Avsnitt
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The Pentagon's autonomous weapons program just crossed a threshold — not in a policy document, but in operational approvals.
This episode covers five major developments from the past 72 hours. JIATF-401 validated CACI's SkyValor as the first long-range autonomous counter-drone system approved for joint force use across the entire U.S. military — with "automated sense and shoot algorithms" now in an official DoD release. At the Army's Operation Jailbreak at Fort Carson, six companies — AZAK, HavocAI, Leonardo DRS, Allen Control Systems, Picogrid, and Anduril — assembled a two-vehicle autonomous hunter-killer UGV counter-drone team in 48 hours, demonstrated it to the Army Secretary, and immediately signed an MOU to scale production to thousands of units. The Army issued a new RFI for an autonomous ground vehicle capable of recovering disabled vehicles in DDIL-contested zones without human control. The Army also moved to deploy agentic AI platforms on JWICS and SIPRNet at Impact Level 6, the next layer beyond its classified network agreements with OpenAI, Google, NVIDIA, and five other firms. And a critical supply chain story: fiber optic spool prices have surged 8x as AI data center buildouts compete for the same material as Ukraine's jam-proof FPV drone program.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Ukraine's autonomous drone campaign reached a new strategic threshold this week — 194 drones on Moscow, the Kapotnya Oil Refinery halted, and a coordinated assault that disrupted 700,000 barrels per day of Russian refining capacity since January.
Marcus and Sam break down the strategic logic behind Ukraine's systematic targeting of Russian energy infrastructure, how AI-guided drones like the Saker Scout now prosecute targets autonomously after electronic warfare severs their link, and why Russia's 81% intercept rate still isn't enough. They cover the Pentagon's extraordinary $54.6 billion FY2027 request for the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group (DAWG) — a near 24,000% single-year increase — and what the bet on autonomous orchestration software signals about where U.S. defense procurement is heading. Airbus's U145 cockpit-free autonomous helicopter, unveiled at ILA Berlin with an MBDA drone-mothership partnership, gets the hardware spotlight. Then: the NATO allied counter-drone marketplace agreement signed at Eurosatory, EuroTrophy's new APS variant with integrated drone-kill capability, and the Turkish Katica UGV now carrying a short-range air defense system to the front line. The episode closes on the policy fault line — 74 days to the DoDD 3000.09 autonomous-weapons rewrite deadline, and what Senator Gallego's warning letter signals about the coming policy fight over human judgment in the kill chain.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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The drone war just stopped being about who flies faster and started being about who can afford to keep shooting. In Eurosatory's closing days, Thales unveiled the LGR275 Proxy — a 70mm laser-guided counter-drone rocket headed for 20,000 units a year — while GDELS stacked a Cilas HELMA-P high-energy laser onto the Pandur air-defense vehicle. Marcus and Sam break down the interception-cost crisis, then turn to Ondas' "Autonomy at First Contact" launch and its LADOS orchestration brain — the software that proves the network, not the airframe, is the real weapon. We cover Rostec/Shvabe's neural-net maritime drone interceptor at Fleet 2026 in Kronstadt, France's Furious autonomous ground robot and the European UGV wave, and the policy fight that ties it all together: NSPM-11's 90-day rewrite of DoD Directive 3000.09, Senator Gallego's warning over human judgment, and the $14.6 billion flooding into autonomous weapons before the rules are written. The battle this week wasn't on the floor in Paris — it was between the spreadsheet and the rulebook.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The airframes get the headlines — but the war is being decided in the spectrum, eighteen minutes at a time.
In this episode, Marcus and Sam unpack the middle days of Eurosatory 2026, where Ukraine stopped being a weapons buyer and became a weapons exporter: Ukroboronprom's turbojet-powered UAV-290 strike drone (~800 km/h), Global Mark's ten-ton Sea Trident autonomous underwater hunter-killer, and OM Defense Systems' rifle-armed Drone Squad Fury. We trace the fiber-optic versus electronic warfare arms race playing out on the same show floor — Orqa's MRM2-10AI with hybrid radio/fiber failover against new PeriSight and Ondas MODUS systems that can detect "unjammable" wired drones. Plus: the Pentagon clears CACI's autonomous SkyValor counter-UAS for military-wide use after Yuma testing and pushes it to the border; Russia's layered SIGINT-jam-kinetic defense severs an 800-drone Ukrainian swarm in eighteen minutes near Kharkiv; and the Senate Armed Services Committee advances a $1.14 trillion NDAA that would permit a new four-star Robotic and Autonomous Systems Combatant Command.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The land battlefield just hit the assembly line. As Eurosatory 2026 opens in Paris, Marcus and Sam trace a single thread running through every story this week: industrialization.
Renault and Belgium's John Cockerill unveil a car-sized robotic scout built to be mass-produced on an automotive line, while Humvee-maker AM General takes the armed UGV we covered last episode onto the international export floor — alongside live demos from ST Engineering and a Spanish EM&E counter-drone vehicle. In Ukraine, a new anti-Shahed AI module lets interceptor drones lock on and kill autonomously, MaXon Systems automates 95% of the intercept, and production runs past 2,000 interceptors a day — possibly flipping the cost curve in the defender's favor for the first time. On Capitol Hill, Senator Gillibrand's Secure and Accountable Military AI Act moves to bar AI from nuclear launch decisions and mandate "meaningful human oversight," colliding with the Red Dragon strike drone's near-autonomous targeting. Plus: the Thunderforge generative-AI system writing combatant-command war plans at EUCOM and INDOPACOM, and SOCOM's hunt for a synthetic-data factory to train the eyes of every autonomous system.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Washington just decided autonomy needs its own war command. This episode opens with the U.S. Senate's move to create a Robotic and Autonomous Systems Combatant Command — the first new combatant command since Space Command in 2019, armed with rare acquisition authority and modeled on Ukraine's and Russia's Unmanned Systems Forces.
We trace the through-line from the battlefield to the bureaucracy: Ukraine's NC13 Strike UGV Company capturing an enemy position with ground and air robots alone — a Droid TW 12.7 with a .50-cal, no infantry, no casualties; AM General's combat-ready unmanned ground vehicle carrying a Moog RIwP turret with a 30mm cannon plus Stinger, Coyote, APKWS, Hellfire and Javelin effectors; the Pentagon's service-wide approval of CACI's SkyValor counter-drone system after border testing; and SOCOM's push to mount autonomous ELINT payloads on uncrewed maritime drones. Watchlist: Türkiye's supersonic İHA-230 drone-launched ballistic missile, Germany's €540M Helsing/Stark loitering-munition buy, Ukraine's laptop-run distributed deep-strike C2, and the Cornyn counter-UAS standards bill.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The cost-exchange war just crossed its last line: the limiting factor in drone air defense is no longer money — it's the human pilot, and Ukraine just removed him.
This episode leads with MaXon Systems' combat debut of the first fully autonomous Shahed interceptor — a $3,500 fixed-wing drone, flown through Ukraine's Brave1 cluster, that automates roughly 95% of the kill cycle across launch, transit, and terminal homing, with first intercepts logged by the 12th Separate Special Purpose Center in Kharkiv Oblast and announced by Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov. Marcus and Sam break down the two-button workflow, the GPS-independent beacon navigation, the foreign terminal-guidance dependency, and the speed gap against Russia's jet-powered Geran-3 and Geran-4 Shaheds. Then: the U.S. Navy's Saronic Corsair drone boat pulling two downed AH-64 Apache crew from the Strait of Hormuz — the first uncrewed-vessel rescue the military has ever run, by Task Force 59. Plus the Pentagon's Drone Dominance "Gauntlet" attack drones begin arriving (Neros Archer leading), Airbus deletes the cockpit from its H145 to unveil the U145, and a Lockheed Martin UK-led consortium pitches NATO's Modular GBAD network. Watchlist: SAFER SKIES counter-drone rules, jet Shaheds, Echodyne's $490M radar deal, and Stark's Cascade and Gambit.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The machines are taking the missions — and Washington is finally fighting over which decisions they can never take with them.
This episode covers Senator Gillibrand's Secure and Accountable Military AI Act, the first comprehensive bill to regulate Pentagon AI: a general prohibition on fully autonomous lethal weapons, mandatory human override, a domestic mass-surveillance ban, and 15-day Congressional notification for "high consequence" AI operations. At the same time, the House Armed Services Committee's FY27 NDAA orders the Navy to accelerate small unmanned surface vessels and XLUUVs — and certify drone boats can fight with comms jammed and GPS denied. Plus: Türkiye inducts the Roketsan İHA-230, a supersonic ballistic missile giving Bayraktar Akıncı drones 150 km standoff strike; Ukraine's Fire Point test-flies the FP-7.X, foundation for FREYJA, a sub-$1M composite ballistic missile interceptor targeted for 2027; and General Atomics and Saab fly the world's first unmanned AWACS — an MQ-9B with LoyalEye radar pods. On the watchlist: the SAFER SKIES counter-drone rulemaking deadline, DARPA's containerized autonomous swarm hubs, and SOCOM's hybrid-electric amphibious seaplane.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The drone technology that reshaped Ukraine's battlefield has escaped the battlefield — and it's killing soldiers Israel's jammers can't protect.
This episode covers Hezbollah's operational use of fiber-optic FPV drones in southern Lebanon, immune to electronic warfare and responsible for at least 10 Israeli soldiers killed since April; the Pentagon's counter-drone buying spree, including Echodyne's $490 million Air Force radar program, the Perennial Autonomy interceptor stack, and AeroVironment's $117.3 million P550 reconnaissance contract pushing battalion-level ISR; Golden Dome's twin milestones — Northrop Grumman's space-based interceptor demonstration targeting 2027 and Lockheed Martin's Next-Generation Interceptor entering production — in the shadow of Russia's uninterceptable Zircon salvo; Ukraine's contracting of 25,000 unmanned ground vehicles to move all frontline logistics onto robots, Palantir's expanded Brave1 partnership after Alex Karp's Kyiv visit, and a draft US-Ukraine agreement that would let Kyiv export drone technology to America; plus the R7 — a Chinese AI-guided drone interceptor listed on eBay for $6,999 despite an FCC ban — and the SAFER SKIES Act regulatory deadline landing mid-June.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Russia crossed a threshold overnight: eight Zircon hypersonic missiles were fired in a single strike, and not one was intercepted. That number — eight launched, zero stopped — defines this episode.
Marcus and Sam break down Russia's June 2 saturation strike: 656 Shahed drones exhausting Ukraine's interceptor inventory, then eight Mach 8 Zircon missiles through the degraded defense layer. Then: the Pentagon's staggering FY27 budget request for the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group — $54.6 billion, up from $225.9 million, a 24,167% year-over-year increase. Eight major AI firms — Amazon, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, SpaceX, NVIDIA, Reflection, and Oracle — cleared for classified military networks at Impact Level 6 and 7, while Anthropic remains excluded after its contract termination. Overland AI's ULTRA autonomous ground vehicles execute live combined-arms breach training at African Lion 2026 in Morocco alongside the 173rd Airborne Brigade. And Ukraine's Sting interceptor drone hits 7,000 Shahed kills while a new USV-launched Sting completes the war's first ship-drone-drone kill chain, as Zelenskyy opens controlled drone exports to Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE under the new Drone Deals framework.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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One year after Operation Spiderweb proved no Russian airbase is safe from a cargo truck, the doctrinal aftershocks are still landing.
This episode marks the anniversary of Ukraine's June 1, 2025 strike on five Russian strategic airbases — 117 FPV drones smuggled inside cargo trucks by recruited Russian drivers, hitting Tu-160, Tu-95, and Tu-22M strategic bombers at bases up to 1,700 km from Ukraine, destroying an estimated 34% of Russia's cruise missile-carrying bomber fleet in a single night. One year on, we assess what changed and what didn't. We then cover Ukraine's Sky Map counter-drone AI — now deployed to Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, with Ukrainian officers training U.S. soldiers after $1.3 billion in losses during Operation Epic Fury — and the broader Ukraine-to-West technology transfer now operating in reverse. We cover Northrop Grumman's YFQ-48A Talon Blue autonomous wingman entering flight testing as the third CCA contender, putting the Air Force's down-select decision within reach. We examine Mistral AI's partnership with Airbus and what a sovereign European AI-weapons supply chain means for NATO interoperability. And we close with DARPA's containerized autonomous drone hub concept — the direct architectural response to the lesson Spiderweb proved: fixed bases are targets.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The age of the human pilot is ending — and this week the Pentagon signed the contract to prove it.
Shield AI was selected to integrate its Hivemind AI software into the LUCAS one-way attack drone program, placing an autonomous agent in command of swarms of kamikaze drones for the first time in US military history. One human sets the objective; Hivemind handles the rest. We break down what that means — technically, doctrinally, and legally — against the backdrop of a Senate hearing where officials admitted that human-in-the-loop oversight becomes mathematically impossible when you're orchestrating thousands of systems simultaneously.
This episode also covers the Pentagon's staggering $54.6 billion DAWG budget request for FY2027, and why that number matters more than its size suggests; the $500 million Perennial Autonomy contract that turns Ukraine's battlefield counter-drone math into official US doctrine — the Merops interceptor has downed 4,300 Russian drones at $15k per kill; a Ukrainian ground robot that held a front-line position under constant Russian assault for 45 consecutive days with zero Ukrainian casualties; and Project Flytrap 5.0, the NATO exercise that just concluded testing 50+ counter-UAS technologies including a new offensive doctrine aimed at the drone operator, not just the drone.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The autonomous kill chain is no longer theoretical — it happened yesterday. Ukraine's GOGOL-M AI drone mothership has completed its first confirmed real-world combat strikes against Russian positions, with a visual-inertial navigation AI making the terminal kill decision at 300 kilometres for $10,000 per mission. That threshold — quietly crossed by a Ukrainian startup — is the centrepiece of this episode.
We cover the GOGOL-M's confirmed combat debut and what $10K autonomous strikes mean for the cost-of-war calculus; Ukraine's new balloon-launch TTP that carries the Hornet strike drone to 8,000 metres and doubles its range without GPS or radio emissions; Russia's Geran-5 jet-powered strike drone making its combat operational debut, with the unresolved air-to-air missile threat assessment still open; DARPA's Containerised Autonomous Drone Delivery System — a programme to enable 500-drone swarms from hidden shipping containers in GPS-denied environments; and NATO's Silent Swarm 2026 live-fire exercise in Estonia, convened because 10 Ukrainian drone operators defeated two NATO battalions in six hours during a February wargame.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Russia's largest aerial assault of 2026 — and a new Ukrainian doctrine that targets drone operators before they reach the front.
On May 24, Russia launched 600 drones and 90 missiles at Ukraine in its most saturating attack of the year, including a third confirmed combat deployment of the Oreshnik hypersonic ballistic missile striking Bila Tserkva, 50 miles from Kyiv. The same week, Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces struck a Russian drone cadet training facility in Snizhne, Donetsk Oblast — killing 65 Akhmat Sever cadets and their commander, a credentialed PhD instructor from the Russian Academy of Missile and Artillery Sciences. Marcus and Sam break down what the Oreshnik's operational cadence signals about Russian strategic intent, and why Ukraine's shift to targeting the human operator pipeline may be more disruptive than shooting down hardware at the front. In Washington, the Pentagon's FY2027 AI Arsenal initiative requests $29.5 billion for classified AI supercomputing infrastructure — stacked on top of the $54.6 billion DAWG autonomous warfare programme, bringing the combined AI and autonomy ask above $80 billion. The episode also covers the Anduril and Booz Allen integration that puts cyber effects and kinetic C2 on a single operator interface for SOF teams, and Russia's unverified but credible claim of a 65-kilometre fiber-optic FPV drone — a development that could neutralise Ukraine's electronic warfare advantage in the FPV fight.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Autonomous weapons are outrunning every rule written to govern them — and this week, both sides of the Ukraine conflict unveiled systems that prove it.
Russia publicly revealed the Geran-5 jet-powered strike drone at the Victory Day parade in Moscow. Unlike its slow Shahed-derived predecessor, the Geran-5 is faster, harder to intercept, and — according to Ukraine's HUR intelligence directorate — may be capable of carrying R-73 infrared-guided air-to-air missiles, turning a strike platform into an active counter-air threat. Ukraine's answer: the Sichen, a domestically produced 1,400km strike drone with a 40kg warhead, engineered to defeat Russian GPS jamming and electronic warfare — no Western partner approval required. We cover what both revelations mean for air defence doctrine in contested airspace.
In Washington, the Pentagon cleared eight AI firms — AWS, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, SpaceX, NVIDIA, Reflection, and Oracle — to deploy their systems on its most classified warfighting networks, explicitly excluding Anthropic after its refusal to support autonomous weapons targeting. The day after, the US Senate warned that DoD Directive 3000.09 cannot keep pace with the autonomous systems already being fielded. We break down what the AI vendor shake-up means for the US kill chain, the Army's $994M counter-drone procurement plan, Perennial Autonomy's $500M contract, Poland joining the Pentagon counter-drone marketplace, and Ukraine's commitment to 25,000 ground robotic systems by mid-2026.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The week autonomous warfare stopped being theoretical. Ukraine has confirmed combat deployment of the GOGOL-M — an AI-powered drone mothership that carries FPV strike drones 300 kilometres and releases them to autonomously acquire and engage targets without a human in the terminal loop. A $10,000 mission replacing a $5 million missile strike. Meanwhile, the Pentagon has proposed the most radical defense budget shift in decades: $54.6 billion for the Defense Autonomous Working Group in FY2027, up from $226 million — a 24,000% increase in a single cycle.
This episode covers the GOGOL-M's SmartPilot GPS-denied autonomous guidance system and what it means for strike campaign economics and AI governance; a single Ukrainian Droid TW 12.7 UGV that held a contested intersection under constant Russian attack for 45 days, operated by one soldier 10 kilometres away; the Army's new CPE Mission Autonomy office and its "packages of capability" doctrine that translates commander intent into autonomous mission execution; L3Harris's Wraith Shield software update that turns 100,000 existing Falcon IV soldier radios into networked counter-drone jammers; and the transformation of Virginia's 116th National Guard Brigade into the Army's first drone-EW-cyber Mobile Brigade Combat Team.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The Pentagon just drew its sharpest line yet on military AI — and it has consequences for every battlefield system in development.
This episode covers the Pentagon's decision to grant eight major AI firms access to its most classified networks while blacklisting Anthropic for refusing to remove safety guardrails on autonomous weapons. We break down what Impact Level 6 and IL7 access actually means, why OpenAI said yes and Anthropic said no, and what the federal court injunction blocking the blacklist signals about the coming AI governance crisis in defence procurement. We also cover Ukraine's Tryzub AI laser system — developed by Celebra Tech — now entering final testing with a 5km engagement range against Shahed drones at near-zero cost per intercept, directly challenging Russia's mass-drone attrition strategy. President Zelenskyy has officially confirmed the first all-robot seizure of a fortified Russian position, with 25,000 unmanned ground vehicles now under contract for delivery in H1 2026. The US Army's FY27 counter-UAS budget hits $994 million — nearly double last year — with a systems-of-systems architecture integrating kinetic, electronic warfare, and individual soldier-level tools. And in the maritime domain, unmanned surface vessels are going armed: Leonardo DRS and Invariant both demonstrated counter-drone kill chains from autonomous boats, as China's L30 USV swarm test signals a parallel maritime unmanned race.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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Ukraine just solved the fiber-optic drone problem — and the answer isn't electronic warfare.
This episode covers Ukraine's deployment of the Khyzhak AI-powered gun turret, a Brave1-developed system that autonomously tracks and engages fiber-optic-guided FPV drones — the one class of UAV that electronic warfare jamming cannot touch. The turret is already in active combat with K-2 Brigade and more than ten frontline units. Hosts Marcus Vale and Sam Chen dig into the supply chain crisis driving it: fiber-optic spool prices have risen 800 percent as AI data centers and drone manufacturers fight over the same cable. Then the Pentagon's most significant munitions announcement in years — framework agreements with Anduril (Barracuda-500M), Leidos, CoAspire, and Zone 5 for 10,000 low-cost cruise missiles by 2029, plus startup Castelion's parallel deal for 500 Blackbeard hypersonic strike weapons. CYBERCOM's request for a 2,660 percent AI budget increase signals machine-speed offensive and defensive cyber operations are no longer theoretical. The CBO drops a $1.2 trillion price tag on Golden Dome, and the Air Force finalizes requirements for an attrition-tolerant MQ-9 Reaper replacement. The common thread across every domain: designing for mass, building for loss, and pushing the kill chain to machines.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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The first confirmed all-machine assault in modern warfare happened in April — and this episode is about everything it means.
Ukraine's 3rd Separate Assault Brigade captured a fortified Russian position using only ground robots and UAVs, with zero Ukrainian casualties in the assault phase. We cover that milestone alongside the world's first USV-launched interceptor drone kill by Ukraine's 412th Nemesis Brigade — a crewless naval vessel shooting down a Shahed over open water. We then turn to Washington, where the Pentagon's Defense Autonomous Warfare Group is requesting a 24,000% budget increase — from $226 million to $54.6 billion in a single cycle — as part of a $75 billion total drone warfare investment. That's the same week the DoD cleared eight AI firms for its most classified networks while excluding Anthropic, which has now sued the department over military AI ethics. We also cover DARPA's containerized drone swarm program seeking autonomous constellations of up to 500 platforms, Germany's STARK AI recce-strike loop trials, the Auterion-Airlogix autonomous strike drone production JV in Germany, and the DoD's selection of five bases for its directed-energy counter-drone program.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
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When drone mass becomes political language — and when AI autonomy in warfare stops being theoretical.
This episode covers Ukraine's second-largest drone attack of the war: 347 UAVs launched across 20 Russian regions on the eve of Victory Day, grounding nearly 100 Moscow flights and forcing Russia to strip its most important national parade of tanks and missiles for the first time in two decades. Marcus and Sam break down the TTP evolution of using drone mass as a diplomatic signal — and why Russia's claimed 100% intercept rate still represents a Ukrainian operational success. The episode then turns to the US Army's AI TTX 2.0 wargame, where 14 senior tech executives joined Army Cyber Command in a Pacific-war scenario that produced a stark finding: AI attacks faster than humans can defend, and the Army is now developing a formal "risk acceptance continuum" for when it may have to authorize autonomous AI action in the cyber domain. Also covered: the US Army's 116th National Guard brigade becoming the first force reclassified as a Mobile Brigade Combat Team with organic drone, EW, and cyber capabilities; DARPA and Northrop Grumman's first flight of the XRQ-73 SHEPARD hybrid-electric stealth ISR drone designed for acoustic-signature penetration of contested airspace; and China's Hurricane 3000 and NI-HP1000 high-power microwave counter-drone systems — and what their proliferation means for the mass-drone operational window that Ukraine has proven effective.
Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.
- Visa fler