Jared Martin
For more than two decades, the United States has been lulled into complacency fighting counterinsurgencies against foes who were woefully overmatched by the technical prowess of the U.S. military. Satellites and high-altitude surveillance aircraft thrived in uncontested airspace which provided American forces the distinct intelligence advantage. This advantage seemed so dominant that the United States stopped evolving. In Ukraine, our illusion is being dismantled by $500 drones.
Across a battlefield saturated with electronic warfare and long-range fires, Ukrainian units now use cheap commercial drones to spot targets, track movements, provide surveillance and reconnaissance, and organize strikes in real-time. These systems do not belong to a rigid, centralized enterprise. Instead, they belong to platoons, companies, and volunteer operators scattered across hundreds of miles along the warfront. Together, they have built something no Western military currently possesses: a disposable, decentralized intelligence network designed to survive in a high-attrition war.
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