Steel Soldiers: How Ukraine Is Sending Machines to Battle Instead of Human Soldiers
15 Articles
15 Articles
By Ivana Kottasová, Daria Tarasova-Markina and Victoria Butenko, CNN. The scene is as old as war itself. Two soldiers, hands raised, surrendering and carefully following orders shouted by the other side. Only in this case, there were no human captors in sight. Instead, the two Russians were surrendering to Ukrainian ground robots and drones controlled by an operator from the safety of a position miles from the front line. This is the future of w…
The scene is as old as the war itself. Two soldiers, with their arms raised, surrender and follow carefully the orders given to them from the other side. Except that in this case, there is no human enemy in sight. Instead, the two Russians surrendered to ground robots and Ukrainian drones, controlled by a safe pilot, in a position located miles away from the front line.
For the first time, Ukraine claims that only robots have taken over a Russian position. This claim cannot be independently verified. However, one thing is certain: technology has long since changed warfare. By R. Barth.
Since the beginning of the war, drones have dominated the skies over Ukraine. Now, however, their ground-based counterparts—wheeled or tracked robots—are becoming equally important.
Steel soldiers: How Ukraine is sending machines to battle instead of human soldiers
New Delhi: This might seem to be a plot point from a futuristic film or a science fiction series, but it is real and happening right now. The popular trope of machines going into war instead of humans is becoming real. Something like this happened when Ukrainian land robots and drones controlled by a pilot from the safety of a position miles away from the front line were seen in combat with the Russians in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war. “The po…
CHANGING FACE OF WAR: Ukraine using robotic soldiers to hold off Russia – ‘Robots don’t bleed’ – Ogbomoso Insight
CHANGING FACE OF WAR: Ukraine using robotic soldiers to hold off Russia – ‘Robots don’t bleed’ Yinka ADETUNJI Except in this case, there were no human captors in sight. Instead, the two Russians were submitting to Ukrainian land robots and drones controlled by a pilot from the safety of a position miles away from the front line. This is the future of warfare – and it’s happening now. “The position was taken without a single shot being fi…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium







