A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Mar 21, 2026

30% of Ukraine Infantry Can Be Replaced By Ground Robots This Year

Ground robots of various types replace as many as 30% of Ukrainian infantry this year and may be able to increase that number to 80% in the future. 

The Ukrainians have already used such robotic systems to accomplish tasks as diverse as evacuating wounded, bringing up supplies, defending static strong points or trenches, taking prisoners and even attacking Russian positions. JL

Anatoly Buryak reports in Espreso Global:

Ground -based robotic systems (GROS) can replace a third of the infantry of the Ukrainian Defense Forces on the front line.  "If we go in the direction of technological innovation, then this year, I am convinced, we can remove up to 30% of infantrymen behind the LBZ, and in the near future - up to 80%," said Andriy Biletsky, Commander of Ukraine's 3rd Corps. According to him, under such conditions, the infantry will become an "elite specialized force" to perform tasks that the NRC cannot handle.

Russians Lose 2 KA-52 'Copters In 24 Hours, the First To Ukraine Fiber Optic Drone

Russian forces in Donetsk lost two KA-52 "Alligator" helicopters within 24 hours in the past few days. The first was especially significant because it was taken down by a Ukrainian FPV fiber optic drone. 

The implication of this chain of events - the loss of one helicopter being noteworthy but of two within a day being almost unheard of - is that Russian electronic warfare and air defenses have been degraded, which confirms reports of the Ukrainian strategy which has intentionally targeted such assets precisely to create these types of opportunities. JL

Julia Struck reports in the Kyiv Post and Roman Pryhodko reports in Militarnyi:

Ukraine destroyed a Russian Ka-52 attack helicopter in the Pokrovsk sector using a fiber-optic (FPV) drone. The helicopter was “hunted down” with a drone by pilots from the “Baltika” crew of the “Predators of Heights” battalion in the Donetsk region. Following an emergency landing, the crew attempted to escape but drones of the 1st Battalion, 414th Unmanned Systems Brigade “Birds of Madyar,” eliminated them. Russian forces then lost a second Ka-52 attack helicopter in the past 24 hours. The crew attempted to eject, but one of the pilots was killed immediately upon the helicopter being hit. 

Russia Tries Armor Again To Reduce Casualties. They've Being Massacred

The winter of 2026 did not go well for Russian forces in Ukraine. Spring, if anything, is proving to be worse. 

During the winter campaign, the Russians gained no appreciable ground and actually ended up seeing the Ukrainians advance. And, for the first time, Russian casualties were no longer easily replaced. So the Kremlin has decided to go back to the previously failed strategy of attacking with armor in hopes it may reduce the number of Russian killed and wounded. But if the first week's experience from multiple assaults along the entire front line, that hope is as vain as all its predecessors as Ukrainian drones, mines and artillery decimate Russian forces. JL

David Axe reports in Trench Art:

Russian tanks and other armor are back as the weather warms up along the 1,200-km front line. But the renewed mechanized offensive is off to a disastrous start for the Russians. An armored assault in eastern Ukraine on Thursday ended in a hardware "massacre." More massacres are likely. The Russians may be hitting their manpower limit. After 418,000 casualties in 2025, they bury more troops than they recruit. Hence armor again. (But) Moscow is trading one dwindling resource for another. The Russians have tried this before. Vehicle-led assaults in the first two years of the war got a lot of hardware destroyed in exchange for modest advances. Toward Lyman this week, "We knew they were planning to attack. Remote mines, emplaced along the likeliest assault lanes, wiped them out. Massacre"

OpenAI's Creates ChatGPT-Codex-Browser "SuperApp" To Fight Anthropic

OpenAI got the message. Recognizing that arch competitor Anthropic was surpassing it with business users - the most significant and lucrative part of the market - and that Anthropic had 'won by losing' in its conflict with the Pentagon, OpenAI has radically shifted strategy to stem the loss of momentum and to try to regain its position as the AI -of choice.

The first step is the creation of a 'Super App' combining three of its products to simplify use and choice. This is also an acknowledgement that AI is increasingly a tool - not a new way of life as the Silicon Valley hype has tried to position it. This means focusing on giving the end users what they want, which is productivity driven by effectiveness and ease of use. Welcome to the real world... JL 

Berber Jin reports in the Wall Street Journal:

OpenAI  is planning to unify its ChatGPT app, coding platform Codex and browser into a desktop “superapp,” to simplify the user experience and continue with efforts to focus on engineering and business customers. The strategy change marks a major shift from last year, when OpenAI launched a series of stand-alone products that didn’t always resonate with users. OpenAI executives are hoping that unifying its products under one app will allow it to streamline resources as it seeks to beat back the success of rival Anthropic in winning enterprise and coding customers. OpenAI is in a business battle with Anthropic to increase sales from companies looking to buy AI tools that boost productivity for their employees. 

Mar 20, 2026

Ukraine Drone Startup "Swarmer" Has Hottest IPO Of Year, Up 700% On Ist Day

Swarmer's technology allows one operator to control hundreds of drones at the same time. It has been successfully deployed in combat by the Ukrainian military. 

The market responded enthusiastically, with the IPO's stock rising 700% in its first day of trading. And part of the secret to that success is that Swarmer, founded in Ukraine, moved operations to the US - with Ukrainian government permission - in order to gain access to US capital markets which will enable significant expansion. JL

Aidan Stretch reports in CBS News:

A Ukrainian drone startup saw the most explosive U.S. stock market debut of the last year during its first day trading on Nasdaq. Shares in Swarmer, whose software enables single pilots to control hundreds of drones at once, soared 700% Tuesday. Ukrainian companies often lack financing needed to expand operations. Controls on exporting Ukrainian defense tech limits access to capital. Ukraine's defense industry reached production capacity of $35 billion in 2025 but received only $6.1 billion in foreign funding. Incorporating businesses in the U.S. and bringing in partners with ties to the US defense industry could offer solutions. "Swarmer has been deployed in Ukraine with more than 100,000 real-world missions in combat, informing the software and machine-learning models that feed into it."

At Pokrovsk, Ukraine Wipes Out 120 Russian Troops, Drones Destroy Rocket Battery

Russia's spring offensive launched in the Pokrovsk sector with the same lack of success as it did in Zaporizhzhia: an attacking Russian infantry company was annihilated and an entire battery of Grad rocket launchers was destroyed. 

Following the losses suffered in their failed winter offensive, the Kremlin appears to be wholly unprepared for the spring in every sector where they have attempted to attack so far. JL

Valentyna Romanenko reports in Ukraine Pravda and Ivan Khomenko reports in United24:

The Russian command deployed significant forces to the latest assault on the Pokrovsk front. The Russians were counting on taking advantage of rainy weather (but) in 48 hours the 3rd Ukrainian Spartan Brigade stopped the offensive and destroyed a company-sized force of 120 Russian troops. (At the same time) Ukrainian drone operators destroyed a full battery of Russian BM-21 Grad multiple launch rocket systems on the Pokrovsk axis, in a coordinated strike involving multiple units. On March 19, the operation was carried out in coordination with drone and reconnaissance elements. Six Grad systems— a full battery—were eliminated during the strike.

Ukraine Paratroops Test Exoskeletons To Assist Speed, Load Lifts

In yet another example of how technology is transforming war fighting, Ukrainian paratroopers are testing exoskeletons at the front in the Pokrovsk sector.

Early reports indicate that the exoskeletons can reduce physical strain as much as 30% by reducing the impact of carrying heavy loads and enhancing movement. The tests suggest that troops work faster and are less fatigued. While this may be evident for artillerymen carrying heavy shells, it may also assist infantry who have to run suddenly and quickly to avoid danger or spring surprise on the enemy. JL

Vlad Litnarovych reports in United24:

Ukrainian air assault troops have begun testing exoskeleton technology on the front lines, deploying early models with units operating in the Pokrovsk sector. Trial systems have been distributed and are being evaluated in both logistics and active combat. Exoskeletons are designed to reduce physical strain on soldiers by up by up to 30%, while allowing assisted movement speeds of up to 20 km/h at a range of 17 kilometers. Artillery crews, in particular, are expected to benefit from the technology as they handle extreme physical workloads transporting heavy ammunition. “Every day, they endure significant physical strain. They carry 15–30 shells daily, each weighing 50 kilograms. Based on the test results, they get less fatigued, work faster, and maintain combat effectiveness for longer.”