UAVs and Swarm Drone Systems
"When one is talking about the strategy for the development of unmanned vehicles, one should pay a lot of attention to the so-called 'swarming system'," he continued.
"Despite the fact that a lot is said about the autonomy of drones (…) they are mostly semi-autonomous drones," Alexei Leonkov, a military analyst and editor of Arsenal of the Fatherland, a Russian military publication, told Sputnik. "In case of an error in the drone's autonomous actions, the operator can always intervene and correct it; or find the drone that is stuck somewhere, for example, or [to redirect] some ground drones that deliver correspondence. So it’s not yet possible to talk about fully autonomous drones which operate being controlled by artificial intelligence."
Russia's State-of-the-Art Electronic Warfare Systems
"Electronic warfare systems have been developing for a long time," Leonkov emphasized. "That is, arguably, Russia is the only country in the world that has specialized electronic warfare systems that target certain radio equipment; high-precision weapons and fuses; and electronic surveillance stations both aviation and ground-based. We have EW systems that can target communication systems, including mobile communication and mobile Internet systems. And we also have EW complexes that can target satellite systems for data transmission, communications, intelligence, and so on. The development of these complexes never stops."
"There was equipment, but it was mostly experimental, capable of producing a large-scale impact on a large number of unmanned aerial vehicles," Leonkov said. "I have seen several installations of that kind which could immediately cover a large space where they conduct their activity (...) Their power allows you to target a whole group of drones. Therefore, their appearance in the conflict zone was a matter of time. And indeed, as soon as they go into mass production and appear on the line of contact, most of the problems with small unmanned vehicles will be solved. Such complexes will be able to counter-attack swarms of drones, which have not yet been used on a large scale in the zone of the special military operation."
"The question is simply how the work of the electronic warfare complex will be organized so that it affects either individual key satellites, both military and civilian, [or groups of satellites]," Leonkov said. "That is, for example, satellites for remote sensing of the Earth, satellites that provide mobile and Internet communications in 5G format. If these satellites operate for military purposes, they become a combat control loop. So, the impact of the electronic warfare complex on them violates their functionality. If the enemy does not understand that commercial satellites are being used for something other than their intended purpose, then they can be made to stop functioning. In principle, there was such a precedent. Elon Musk complained that his satellites had begun to work poorly. Then some of them failed. He had to launch additional satellites from the reserves in order to make continuous transmission of the 5G signal across the entire surface of the planet."