Ukraine's answer to Russia's drone blitz
The previous record had been set on July 4, and the one before that five days earlier.
Russia's 'swarm' warfare, enabled by its ability to mass-produce low-cost, long-range attack drones, has exhausted and overwhelmed Ukraine's air defences, allowing targets to now be hit three times the typical rate.
With its stocks of Western air defence missiles depleted and Russia's Iranian-designed Shahed-type drones flying faster, higher and with greater precision, Ukraine has become increasingly vulnerable.
Credit: X / @wartranslated
Volodymyr Zelensky had set a target by the end of July for Ukraine to produce 1,000 interceptor drones a month and blunt Russia's relentless drone offensive.
The Ukrainian president bet big, estimating it would cost £4.4bn to ramp up production and train more pilots.
The maths makes sense. It costs £3m to fire an interceptor missile from a US-made Patriot system – or £400,000 for those from the European IRSI-T – to knock out a £50,000 Shahed or possibly even a cheap decoy.
Ukraine's new anti-aircraft drones, however, cost as little as £1,000 to £4,000.
Depending on the interceptor, they either smash into their target, blow up next to it or shoot it down. Those being produced now have to be able to hunt the newer Shahed variants that are flying out of range of truck-mounted machine gun units, a core pillar of Ukraine's air defence.
Kyiv already has a huge domestic drone industry manufacturing cheap but highly effective unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) en masse and quickly adapting them to the evolving aerial battlefield.
To domestically produce a low-cost air shield will depend on time, money and whether it can defend against newer Russian drones.
In July, Ukraine's military signed a major deal with Swift Beat, a company belonging to Eric Schmidt, the former Google chief executive, to mass-produce 'hundreds of thousands' of AI-driven drones. Sources say the company's three drones – kept secret for security reasons – are responsible for 90 per cent of Shahed interceptions.
One of Ukraine's newest domestically-produced interceptors is the Bagnet (Bayonet) UAV, which is being lauded as the 'Shahed killer'. Purpose-built to down the lethal munitions, it can match the increased speeds of the Shahed (up to 150mph), fly at altitudes of 16,500ft with a 10-mile range.
It is currently being used by several Ukrainians on the frontline, with confirmed successes. Five defence companies are now mass producing it for the military.
Wild Hornets, a Ukrainian UAV manufacturer, this month showed its 'Sting' interceptor drone flying at speeds of up to 195mph, making it one of the fastest first-person-view drones on the market.
Less than a year ago, the Sting flew at half the speed. Now, pilots have used the $2,500 (£1,860) model to down at least 100 Shaheds, the company said.
It's a small contribution in the fight against Russia's drone attacks – it launched 6,129 Shahed-type drones in July alone, 14 times the amount launched in July 2024.
'Ukrainians feel they have found the technical solution to Russia's exponential increase in production of Shahed-type drones, but now it is a matter of scaling it up,' John Hardie, deputy director of the Russia programme at the Foundation for Defence of Democracies, told The Telegraph.
He said Kyiv had already proved it was up to the task, given its success in mass-producing interceptor drones to target Russian reconnaissance drones last year, which helped to blind Moscow's eyes in the sky. 'I was sceptical it could be done, but it could,' he said.
The results are likely to be seen in 'six months to a year'. It's not as simple as producing drones – the pilots need to be trained and radar stations built. 'And then comes the adaptations,' he said.
And yet the aerial battlefield changes fast. Ukraine has the edge now – but how long this lasts is unclear, said Mr Hardie. Some of Russia's attack drones are starting to show an ability to counter Ukraine's new interceptors. It's a cat and mouse game, with both sides locked in a technological race to gain the edge in a sky filled with drones.
'The dance never really stops,' he added.
Valerii Riabykh, a Ukrainian weapons expert and the editor of Defence Express, said: 'Frankly speaking, it should take some time for Ukraine to have enough interceptor drones to combine them in an efficient system to counteract enemy suicide drones.'
The state is also still playing catch-up. Ukrainian charities that crowdfund weapons through civilian donations have been supplying military units with interceptor drones for almost a year.
Taras Tymochko, a consultant from one of the largest of them, Come Back Alive, said that they now supply interceptors to 90 units and that over 3,000 Russian drones have been downed as a result, including 100 Shaheds.
He told The Telegraph: 'The Shaheds became the main weapon of terror attacks on our civil population. We needed to increase our capabilities'.
Mr Tymochko estimates the value of downed Russian drones at $195m (£145m), over a dozen times more than the cost of the drones and equipment handed over under the project. 'When it comes to cost, it cannot be compared,' he said.
But interceptor drones are no silver bullet to sealing the holes in Kyiv's air defences.
The small propeller-powered interceptor drones are also no match for Russian missiles, or for its new jet-powered Shahed-type Geran-3 drones, which can fly at up to 500mph and are difficult to catch and being launched in increasing numbers.
It also does not solve the issue of Russia's ability to launch cheap mass attacks of drones and decoys all across Ukraine at once as there are simply not enough Ukrainian drone pilots to target them all.
'They will change the future of air defence, but they won't replace conventional systems, they will compliment them,' he said.
That future is coming – just not yet.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Los Angeles Times
11 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
Google's Pixel 10 phone raises the ante on artificial intelligence
Google unveiled a new line-up of Pixel smartphones injected with another dose of artificial intelligence that's designed to do everything from fetch vital information stored on the devices to help improve photos as they're being taken. The AI expansion on the four Pixel 10 models amplifies Google's efforts to broaden the use of a technology that is already starting to reshape society. At the same time, Google is taking a swipe at Apple's Achilles' heel on the iPhone. Apple so far has only been able to introduce a few basic AI features on the iPhone while failing to deliver on last year's promise to deliver a more conversational and versatile version of its often-blundering virtual assistant Siri. Without mentioning the iPhone by name, Google has already been mocking Apple's missteps in online ads promoting the four new Pixel models as smartphones loaded with AI technology that consumers won't have to wait for more than a year to arrive. 'There has been a lot of hype about this and, frankly, a lot of broken promises, too,' Google executive Rick Osterloh said during a 75-minute presentation in New York about the new Pixel phones. The event was emceed by late-night TV show host Jimmy Fallon. Google, in contrast, has been steadily increasing the amount of AI that it began to implant on its Pixels since 2023, with this year's models taking it to another level. 'We think this year we have a game-changing phone with game-changing technology,' Osterloh said. Taking advantage of a more advanced processor, Google is introducing a new AI feature on the Pixel 10 phones called 'Magic Cue' that's designed to serve as a digital mind reader that automatically fetches information stored on the devices and displays the data at the time it's needed. For instance, if a Pixel 10 user is calling up an airline, Magic Cue is supposed to instantaneously recognize the phone number and display the flight information if it's in Gmail or a Google Calendar. The Pixel 10 phones will also come with a preview feature of a new AI tool called 'Camera Coach' that will automatically suggest the best framing and lighting angle as the lens is being aimed at a subject. Camera Coach will also recommend the best lens mode to use for an optimal picture. The premium models — Pixel 10 Pro and Pixel 10 Pro XL — will also include a 'Super Res' option that deploys a grab bag of software and AI tricks to zoom up to 100 times the resolution to capture the details of objects located miles away from the camera. The AI wizardry could happen without users even realizing it's happening, making it even more difficult to know whether an image captured in a photo reflects how things really looked at the time a picture was taken or was modified by technology. The Pixel 10 will also be able to almost instantaneously translate phone conversations into a range of different languages using the participants' own voices. Google is also offering a free one-year subscription to its AI Pro plan to anyone who buys the more expensive Pixel 10 Pro or Pixel 10 Pro XL models in hopes of hooking more people on the Gemini toolkit it has assembled to compete against OpenAI's ChatGPT. The prices on all four Pixel 10 models will remain unchanged from last year's Pixel 9 generation, with the basic starting at $800 and the Pro selling for $1,000, the Pro XL at $1,200 and a foldable version at $1,800. All the Pixel 10s expect the foldable model will be in stores on August 28. The Pixel 10 Pro Fold will be available starting October 9. Although the Pixel smartphone remains a Lilliputian next to the Gulliverian stature of the iPhone and Samsung's Galaxy models, Google's ongoing advances in AI while holding the line on its marquee devices raise the competitive stakes. 'In the age of AI, it is a true laboratory of innovation,' Forrester Research analyst Thomas Husson said of the Pixel. Apple, in particular, will be facing more pressure than usual when it introduces the next-generation iPhone next month. Although the company has already said the smarter Siri won't be ready until next year at the earliest, Apple will still be expected to show some progress in AI to demonstrate the iPhone is adapting to technology's AI evolution rather than tilting toward gradual obsolescence. Clinging to a once-successful formula eventually sank the BlackBerry and its physical keyboard when the iPhone and its touch screen came along nearly 20 years ago. Apple's pricing of the next iPhone will also be under the spotlight, given that the devices are made in China and India — two of the prime targets in President Donald Trump's trade war. But Apple appeared to gain a reprieve from Trump's most onerous threats earlier this month by adding another $100 billion on top of an earlier $500 billion investment pledge to the U.S. The tariff relief may enable Apple to minimize or even avoid price increases for the iPhone, just as Google has done with the Pixel 10 models. Liedtke writes for the Associated Press.

Engadget
11 minutes ago
- Engadget
Google AI Mode is expanding to 180 countries and adding an agentic restaurant finder
Google's seemingly unrelenting quest to infuse AI into every aspect of your online life just got a lot more global in scope, with the company expanding its AI Mode in Search to over 180 new countries . AI Mode has previously only been available in the US, India and the UK, and while English remains the only supported language right now, Google says it'll add more soon. Google is also expanding its AI Mode's agentic capabilities, so you can now use natural language to find restaurant reservations. Google says you can ask about getting a dinner reservation with conditions such as group size, date, location and your preference of cuisine, all of which be taken into consideration when AI Mode pulls in its results from across the web. Suggestions will be presented in list form with the available reservation slots. It'll also provide a link to the booking page you need. Google also plans to add local service appointments and event ticketing capabilities soon, with Ticketmaster and StubHub among its partners. AI Mode leverages Google's web-browsing AI agent Project Mariner' its direct partners on Search and resources like Knowledge Graph and Google Maps when prompted to find you somewhere to eat. It has partnered with the likes of OpenTable, Resy and Tock to incorporate as many restaurants as possible and streamline the booking process. Right now, this feature is exclusive to those subscribed to the wildly expensive Google AI Ultra plan in the US, and can be accessed through its Labs platform. If you opt into the AI Mode experiment it can also remember your previous conversations and searches to give you results that more closely match your preferences. Finally, if your AI-powered conversations are simply too interesting to keep to yourself, Google will now let you bring others in when you tap the "Share" button on a response. This allows your chosen contact to join the conversation at that point and ask their own follow-up questions. Google uses planning trips or parties as examples of when you might want to collaborate with someone else on an AI-assisted task. The original sender can delete shared links whenever they like.


The Hill
11 minutes ago
- The Hill
Witkoff calls Trump the ‘Michael Jordan' of dealmaking amid Russia-Ukraine talks
U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff on Wednesday recounted the Alaska summit last week with Russian President Vladimir Putin, calling President Trump the 'Michael Jordan' of dealmaking. In a radio interview on the 'Cats & Cosby Show,' Witkoff described to hosts John Catsimatidis and Rita Cosby what he and Secretary of State Marco Rubio witnessed behind closed doors ahead of Trump's high-stakes meeting with the Kremlin's leader. 'When the doors closed, John and Rita, in Alaska, I and Marco got to witness the great master, master dealmaker-in-chief, Donald J. Trump,' Witkoff said. 'And it was quite extraordinary to watch.' 'We've all grown up in New York and we've all done deals, but President Trump is, you know, he's the Michael Jordan of this business. In fact, he's the Michael Jordan, Tiger Woods and Albert Einstein all put together,' Witkoff continued. Witkoff has held several sessions with Putin in recent months as the Trump administration has sought to broker a diplomatic end to the war between Russia and Ukraine. While his own talks with Putin were constructive, Witkoff said in the interview that Trump has 'got this uncanny ability to get to the right place' and was able to make significantly more progress in his meeting with the Russian leader last Friday. 'I think he felt that we made a lot of progress in a one-on-one with Putin,' Witkoff said. 'What we were able to determine, and I hope it holds, that the Russians are prepared to be accommodating — more accommodating than we had seen in five or six sessions that I had with him, with President Putin.' 'They were positive and constructive sessions,' Witkoff said about his own meetings with Putin, 'but the president was able to extract more concessions in that Alaska summit — significantly more — with regard to the regions, with regard to the territories, with regard to security protocols.' 'A lot of things were given or were offered up as a compromise, as an accommodation, by President Putin. That is a really big deal because… that's the deal making business,' Witkoff said, 'Narrowing the issues between the parties. And that's what happened, by the way, in Alaska, we narrowed the issues and the divide.' Trump emerged from the meeting Friday with no concrete wins but touted the progress made behind closed doors. He then met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and other European leaders at the White House on Monday to discuss next steps. Trump has said the next step is for Zelensky and Putin to meet for a bilateral meeting, after which Trump said he would join for a trilateral meeting. Witkoff said during the interview he expects a trilateral meeting, if it takes place, would produce the most progress. 'The next move is going to be very telling as to whether Zelensky and Putin meet together. And I think ultimately, if that happens, if that meeting happens — and I believe it will, I'm certainly hopeful it will — that will, in my view, potentially lead to a trilateral between the three, and there, I think you'd see a lot more progress,' Witkoff said.