BLUF #16: The Attritable Soldiers of Modern Warfare
BLUF
On March 1, two Iranian drones operated by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps flew into and struck [https://health.aws.amazon.com/health/status] Amazon Web Services data centers in the United Arab Emirates, and one more struck near a data center in Bahrain. According to the AWS health dashboard [https://health.aws.amazon.com/health/status], the strikes caused structural damage and disrupted power delivery to a significant portion of the infrastructure at the affected sites. In some cases, AWS needed to suppress fires, which led to additional water damage. This is not an isolated instance. Throughout the war in the Gulf, the Russo-Ukrainian War, the Sudan Civil War, and the Myanmar Civil War, these types of attritable, flying weapons are becoming the tool of choice for militaries and militia groups that want both extended surveillance times and cost-effective weapons systems.
Loitering munitions [https://www.swcs.mil/Special-Warfare-Journal/Article/4338971/loitering-munitions-in-modern-combat-addressing-tactical-gaps-at-the-small-unit/], also known as suicide drones or kamikaze drones, are autonomous or semi-autonomous aerial vehicles designed to hover around an area, collect surveillance data, identify a target, and engage it with their onboard warhead by flying into it. This article examines three such loitering munitions currently deployed in combat zones. The first is the small and common first-person viewer drone. The second is the Switchblade 600, a mid-sized tactical munition. And the third is the Shahed-136, a strategic “one-way attack” munition. While not exhaustive of loitering munitions, these weapons systems are redefining what modern warfighting means in the contexts of attritability, autonomous warfare, and artificial intelligence.
Music:
Tomasz Redman
Noah Tan
Video Clip:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Vit4q2RZ3Dc [https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Vit4q2RZ3Dc]
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.roemedia.org [https://www.roemedia.org?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]