A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Mar 15, 2026

Myth Vs Reality: Scaling Up Ukraine's Drone War Required Structure, Training

It is fascinating how Ukraine's success in drone warfare is so similar to business adaptation. Instead of the 'plug and play' myth, effective implementation requires serious training and organizational changes to optimize impact on desired outcomes. 

Ukraine has evolved from an early 'cowboy' phase driven by passionate volunteers to an increasingly institutionalized system in which purposeful recruitment, training and organization have replaced ad hoc approaches. The result can now be seen, four years into the war, as Ukraine, with far fewer soldiers, has fought Russia to a standstill and has now seized the offensive momentum, largely through the increasingly effective and lethal application of its operationally focused drone forces. JL

Oleksandra Molloy reports in The Australian Army Research Center:

The learning curve for drone piloting in combat is (challenging). Battlefield awareness is essential. Uncrewed systems remain highly dependent on people. Flying a drone is not simple. Each system is different; each mission is complex. Without proper training, drones are wasted. Investing in platforms means investing in people. Technical proficiency must be integrated with tactical awareness, coordination, survivability, and mission execution under fire. Humans are required for tasking, targeting, mission control, technical support, communications, logistics, power supply, and intelligence. Drone units must be institutionalised within the order of battle, integrated into established fire and manoeuvre systems. Deployment requires organisational structures: dedicated UAV platoons, companies, and battalions with defined command and standardised procedures.

Russian Ships Ferrying Weapons To Crimea Destroyed In Kerch Strait

Ukrainian drones extended their threat to Russian military operations by sinking one ship and damaging another which were attempting to transport weapons for Russian units in Crimea. 

The objective of these Ukrainian attacks is to demonstrate how insecure Russia's invasion operations have become, which also reveals the parlous state of its overall military posture. JL

Tim Zadorozhnyy reports in the Kyiv Independent:

Ukraine "successfully" struck two Russian vessels transporting weapons and military equipment through the Kerch Strait. Both ships served as as a "key part" of Russia's Kerch ferry service, used to supply ammunition and equipment to Russian forces fighting against Ukraine. The Russian railway ferry 'Slavianin' was put out of action, and the vessel 'Avangard' was damaged. The Kerch Strait — a 35-kilometer (21-mile) waterway linking the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov — separates the Kerch Peninsula in Russian-occupied Crimea from Russia's Taman Peninsula and serves as a key logistics corridor for Moscow.

As the World Is Distracted By Iran, Ukraine Seizes Offensive Momentum

As much of the world is diverted by the US-Israeli attack on Iran, Ukrainian forces have quietly seized the offensive from Russia and are advancing in several sectors of the south and east. 

Much commentary has been devoted to how the Trump-Netanyahu war has benefited Russia, but the evidence so far is that the Kremlin has been somewhat distracted itself, as one of its key allies is publicly pummeled - again - and Russia is perceived as to weak to assist, or even threaten to do much. This has aided Ukraine as its troops have used the opportunity to further destroy Russian men and equipment suffering from logistics and reinforcement challenges as well as its leadership's wavering attention. JL 

Stavros Atlamazoglou reports in The National Interest:

While war rages in the Middle East, the Ukrainian military is taking advantage of the tactical and operational situation to continue its counteroffensive. Ukrainian kamikaze drone operators supporting infantry battalions target Russian positions and vehicles 6 to 10 miles behind the frontline. The goal is to create a rolling screen for the infantry to advance, denying the Russians the ability to reinforce positions under attack. In many ways, the Ukrainian practice resembles the rolling, or creeping, artillery barrage—a century-old tactic that was first introduced by the British Army during the Second Boer War in South Africa, but became popular during the trench warfare of World War I.  The ongoing Ukrainian counteroffensive aims to disrupt Russian plans and divert Kremlin resources.

Ukraine's Expanded Killzone Plan To Cut Off Russia's Frontline Is Working

One of Ukraine's most impressive accomplishments has been the ability to think and plan strategically despite the intense pressure its commanders are under. The tripling of the kill zone within which Russians can operate is evidence of this. 

The Ukrainians have systematically identified, targeted and begun eliminating with heavy 'bomber drones,' air defense systems which, in turn, makes it easier for lighter drones to then attack troop formations, logistics and command centers far behind the front, in areas once considered relatively safe. The result has been a significant degradation of Russian offensive and defensive capabilities. The Ukrainian advances in Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk are evidence of how this is working. JL

Verity Bowman reports in The Telegraph:

A relentless, meticulously planned drone campaign expanding the kill zone threefold is choking Russia’s front-line forces,. It has turned areas considered safe behind the frontline deadly. The aim is to make it impossible for Russian forces to move men and equipment forward fast enough to sustain offensive operations. Ukrainian drones are now able to strike targets 93 miles away from the front line, compared to 31 miles weeks ago. At the heart is Ukraine's Deep Strike Command Centre, created in early 2026 to improve drone strikes on targets behind the front. Ukraine’s transition to a network-centric warfare planning and sharing real-time information allow forces to strike anywhere. “Precision, co-ordination and technological superiority play a key role.”

Mar 14, 2026

Russia Being Pushed Back In Region Where It Stopped Ukraine's 2023 Offensive

If some of the place names being bandied about from Ukraine's current southern counteroffensive sound familiar, that is because they are: much of the fighting is occurring around the sites of Ukraine's disappointing 2023 offensive. 

The difference is that the Ukrainians are now much better armed and organized. They are pushing the Russians back over ground with which they are familiar and using their hard-won knowledge to thwart the Kremlin's forces with some of the same tactics they faced three years ago. JL

Decimus reports in Daily Kos:

Ukraine learned some very hard lessons from its failed 2023 counteroffensive in Zaporizhia.  And is now serving it back to the Russians in double measure. The much anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive, for whatever reason, was slow in coming.  Russian General Surovikin used the time to make his defensive lines more formidable.  Those elaborate multi-layered lines with miles of dense frontal mine fields, enfilading firing positions and hardened dugouts backed by Ka-52 “Alligator” helicopters are still visible in the above map.  A new name had entered military history … the Surovikin LineJust as it was for the Ukrainians in the summer of 2023, the Russians have run smack dab into the Ukrainian defensive rock wall in the very same area

Ukraine's Counteroffensive Disrupted Russia's Donetsk Advance For This Year

The Kremlin's plan to take all of Donetsk this year was never considered realistic given Russian forces weaknesses - especially the lack of a strategic reserve to continue attacking in small units, let alone exploit hypothetical breakthroughs. But Ukraine's southern counteroffensive, which has forced the Russians to redeploy troops from Donetsk to the south has now all but cancelled the Kremlin's Donetsk hopes. 

The Ukrainians' counteroffensive continues, largely because the ostensible Russian advances of the past year have often been by small groups of soldiers who are frequently not in communication with each other. This has made them easy for the Ukrainians to roll up. Since the lack of a significant reserve makes such setbacks more dangerous than they might have been a year or two ago, the Ukrainians are in a position to keep pushing the Russians, thereby forcing the Kremlin to reassess what is possible for their depleted units. JL

Alex Stezhensky reports in New Voice of Ukraine:

Ukrainian forces' counteroffensive on the southern front that has already disrupted Russian plans for the coming (year). The counteroffensive has produced “tactical, operational and strategic effects.” Russia’s Dnepr group has effectively halted its offensive near Orikhiv and south of Zaporizhzhya. The 400 square kilometers captured so far includes territories that had never officially been recognized as lost —  where only small Russian groups had entered. Drone reconnaissance discovered the map did not match reality: Russian forces controlled a much smaller area than they believed. Russian counterattack attempts failed. Collapse of Russia's broader summer offensive is 'coming into view' and the Kremlin’s ambition to fully capture Donetsk Oblast will not be realized this year.

Big Tech Is Backing Anthropic In Fight Against White House

Despite images of senior tech executives falling all over themselves to pledge fealty in the early days of the Trump administration, the Pentagon's retaliation against Anthropic has resulted in an unprecedented display of anger and defiance from the industry, which views the White House - Pentagon action as a 'capricious temper tantrum' from officials largely unschooled in AI which threatens US preeminence in technology. 

This is especially true given the degree to which the US military has relied on Anthropic's AI to pursue its attacks on Iran - and the understanding that no other AI - including OpenAI's - is as effective. This suggests that tech is growing increasingly uncomfortable with the current administration's use of these tools and may effect how they are developed in the future. JL

Kali Hays reports in the BBC:

Since Monday, a slew of America's biggest tech companies -  Google, Amazon, Apple and Microsoft - have publicly supported Anthropic's legal action to overturn Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's unprecedented decision to label it a "supply chain risk". In legal filings, the tech giants expressed concerns about the government's retaliation against Anthropic after it refused to let its tools be used in mass surveillance and autonomous weapons and could cause "broad negative ramifications for the entire technology sector." A tech advocacy group, representing Google, Apple, Amazon, Nvidia and many other tech companies, said they shared concerns over the government punishing Anthropic and called the department (action) little more than a "temper tantrum". Former high ranking US military officials filed a brief, saying the government label "risks capricious retaliation for voicing disagreement".