A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

May 13, 2026

For Maximum Effect, Ukraine Teams Ground Robots With Aerial Drones

Constant innovation, experimentation and adaptation has given Ukraine a distinct edge in fighting  much larger if bureaucratic Russia.

The latest example is Ukraine's growing ability to combine aerial and ground robot operations to optimize their effectiveness and lethality. JL

Sinead Baker reports in Business Insider:

Ground round robots are very effective on their own, but "when combined, it's more effective than using just an FPV drone or just a ground drone." Uncrewed systems have different strengths and weaknesses in battle. The robots carry heavier weaponry and enter Russian positions, like dugouts, more easily. But aerial drones have the advantage in speed and situational awareness. Flying drones can arrive at target positions first and inform other uncrewed operations, making the operation more effective. "A crucial difference between aerial and ground unmanned systems is the mass that they can carry." A ground robot carrying 66 pounds of explosives into a basement eliminates Russian infantry inside. The biggest aerial drones can carry mines that weigh 22 pounds, while even the smallest ground robots can take 48 pounds. Ground robots armed with machine guns and grenade launchers, are even more powerful when they work alongside its flying drones

Russia's Infantry Are Dying At A Higher Rate And Gaining Less While Doing So

As spring in Ukraine begins to turn to summer, Ukrainian forces are killing more Russians who are making fewer gains even as their casualty rates rise. More effective and efficient drones and drone pilots, more lethal defensive systems, frequently installed or supplanted by technology facing fewer Russian reinforcements have added up to a potentially insurmountable obstacle for the Kremlin's plans. And this appears to be a systemic, not a temporary Ukrainian advantage. JL
 Francis Farrell reports in the Kyiv Independent:

This spring, something strange is in the air. The reality on the battlefield is that instead of picking up over spring as they usually do, Russian territorial gains have flatlined, giving Moscow next to nothing to show for its consistently high losses. A major effort to push northwest of Pokrovsk has bogged down in Hryshyne, advances east of Sloviansk have also ground to a halt, while Kostiantynivka, the southernmost of Ukraine "fortress belt" of cities, is doing its job, making Russia pay a hefty price for each street and house taken. Ukrainian counterattacks upended Russian plans to push west toward Zaporizhzhia.  Venturing into a grey zone that is getting deeper and deadlier every month, Russia's single-use infantrymen continue to die at the same rate, they are just achieving less in the process.

60-70% of Russians Sent Forward Die Before Reaching Ukrainian Lines

Ukraine's kill zone math is becoming inexorable: having squandered their advantage in men and equipment, the Russians no longer have enough troops for assaults. 

And not only are the majority of attacking Russian soldiers or attempted infiltrators killed or severely wounded before they even reach Ukrainian lines, even if they did, the Kremlin forces do not have enough troops to hold anything they take meaning that surviving infiltrators are then mercilessly hunted down and eliminated by Ukrainian drones and hunter-killer infantry teams. JL


Decimus reports in Daily Kos:

Russian frontline assaults rare as 60-70% of infiltrators die before reaching Ukrainian lines. The earlier embarrassment of riches in tracked armor which they threw into every assault now appears to be a faint memory. Ukrainian drones and precision battery put paid to that. (And) the endless pool of mobiki wantonly pressed into “meat assaults” also seem to be drying up. Russia's offensive operations now consist of small-group infiltrations, since the army cannot gather enough men for assaults. (But) infiltration is not always effective because Russia cannot accumulate enough personnel to consolidate any local gains that the surviving fraction of infiltrators might secure. The current Russian tactic is “gradually losing effectiveness,” with advance rates minimal and the manpower deficit growing more visible. 

Grok AI Lags So Far Behind Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini It Cannot Catch Up

There are increasing signs that as use of OpenAI's ChatGPT, Anthropic's Claude and Google's Gemini has grown so exponentially that Musk's SpaceX Grok AI can never catch up in large measure because it just isn't as good. Investor statements that "OpenAI is Coke, Anthropic is Pepsi and Grok is RC Cola" underscore the brutal reality - and perception. 

That Musk has recently agreed to rent massive amounts of computing power to Anthropic is being taken as a sign that he is acknowledging this competitive reality and is pivoting to becoming an external computing support partner for the major AI companies, especially Anthropic, which is the 'enemy of his enemy,' OpenAI. It will undoubtedly be profitable - certainly an issue for Musk given Tesla's travails - but it reduces the Grok AI enterprise to the functional equivalent of a utility like Con Ed. JL 
 
Georgia Wells reports in the Wall Street Journal:

Elon Musk’s AI model, Grok, lags far behind its fast-growing competitors—and an agreement by parent company SpaceX to rent computing power to Anthropic raises questions about whether it can catch up. Downloads of Grok fell to 8.3 million in April, from a high of more than 20 million in January. In a survey of U.S. consumers and workers who use AI, the percent of respondents who said they paid for Grok remained flat at 0.174% in the second quarter of 2026. 48% of respondents said their company was using Claude, up from 21% the prior year. 40% said their company was using Gemini, up from 27% a year earlier. 7% said their company was using GrokThe hottest front for competition among is coding assistants (but) Grok is barely growing within enterprise organizations.  “OpenAI is Coke, Anthropic is Pepsi and Grok is RC Cola”

May 12, 2026

As Its Troops Stall, Kremlin Floods Internet With AI Images To Fake "Wins"

As Russia's forces in Ukraine increasingly fail to meet their objectives - and are actually losing ground - the Kremlin's disinformation specialists are hard at work, using AI in an attempt to create a counter narrative falsely suggesting they are winning. 

The problem they face is that the west has become too skilled and sophisticated at identifying AI-generated content, further undermining the Kremlin's fake news campaign. JL

The Kyiv Post reports:

Russia is using more fake videos generated by AI to portray false battlefield gains in Ukraine, including clips showing Russian flags being raised along the front line. More than 1,000 synthetic videos have been identified as part of a structured “narrative kill chain” – a modular disinformation system designed to target specific groups, including soldiers, civilians, and Western audiences. Military-facing content is aimed at weakening morale by promoting narratives of a collapsing front line, while civilian-focused material seeks to erode trust in institutions and normalize Russian control. The ultimate goal is informational chaos – a space where synthetic content becomes so widespread that even real evidence can be dismissed as fake.

Kremlin's Forces Stumble As "Ukraine Imposes Costs on Russia By Every Measure"

A growing number of the most influential mainstream media like The Economist, the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, are challenging the prevailing Kremlin hype about 'inevitable' victory in Ukraine and, instead, reporting on the growing perception that the Russian military campaign has failed. 

In addition, some have begun to reveal statements by Vladimir Putin that 'the war is coming to end,' suggesting not that the Russians are close to achieving their goals, but that Ukraine's drone-imposed death zones near the front line combined with their increasingly devastating attacks on targets in continental Russia have finally driven the Kremlin to try to find a way out. JL

The Economist reports:

The symbolism of this year's diminished Moscow "Victory" parade is hard to overstate. A day meant to epitomise the military might of Putin’s Russia instead signalled its weakness. It was an accurate reflection of Russia’s battlefield setbacks, and of Russia’s fear of the growing effectiveness of Ukraine’s long-range strikes. For the first time in three years the initiative has shifted in favor of Ukraine. Having got through a harsh winter, when its cities and energy grid were pummeled nightly by Russian drones and missiles, Ukraine is now turning the tide, imposing costs on Russia by every measure. In March, for the first time, Ukraine surpassed Russia in the number of long-range drone attacks launched. Targets 2,000km from the border are being hit, bringing 70% of Russia’s population within range of Ukraine's drones. “The attacks have caused psychological damage to Russia. It feels like an inflection point in the war. I would not be surprised if things start crumbling.”

Russia Is Down To Its Last 50-Yr-Old Tanks. They Won't Save Its War

'The Russian Lollipop' as it is affectionately known to Ukrainian and NATO forces, refers to the Soviet tank design which placed ammunition storage just under the turret, frequently causing the turret to disengage from the body of the vehicle when hit by an anti-tank weapon or drone, fly through the air and land on its gun barrel. 

Having lost approximately 14,000 tanks in Ukraine from an inventory that once made it the most feared armor force in the world, the Kremlin is now down to its last 1,000 or so. Almost all are 1970s era, Soviet-designed T-72s. They are beginning to show up on Ukrainian battlefields, ostensibly re-engineered for drone-infested war fighting. The problem being that even the most modern US, European and Russian tanks are relatively helpless to ward off increasingly accurate and powerful drones, so the chances of a museum-piece surviving in that environment are not expected to be long. JL

David Axe reports in Trench Art:

Russia's Kostiantynivka offensive off to a very slow start, owing to escalating Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian supply lines weakening front-line regiments before they can even begin an assault. If and when the Russians once again deploy large numbers of armored vehicles for a push toward Kostiantynivka, 1,000 1970s-vintage T-72A tanks out of long-term storage could see their first combat on a battlefield where even the best-protected tanks are extremely vulnerable to the twin threat of buried mines exploding underneath them and explosive drones barreling down from above. It's not for no reason that Russian forces have largely parked their surviving armored fighting vehicles after losing 14,000 of them in Ukraine. The gray zone is a kill zone for all armored vehicles, whether they're brand new or 50 years old.