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How Drone Warfare Is Shifting The Balance Of Power, Posing Questions For The West

  • Drones have provided Ukraine with an asymmetric advantage against Russia, a conventionally superior force, and have been used by the Houthis to disrupt shipping in the Red Sea
  • Last week, an armed drone killed three U.S. service personnel and injured dozens more in Jordan
  • West must adapt as drones become weapon of choice for military ‘underdogs’ and terror groups

By Sean Bell, Military Analyst, Sky News, @BellusUK

Since Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine there has been a revolution in the role of military UAVs (unmanned air vehicles), which have enabled much smaller forces to prevail against the traditionally dominant military powers.

Has drone warfare become the dominant military capability for the underdog?

The first flight of a powered UAV was on 6 May 1896, several years before the Wright brothers’ first manned powered flight on 17 December 1903. However, both commercial and military exploitation of aviation potential focused on the manned option, limiting investment in UAVs.

But, the prolonged war in Afghanistan saw a surge of investment in long-range UAVs such as Predator and Reaper as developments in satellite technology led to the weight (and cost) of sensors falling dramatically. More recent conflicts have continued that theme.

Earlier this week, the Ukrainians claimed to have sunk another Russian Black Sea Fleet (BSF) ship – an Ivanovets missile boat – off the coast of Crimea. Video footage released suggests that this was a coordinated attack at night, using several maritime armed drones, that inflicted a series of deadly strikes on the Russian vessel.

Despite no longer having an established Navy, Ukraine has used maritime drones to devastating effect, destroying around 20% of Russia’s BSF.

File pic: Reuters
Russian Navy's Tarantul-class corvette Ivanovets is escorted by a Turkish Navy Coast Guard boat as it sets sail in the Bosphorus, on its way to the Mediterranean Sea, in Istanbul, Turkey, July 13, 2016. REUTERS/Murad Sezer
The Ivanovets missile corvette. Pic: Reuters

The Houthis have fired conventional anti-ship cruise and ballistic missiles against maritime and military vessels in the Red Sea; however, these missiles are expensive and are relatively easy to track and destroy.

But the Houthis have also sought to disrupt shipping in the Red Sea using armed drones. Shahed 136 drones supplied by Iran (similar to those sold to Russia to use against Ukrainian targets) and Samad drones (modified Iranian-supplied) have enabled the Houthis to continue their disruption of global shipping. Despite intense US and UK military retaliation, the drones are easy to hide, simple to operate, and easy to replace.

Pic: Press service of the National Police of Ukraine/Reuters
Members of a Ukrainian police demining unit remove a warhead from a Russian kamikaze drone. Pic: Press service of the National Police of Ukraine/Reuters

Drones provide Ukraine with asymmetric advantage

Although Ukraine lacks the military might of Russia, Ukrainian forces have proven very adept at using, modifying and evolving armed UAVs to provide battlefield reconnaissance and attack options, such as Russian logistics hubs and fuel storage facilities.

Drones have provided Ukraine with an asymmetric advantage against a conventionally superior force.

And, on 28 January an armed drone managed to circumvent US military defences at a base in northern Jordan – Tower 22 – killing three and injuring 34 US service personnel.

It is not entirely clear how the drone managed to penetrate US defences, since there are a complex blend of procedural (lane/height/speed/time) and electronic (Identification Friend or Foe, etc) measures used to protect against such attacks.

But the attack was successful, and the resulting deaths have significantly heightened tensions in the region, and even led to suggestions from former president Donald Trump that we are on the “brink of World War Three”.

A Ukrainian serviceman looks at a monitor of an electronic warfare system to combat Russian drones at the front line, in a shelter near Bakhmut
Pic: AP
A Ukrainian serviceman looks at a monitor of an electronic warfare system to combat Russian drones. Pic: AP

Drones offer increasingly effective precision strike capability

Drones are also being used to fly contraband into prisons, disrupt airports, and test military defences. They are widely available, easy to control (even from a mobile phone), and their impact and potential will not be lost on our potential adversaries, whether state or terrorist.

Military power was once defined by conventional fighters, ships and tanks, and was the exclusive domain of the major international powers.

However, the latest generation of drones is fast becoming the weapon of choice for the military “underdog” and for terrorist organisations. They are cheap, capable, easily (and swiftly) adapted, and offer a small-scale surgical strike capability – on a budget.

The tactical impact of small drones might be limited by the small payload that the cheaper UAVs can carry, but they offer an increasingly effective precision strike capability – with demonstrable strategic impact.

The balance of military power is shifting – the West had better prepare accordingly.

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