are another potentially fatal consequence of the expanding “kill zone”.

Colonel Viacheslav Kurinnyi, 45, chief doctor at the Kharkiv hospital where Mr Meskov was being treated, said the drone threat to vehicles had pushed the average time for medical evacuation beyond three days.

That flies in the face of the so-called “golden hour” of battlefield medicine, he added, referring to the 60-minute window when intervention is critical to saving a fighter’s life.

Ukraine’s Western allies needed to learn the lessons: “Any countries that are preparing for war at home need to realise that there will be no ‘golden hour,’” Col Kurinnyi said. “Maybe a ‘golden day’ if they’re lucky.”

Once his hospital received a wounded soldier who had been wearing a tourniquet for more than two months.

Waiting for next breakthrough

Standing next to his snow-covered tank, commander Bohdanov said he believes such weapons are being rendered irrelevant and should be scaled back in favour of more long-range artillery.

His crew is open to re-training to become more effective, he added.

While tanks are still used in urban battles or in poor weather conditions, armour-led attacks have largely been replaced by small infantry assaults, said military analyst Rob Lee at the Foreign Policy Research Institute.

But it is too soon to write off tanks. The pace of change means tactics could soon shift again, Mr Lee said.

“Right now, the current role is diminished, and I think we’re waiting for the next technological breakthrough that will enable manoeuvring again,” he said. REUTERS

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