Ukraina har etter min mening utviklet denne nye formen for krigføring; stor bruk av "Loitering Munition" og egenproduserte droner i mange varianter. Dette er effektivt og velig skremmende, noe du har sett mange eksempler på her på bloggen i videosnutter. (Red.)
Ukraine’s war strategy needs
drone-heavy overhaul, top general says
By
JOHN VANDIVER
STARS AND
STRIPES February 2, 2024
In a screenshot from a video posted on
social media, a Russian armored vehicle burns after being hit by a Ukrainian
drone. Gen. Valery Zaluzhny, Ukraine's top military commander, said the
country's survival could hinge on a strategy shift that better exploits
unmanned systems. (Ukrainian defense ministry )
Ukraine’s survival could hinge on a strategy shift that better exploits drones
and other unmanned systems, given Russia’s manpower advantages and reduced
Western support for Kyiv’s war effort, the country’s top military commander
said this week.
Gen. Valery Zaluzhny laid out a new war
strategy in a seven-page essay that focused heavily on ramping up the
production of cheap drones.
The strategy, first published Thursday
by CNN, also comes amid reports that the war commander may soon be fired by
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
“The challenge for our armed forces
cannot be underestimated. It is to create a completely new state system of
technological rearmament,” Zaluzhny wrote. “Taking everything into account at
this moment, we think the creation of such a system could be achieved in five
months.”
It is not clear whether disagreements
over future strategy are at the heart of the dispute between the two
leaders. But the failure of Ukraine to regain substantial territory during its
summer counteroffensive has exposed weaknesses.
In a war of attrition, Russia has the
advantages, given its ability to mobilize more fighters than Ukraine, which is
facing its own manpower shortage because of domestic resistance to
unpopular draft measures, Zaluzhny said.
“We must acknowledge the significant
advantage enjoyed by the enemy in mobilizing human resources,” Zaluzhny wrote.
To change the dynamics, Ukraine needs to
overhaul how it is fighting the war, with more focus on unmanned technology
that can inflict damage on Russia from a distance, he said.
“It is well-known by now that a central
driver of this war is the development of unmanned weapons systems,” Zaluzhny
wrote. “They are proliferating at a breathtaking pace, and the scope of their
applications grows ever wider.”
Another factor is a reduction in
military support from key allies, he said. In the U.S., lawmakers are at odds
over the merits of continuing to arm Ukraine in light of domestic concerns,
such as immigration and security on the southern border.
Moreover, some allies are running out of
munitions.
“Our partners’ stocks of missiles, air
defense interceptors and ammunition for artillery is becoming exhausted due to
the intensity of hostilities in Ukraine, but also from a global shortage of
propellant charges,” Zaluzhny said.
In 2024, the top priority for Ukraine’s
armed forces should be “mastery of an entire arsenal of (relatively) cheap,
modern and highly effective, unmanned vehicles and other technological means,”
he wrote.
Ukraine has used such systems to great
effect on the battlefield, enabling commanders to collect real-time
intelligence and deliver precision strikes.
Many of those attacks have been played
over and over on social media, showcasing Ukrainian drones wiping out Russian
positions.
But Zaluzhny said those efforts need to
expand significantly, meaning “nothing less than the wholesale redesign of
battlefield operations and the abandoning of outdated, stereotypical
thinking.”
Enhancing the ability to strike with
drones also means fewer troops in harm’s way and less reliance on heavy
combat systems, though those will still be needed, he said.
“We already possess capabilities to
eliminate the enemy and ensure the existence of statehood,” he wrote. “Our goal must be to seize
the moment.”
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