The AI War Brief

Russia's Geran-5 Can Shoot Back — Ukraine's Sichen Hits 1,400km | May 22, 2026

20 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Russia's Geran-5 Can Shoot Back — Ukraine's Sichen Hits 1,400km | May 22, 2026

Descripción

Autonomous weapons are outrunning every rule written to govern them — and this week, both sides of the Ukraine conflict unveiled systems that prove it. Russia publicly revealed the Geran-5 jet-powered strike drone at the Victory Day parade in Moscow. Unlike its slow Shahed-derived predecessor, the Geran-5 is faster, harder to intercept, and — according to Ukraine's HUR intelligence directorate — may be capable of carrying R-73 infrared-guided air-to-air missiles, turning a strike platform into an active counter-air threat. Ukraine's answer: the Sichen, a domestically produced 1,400km strike drone with a 40kg warhead, engineered to defeat Russian GPS jamming and electronic warfare — no Western partner approval required. We cover what both revelations mean for air defence doctrine in contested airspace. In Washington, the Pentagon cleared eight AI firms — AWS, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, SpaceX, NVIDIA, Reflection, and Oracle — to deploy their systems on its most classified warfighting networks, explicitly excluding Anthropic after its refusal to support autonomous weapons targeting. The day after, the US Senate warned that DoD Directive 3000.09 cannot keep pace with the autonomous systems already being fielded. We break down what the AI vendor shake-up means for the US kill chain, the Army's $994M counter-drone procurement plan, Perennial Autonomy's $500M contract, Poland joining the Pentagon counter-drone marketplace, and Ukraine's commitment to 25,000 ground robotic systems by mid-2026. Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.

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27 episodios

Portada del episodio Ukraine's Sky Map Trains U.S. Soldiers, Talon Blue Flies Autonomous | Jun 1, 2026

Ukraine's Sky Map Trains U.S. Soldiers, Talon Blue Flies Autonomous | Jun 1, 2026

One year after Operation Spiderweb proved no Russian airbase is safe from a cargo truck, the doctrinal aftershocks are still landing. This episode marks the anniversary of Ukraine's June 1, 2025 strike on five Russian strategic airbases — 117 FPV drones smuggled inside cargo trucks by recruited Russian drivers, hitting Tu-160, Tu-95, and Tu-22M strategic bombers at bases up to 1,700 km from Ukraine, destroying an estimated 34% of Russia's cruise missile-carrying bomber fleet in a single night. One year on, we assess what changed and what didn't. We then cover Ukraine's Sky Map counter-drone AI — now deployed to Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, with Ukrainian officers training U.S. soldiers after $1.3 billion in losses during Operation Epic Fury — and the broader Ukraine-to-West technology transfer now operating in reverse. We cover Northrop Grumman's YFQ-48A Talon Blue autonomous wingman entering flight testing as the third CCA contender, putting the Air Force's down-select decision within reach. We examine Mistral AI's partnership with Airbus and what a sovereign European AI-weapons supply chain means for NATO interoperability. And we close with DARPA's containerized autonomous drone hub concept — the direct architectural response to the lesson Spiderweb proved: fixed bases are targets. Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.

Ayer21 min
Portada del episodio Shield AI Pilots LUCAS Swarms as Pentagon Bets $54B on Autonomous War | May 29, 2026

Shield AI Pilots LUCAS Swarms as Pentagon Bets $54B on Autonomous War | May 29, 2026

The age of the human pilot is ending — and this week the Pentagon signed the contract to prove it. Shield AI was selected to integrate its Hivemind AI software into the LUCAS one-way attack drone program, placing an autonomous agent in command of swarms of kamikaze drones for the first time in US military history. One human sets the objective; Hivemind handles the rest. We break down what that means — technically, doctrinally, and legally — against the backdrop of a Senate hearing where officials admitted that human-in-the-loop oversight becomes mathematically impossible when you're orchestrating thousands of systems simultaneously. This episode also covers the Pentagon's staggering $54.6 billion DAWG budget request for FY2027, and why that number matters more than its size suggests; the $500 million Perennial Autonomy contract that turns Ukraine's battlefield counter-drone math into official US doctrine — the Merops interceptor has downed 4,300 Russian drones at $15k per kill; a Ukrainian ground robot that held a front-line position under constant Russian assault for 45 consecutive days with zero Ukrainian casualties; and Project Flytrap 5.0, the NATO exercise that just concluded testing 50+ counter-UAS technologies including a new offensive doctrine aimed at the drone operator, not just the drone. Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.

29 de may de 202620 min
Portada del episodio GOGOL-M Makes First Autonomous Combat Kills — Balloon Drones, Geran-5 Live | May 27, 2026

GOGOL-M Makes First Autonomous Combat Kills — Balloon Drones, Geran-5 Live | May 27, 2026

The autonomous kill chain is no longer theoretical — it happened yesterday. Ukraine's GOGOL-M AI drone mothership has completed its first confirmed real-world combat strikes against Russian positions, with a visual-inertial navigation AI making the terminal kill decision at 300 kilometres for $10,000 per mission. That threshold — quietly crossed by a Ukrainian startup — is the centrepiece of this episode. We cover the GOGOL-M's confirmed combat debut and what $10K autonomous strikes mean for the cost-of-war calculus; Ukraine's new balloon-launch TTP that carries the Hornet strike drone to 8,000 metres and doubles its range without GPS or radio emissions; Russia's Geran-5 jet-powered strike drone making its combat operational debut, with the unresolved air-to-air missile threat assessment still open; DARPA's Containerised Autonomous Drone Delivery System — a programme to enable 500-drone swarms from hidden shipping containers in GPS-denied environments; and NATO's Silent Swarm 2026 live-fire exercise in Estonia, convened because 10 Ukrainian drone operators defeated two NATO battalions in six hours during a February wargame. Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.

27 de may de 202621 min
Portada del episodio Oreshnik Strikes Kyiv, 65 Drone Cadets Killed, Pentagon's $80B AI Arsenal | May 25, 2026

Oreshnik Strikes Kyiv, 65 Drone Cadets Killed, Pentagon's $80B AI Arsenal | May 25, 2026

Russia's largest aerial assault of 2026 — and a new Ukrainian doctrine that targets drone operators before they reach the front. On May 24, Russia launched 600 drones and 90 missiles at Ukraine in its most saturating attack of the year, including a third confirmed combat deployment of the Oreshnik hypersonic ballistic missile striking Bila Tserkva, 50 miles from Kyiv. The same week, Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces struck a Russian drone cadet training facility in Snizhne, Donetsk Oblast — killing 65 Akhmat Sever cadets and their commander, a credentialed PhD instructor from the Russian Academy of Missile and Artillery Sciences. Marcus and Sam break down what the Oreshnik's operational cadence signals about Russian strategic intent, and why Ukraine's shift to targeting the human operator pipeline may be more disruptive than shooting down hardware at the front. In Washington, the Pentagon's FY2027 AI Arsenal initiative requests $29.5 billion for classified AI supercomputing infrastructure — stacked on top of the $54.6 billion DAWG autonomous warfare programme, bringing the combined AI and autonomy ask above $80 billion. The episode also covers the Anduril and Booz Allen integration that puts cyber effects and kinetic C2 on a single operator interface for SOF teams, and Russia's unverified but credible claim of a 65-kilometre fiber-optic FPV drone — a development that could neutralise Ukraine's electronic warfare advantage in the FPV fight. Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.

25 de may de 202619 min
Portada del episodio Russia's Geran-5 Can Shoot Back — Ukraine's Sichen Hits 1,400km | May 22, 2026

Russia's Geran-5 Can Shoot Back — Ukraine's Sichen Hits 1,400km | May 22, 2026

Autonomous weapons are outrunning every rule written to govern them — and this week, both sides of the Ukraine conflict unveiled systems that prove it. Russia publicly revealed the Geran-5 jet-powered strike drone at the Victory Day parade in Moscow. Unlike its slow Shahed-derived predecessor, the Geran-5 is faster, harder to intercept, and — according to Ukraine's HUR intelligence directorate — may be capable of carrying R-73 infrared-guided air-to-air missiles, turning a strike platform into an active counter-air threat. Ukraine's answer: the Sichen, a domestically produced 1,400km strike drone with a 40kg warhead, engineered to defeat Russian GPS jamming and electronic warfare — no Western partner approval required. We cover what both revelations mean for air defence doctrine in contested airspace. In Washington, the Pentagon cleared eight AI firms — AWS, Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, SpaceX, NVIDIA, Reflection, and Oracle — to deploy their systems on its most classified warfighting networks, explicitly excluding Anthropic after its refusal to support autonomous weapons targeting. The day after, the US Senate warned that DoD Directive 3000.09 cannot keep pace with the autonomous systems already being fielded. We break down what the AI vendor shake-up means for the US kill chain, the Army's $994M counter-drone procurement plan, Perennial Autonomy's $500M contract, Poland joining the Pentagon counter-drone marketplace, and Ukraine's commitment to 25,000 ground robotic systems by mid-2026. Hosted by AI. Researched and written entirely by AI using open-source intelligence. Mistakes are possible — always verify with primary sources.

22 de may de 202620 min