Giorgi Revishvili Profile picture
Military Analyst • Former Senior Advisor to NSC of Georgia • Focused on Russia-Ukraine war and Eurasian Security • Views my own •

Mar 23, 7 tweets

Robert Brovdi, Commander of Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces:

Soldiers are ordered to target [Russian] personnel, rather than armour or other equipment, at least 30% of the time. 1/6

“If a battalion has no infantry left, the Russians don’t disband it but throw desk officers to the front. They are the easiest targets, because they can’t fight.” 2/6

Every mission, whether drone strike or electronic-warfare session, is logged and verified by video, then fed into business-intelligence software that Brovdi repurposed from his days as a grain trader. 3/6

The killing is managed closer to the front. Teams operate 3-5km behind the line, overseen only by battle captains back at headquarters. The unit has an ecosystem of 15 interlocking functions, from jamming to surveillance, mine-laying and explosive production. 4/6

It is a concept nato generals have yet to grasp, he says. “When the Americans come—and they come to us like bees to honey—they ask, ‘Which drone is best?’ I tell them the best drone is an ecosystem. For one pilot to make a kill, a whole machine must work behind him.” 5/6

Strict safety protocols keep his unit’s cumulative casualty rate at just 1%. The unmanned-systems forces now extract 400 Russian lives for just one Ukrainian and each kill costs $878 in materiel. 6/6

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