Ukraine has a war lesson for NATO forces: Drone units need to be constantly on the move with command centers buried deep
Russia hunts Ukrainian drone operators, units, and command centers. As a result, Ukraine tries to keep them on the move and concealed and underground. A Ukrainian defense official said the West should take heed, even though it makes things expensive. RIGA, Latvia โ The West wo
Russia hunts Ukrainian drone operators, units, and command centers.
As a result, Ukraine tries to keep them on the move and concealed and underground.
A Ukrainian defense official said the West should take heed, even though it makes things expensive.
RIGA, Latvia โ The West would do well to make sure that its future drone units and command centers are mobile and ideally underground because they are such high-value targets, a Ukrainian defense official said.
The West is investing heavily in drone warfare and tactics after seeing how effective they have been in the war in Ukraine, and Ukraine has hard-earned lessons to offer.
One of the lessons Taras Berezovets, the head of the military cooperation department of Ukraine's Territorial Defense Forces, a branch of the country's armed forces, said the West can learn from its experiences is just how high-value drone units and command centers are as targets and how much effort is required to protect them.
"This war, especially in terms of the drone war, is like a cat-and-mouse game. The Russians are always searching for the locations of our drone units," he said, so Ukraine is always relocating them, especially if there is a chance they have been exposed.
Speaking at a drone summit in Latvia attended by Business Insider, he said that Western allies also need to consider building drone command centers "deeper underground."

