Taras Kuzio
Ukraine’s most important battlefield lessons have much to teach the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Ukraine’s experience has shown how cheap drones can destroy high-value assets, highlighting urgent gaps in NATO preparedness. Battlefield experience in Ukraine shows that innovation, speed, and adaptability matter more than expensive legacy systems in modern warfare. Its forces update software in weeks, use decentralized procurement, and integrate civilians and industry into defense.
Ukraine has become a leader in modern warfare—producing thousands of drones daily, pioneering sea-drone combat, and achieving high air-defense interception rates. Its tactical creativity underscores that future wars require whole-of-society mobilization, flexible doctrines, and scalable, low-cost technologies.
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