The war in Ukraine has done quite a number on armored vehicles. What's interesting is that the difference in generations and protection levels hasn't mattered all that much. A recent M1 Abrams lost there hit a land mine, was struck with a laser guided shell, and finished off with multiple FPV drone hits. Some of this is obviously due to the changing nature of the conflict. While landmine/IED threats have been present for some time, most wars don't feature minefields kilometers (tens of kilometers in some cases) deep, and hundreds of kms long. And generally while guided artillery shells have played a role here, the use of artillery in this war is not unprecedented in principle. But FPV drones, a cheaper version of loitering munitions, represent a fairly new element. Prior to the war loitering munitions were relatively expensive and complex. And while the Russian Lancet has become quite widespread, and is now showing at over 150 strikes per month consistently, this is nothing compared to the thousands of FPV drones used by both sides. Civilian UAS adapted for battlefield use are also in principle nothing new. ISIS used quadcopters to drop grenades, and Syrian rebels have used swarms of UAVs to try and overwhelm Russian defense at Khmeimeem before, but the FPV drone as it has emerged here is different. They offer the ability to hit different projections of armor on any vehicle. They're so cheap they can be purchased with donations and so simple they can be assembled like Legos with COTS components by almost anyone. They provide a PGM capability to the last, saddest, most forgotten batallion of mobilized personnel from either side. Initially I thought they were just an erzats for proper loitering munitions, but this is clearly not the case. Their variety and non-standard nature is actually a plus as it makes it harder to come up with a one-size fits all EW solution. Their low price means their expenditure is not significant. You can throw them away in whatever quantity you have them in. The sides involved in the war have adapted by building complex cage structures over all kinds of vehicles, and by putting up netting around artillery positions and over trenches, but this has only partially helped.
So what does the future hold? Roof cages have clearly become mainstream. We've seen Israel, China, and India, using them in peacetime. FPV drones have been spotted in use by the Syrians in actual combat, but no doubt many others stand ready to follow their example. So what does this mean for the future of warfare? Clearly they have a profound effect on the survivability of an armored vehicle. They're also being used to target infantry with airburst variants fielded by both sides in Ukraine. They can overcome EW with limited automated targeting capability (we've seen this first from Russian Lancet variants, then from Ukrainian FPV drones, no doubt Russian ones with that are just around the corner too). The technology is clearly simple enough that anyone with resources will follow suit. What does this mean for future armored vehicle design? An ELINT/EW combo on every vehicle, or every 3rd/5th/10th vehicle to detect both frequencies in use and jam them before the strike lands? Giant barns of sheet metal on top of vehicles leading assault? An end to mechanized and armored warfare as we know it? And where will FPV drones go in the ORBAT? What tactical level needs to use them? A section per company? A dedicated vehicle with a launcher?
Clearly EW has a role to play in countering them as does some sort of SHORAD, possible based on lasers, possibly based on HMGs with EO or radar guidance. Positions will need to protected by anti-UAS teams, we've seen Russia and Ukraine use two-man teams with anti-drone rifles, recently Russia has used a shotgun-based munition to do this (some anti-UAS pickets have been spotted with Vepr' semi-automatic shotguns, some have been spotted using anti-UAS munitions fired from the under-barrel grenade launcher). Their effectiveness is unclear. But so far no solution has emerged that completely overcomes the issue.
What are your thoughts? Where do FPV drones fit in the ORBAT? What does this mean for armored vehicle and MBT design? What happens when COTS FPV can give you a range of tens of kms, instead of the typical 4-5 we have now and they become an effective counter-battery weapon too?
So what does the future hold? Roof cages have clearly become mainstream. We've seen Israel, China, and India, using them in peacetime. FPV drones have been spotted in use by the Syrians in actual combat, but no doubt many others stand ready to follow their example. So what does this mean for the future of warfare? Clearly they have a profound effect on the survivability of an armored vehicle. They're also being used to target infantry with airburst variants fielded by both sides in Ukraine. They can overcome EW with limited automated targeting capability (we've seen this first from Russian Lancet variants, then from Ukrainian FPV drones, no doubt Russian ones with that are just around the corner too). The technology is clearly simple enough that anyone with resources will follow suit. What does this mean for future armored vehicle design? An ELINT/EW combo on every vehicle, or every 3rd/5th/10th vehicle to detect both frequencies in use and jam them before the strike lands? Giant barns of sheet metal on top of vehicles leading assault? An end to mechanized and armored warfare as we know it? And where will FPV drones go in the ORBAT? What tactical level needs to use them? A section per company? A dedicated vehicle with a launcher?
Clearly EW has a role to play in countering them as does some sort of SHORAD, possible based on lasers, possibly based on HMGs with EO or radar guidance. Positions will need to protected by anti-UAS teams, we've seen Russia and Ukraine use two-man teams with anti-drone rifles, recently Russia has used a shotgun-based munition to do this (some anti-UAS pickets have been spotted with Vepr' semi-automatic shotguns, some have been spotted using anti-UAS munitions fired from the under-barrel grenade launcher). Their effectiveness is unclear. But so far no solution has emerged that completely overcomes the issue.
What are your thoughts? Where do FPV drones fit in the ORBAT? What does this mean for armored vehicle and MBT design? What happens when COTS FPV can give you a range of tens of kms, instead of the typical 4-5 we have now and they become an effective counter-battery weapon too?