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Ukraine Plans 25,000 Ground Robots as Battlefield Automation Accelerates

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Ukraine is accelerating its use of unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), betting heavily that machines can take over some of the most dangerous roles on the battlefield. According to Business Insider, Ukraine plans to contract 25,000 new ground robots in the first half of the year, aiming to significantly expand a fleet already used for logistics, combat support, and evacuation. The country’s leadership wants these machines to eventually handle 100% of frontline supply operations, reducing the risks faced by human soldiers. Defense officials say the shift is driven by necessity. Ukraine’s military, facing a larger opponent, is seeking ways to conserve manpower while maintaining operational effectiveness. It’s a matter of efficiency as much as safety. Oleksandr Yabchanka, head of robotic systems for the Da Vinci Wolves Battalion, told Business Insider that “one average-sized war robot can carry more than roughly 10 servicemen can.” Battlefield robots are becoming offensive tools While these wagons started as delivery tools, they are now leading the charge. For the first time in the history of this war, Ukrainian officials report taking an enemy position using only unmanned platforms. In one recent mission in the city of Kupiansk, robots led an assault on a school building occupied by Russian troops. One robot fired rockets to keep the enemy away from windows, while others carrying heavy explosives drove directly into the building to bring it down. The human operators weren’t even in the same city; they controlled the machines via radio relays from a safe distance. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy highlighted this evolution in a recent address, stating that ground robots carried out over 22,000 missions in the last three months. Zelenskyy noted that “lives were saved more than 22,000 times when a robot went into the most dangerous areas instead of a warrior.” That number is staggering when you consider the context. Just six months earlier, in December, Commander-in-Chief Ole…