Ǵ

Robot wars: Ukraine now adding ‘land drones’ to its futuristic arsenal

A manufacturer tends to a Ukrainian-made unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) holding a dummy land mine at a Ukraine Defense Innovations exhibition for military clients at an undisclosed location in Ukraine, April 11, 2025.

Efrem Lukatsky/AP/File

May 31, 2026

Located down a dirt road that traverses spring-green fields, the white-washed, blue-shuttered farmhouse looks like any other in this eastern region of Ukraine bordering Russia.

On the outside, the scene could be a quaint depiction of 19th-century farm life: Flowering pear trees partly obscure the house and its outbuildings surrounding a small courtyard. Cows can be heard next door.

But step inside the old farmhouse or one of the barns, and it’s 21st-century warfare in the making.

Why We Wrote This

The Ukraine war has transformed the battlefield. First, it was aerial drones. Now, ground robots are being developed and deployed for reconnaissance, deliveries, evacuations, and handling mines. The goal: to help Ukraine stand up to its larger Russian enemy.

Scruffy-bearded young men in flannel shirts test the connections between handheld controllers and vehicles in a variety of shapes and sizes. Computer screens display small vehicles moving across an obstacle-strewn battlefield. In one barn, a man inspects autonomous vehicles ranging in size from an average lawnmower to a large wagon.

Welcome to Ukraine’s war-inspired robot revolution.

In Trump’s second term, financial gain has become a defining feature

UGVs to do foot soldiers’ work

Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, now in its fifth year, has been the arena both for astounding expansion of the role of drones in war and for accelerating technological advances in adapting aerial drones – also called unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs – to battlefield uses.

Now, a similar process is unfolding involving robots – or “land drones,” as Ukrainians prefer to call them. Unmanned ground vehicles, or UGVs, are being developed and deployed on the front lines to carry out tasks traditionally handled by foot soldiers.

From providing reconnaissance and delivering supplies to firing small arms, evacuating the wounded, and mining and demining, robots are doing it, or soon will be.

Speaking to weapons manufacturers on Ukraine’s Arms Makers’ Day in April, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine, for the first time, had captured an unspecified Russian position “using exclusively unmanned platforms,” both aerial drones and robots. “The future is here, on the battlefield,” he said, “and Ukraine is creating it.”

Military robot operation school director Vitaly, call sign "Cossack," has seen the battlefield evolve to more intense use of aerial drones over the last two years and greater use of robots or land drones.
Howard LaFranchi/Ǵ

“When this war started, most people were still thinking of aerial drones as ‘wedding drones’ that go up and take videos for the people getting married,” says Vitaly, director of the 10th Army Corps’ robot operation school, which occupies the blossom-cloaked farmhouse. He and others interviewed for this story only gave their first names because of security concerns.

One God, one prayer, and a promise

“With land drones, it’s the same,” he adds. “What started as toys and a hobby for soldiers [is] now quickly being adapted to battlefield uses.”

Vitaly – who in recognition of Ukraine’s legendary defenders uses the call sign “Cossack,” and sports the Cossack haircut of a shaved head save for a long, blond ponytail – says that, like drones, robots are being developed and deployed to level the playing field with Russia.

The objective: compensate as much as possible for Ukraine’s deficits and disadvantages in relation to Russia, which has a far greater population and one of the largest standing armies in the world.

Sparing lives on the battlefield

“We need to develop robots to perform as many of the tasks a soldier normally would handle as possible,” Vitaly says. “There will always be a need for infantry, so we need to develop ways to support and protect the infantry, and robots can help us do that.”

Indeed, sparing lives on the battlefield and making the day-to-day lives of soldiers on the front lines safer and less encumbered is a key objective of Brave1, a Ukrainian government wartime initiative. The collaborative platform aims to accelerate the development of a world-class defense tech industry by supporting defense-focused startups and innovation.

“We help our government find the small startups and producers who are responding to the needs of our guys on the front lines, and then funnel contracts to them to deliver the products that can make our soldiers’ lives better,” says Ihor Shmyryov, head of the UGV Department at Brave1. “Our purpose is the fast-tracking of innovation to the front line,” he adds, “with the highest goal of this effort being the saving of lives.”

When created in 2023, Brave1 initially focused on UAV innovation and production. But by this year, UGV development had jumped to almost 40 percent of the grants the initiative awarded.

“Now, almost every day, I receive some new proposal for the application of UGV technology on the ground,” Mr. Shmyryov says, noting that already some 270 manufacturers of various sizes are producing 550 UGV models – and counting.

Taras Ostapchuk, the head of Ratel Robotics in Kyiv, stands among models of his firm's robots, which can be configured to deliver supplies, perform reconnaissance, drop bombs, shoot small-arms fire, and even evacuate wounded soldiers.
Howard LaFranchi/Ǵ

Calling himself a go-between connecting what front-line soldiers are learning with Ukraine’s growing defense tech industry, Mr. Shmyryov offers an example of how robots have answered a call from on the ground.

“A close friend serving in the war before the full-scale invasion told me it would be great to have something that could carry the hundreds of pounds of equipment he was regularly carrying on his back,” he says. “Now, we have robots that can deliver all the gear to positions,” he adds. “It’s one way to lighten the hard work the soldiers do so they can work smarter.”

Currently, about 90% of the tasks robots are undertaking in the war are in logistics, though the use of UGVs for reconnaissance missions that might stump UAVs – for example, in areas of heavy tree cover – is growing rapidly.

Robots instead of “farm boys”

Still, the overriding goal of UGV innovation is “reducing the risks our soldiers face and saving lives,” Mr. Shmyryov says.

“We don’t have the farm boys to send out in waves against enemy fire or to demine a field with their bodies the way our enemy does, and we don’t want to,” he says. “What our use of robots in this war tells the world, I think, is that we care about our people.”

That same philosophy permeates the work at Ratel Robotics in Kyiv.

“We produce five types of UGV drones that can be configured to carry out all kinds of tasks,” says Taras Ostapchuk, the company’s chief executive. “But to me, nothing is more important than the ability to save lives.”

Standing amid five shot-up wagon-like robots in Ratel’s repair shop, the war veteran says each robot was capable of the logistical work of two soldiers.

“That means that when these robots came under fire, maybe we saved 10 lives,” Mr. Ostapchuk says. “And we can fix up these robots and send them right back out to the front line.”

Danilov, an instructor at the 10th Army Corps' drone operations school, is teacher of a class in "survival tactics under drone conditions."
Howard LaFranchi/Ǵ

Ratel (honey badger) was founded in late 2023, initially focused on UAVs. Now, the company has 400 employees – 25 of whom are veterans – producing about 4,000 UGVs annually.

Models are produced that can drop a bomb in enemy trenches, mine or demine a field, deliver supplies, and evacuate the wounded (a large iron-plated box protects the evacuee from aerial drone fire). Some are operated by radio, others with Starlink, the satellite internet service. Some have infrared night-vision capabilities.

Next year, Ratel plans to expand into turret-mounted robots for firing machine guns.

European (and Russian) interest

Some European manufacturers have expressed an interest in gaining access to Ukrainian UGV technology through joint ventures, Mr. Ostapchuk says, but perhaps the highest praise for Ratel’s robots has come from the Russian side.

“We know the enemy has captured our UGVs; we assume to study them and try to replicate them,” he says. “That’s one more indication of how our products are viewed.”

Back at the 10th Army Corps’ robot school, Vitaly and his team are preparing for the next class of 15 students – many of whom will be soldiers coming from the front lines. They’ll spend the day learning the technology and uses of robots, their operation from a computer screen or from a handheld controller out in the field, before returning to their units each night.

“The advantage for us is that we maintain close contact with what’s happening on the ground and how the battlefield is evolving,” says Danilov, the school’s director of curriculum. “It gives us a window into how our robots might be adapted to take on more tasks and make conditions better and safer for our soldiers.”

Oleksandr Naselenko supported reporting for this article.