The Kiev regime has decided to limit the use of the Turkish-made Bayraktar TB2 drones in the face of sophisticated Russian air defenses, Colonel Volodymyr Valiukh, a commander of Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate, told an international defense news outlet.
Valiukh made it clear that although there is evidently still some use for the TB2s, the deployment frequency and roles for those UAVs had changed.
Now that Russian air and electronic defenses have advanced in quality, Valiukh added, the most recent TB2 flight he observed lasted a mere 30 minutes. It’s worth recalling in this regard that per the manufacturer, a TB2 drone is capable of staying airborne for 27 hours.
The global news outlet noted in this vein that although Valiukh’s assessment comes as the UAVs are still of importance to Ukraine’s “defense calculus, new tactical constraints have come into play”.
According to the outlet, the Bayraktar TB2 drones "seemed to have disappeared from available footage of battlefield action," which was not the case with previous years, when these UAVs often grabbed the headlines as they purportedly successfully targeted Russian military hardware.
This followed a US magazine reporting that the Ukrainian Armed Forces no longer have a drone advantage over Russian troops, and that the time when Kiev "had better UAVs than Moscow" has now passed. The magazine quoted Ukrainian drone pilot Nikolai Voroshnov as saying that the Ukrainian military is “starting to fall behind significantly” in terms of drone warfare.
The magazine, in turn, noted that the Russian military is “buying FPV [first-person-view] drones by the hundreds and training regular troops to fly them via virtual-reality headsets”. The Ukrainian forces, in contrast, “largely still rely on donations to buy FPV drones—and volunteers to operate them,” the news outlet added.
The active use of state-of-the-art drones, such as the Lancet, by the Russian forces has added to the Ukrainian military’s failure to break through Moscow's defensive line in the special operation zone in the summer. Russian President Vladimir Putin said that
Kiev’s botched counteroffensive claimed the lives of more than 90,000 Ukrainian soldiers and led to the loss of over 550 Ukrainian tanks.