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Ukraine's drone triumph opens window to the future of war

Ukraine's drone triumph opens window to the future of war
"You don't have the cards," President Trump dismissively told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during their Oval Office blow-up in February. Three months later, Zelensky played a hand no one saw coming.Why it matters: Ukraine's audacious drone operation, which destroyed nuclear-capable bombers deep inside Russian territory, delivered a strategic gut punch to Russian President Vladimir Putin.Ukraine is calling it "Operation Spiderweb." Pro-Kremlin bloggers are calling it "Russia's Pearl Harbor." Military experts are calling it a new nightmare for national defense.All can agree: Ukraine's ingenious use of low-cost drones has vast implications not only for the future of this war — but for the future of all war.Zoom in: Zelensky said the attack involved "one year, six months, and nine days from the start of planning to effective execution." Ukrainian intelligence operatives prepared inside Russia for months undetected, he added.The targets were five Russian bases thousands of miles from Ukraine and from one another. Unknown to the Russian forces manning those bases, Ukraine managed to position dozens of drones nearby.Ukraine's security service, the SBU, said the drones were smuggled under cabin roofs and loaded onto trucks. At the "right moment, the cabins' roofs were opened remotely, and the drones took off to strike their targets — the Russian bombers."The SBU claimed 41 aircraft were hit, causing an estimated $7 billion in damage — using drones that likely cost a few thousand dollars each. Some of the Russian aircraft are so old that they are literally irreplaceable.Map: Axios VisualsBetween the lines: Trump, who was not notified in advance, has yet to comment publicly on the operation. But as MAGA influencers spread fears of "World War III," pro-Ukrainian commentators argue Kyiv was left with few options.The U.S. and European allies have hesitated to supply Ukraine with additional air defenses to counter Russia's weekly bombardments, citing their own dwindling stockpiles.Russia rejected Ukraine's offer for a 30-day ceasefire. Trump railed against Putin for his obstinacy, but has so far declined to impose any new sanctions against Moscow.The calculus from Kyiv, therefore, was simple: If the world won't help Ukraine intercept Russian bombers in the sky, Ukraine must destroy them on the ground.The big picture: The Trump administration is growing impatient to move its strategic focus off Ukraine and onto other urgent priorities, particularly in the Pacific.Just this weekend, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned at a Singapore security conference that a Chinese invasion of Taiwan could be "imminent."But Ukraine's battlefield creativity continues to deliver real-time lessons and intelligence on what modern war — especially asymmetric war — now looks like.For national security experts, Operation Spiderweb has raised new alarms about the threat of commercial infrastructure — say, Chinese container ships docked in the U.S. — being repurposed for covert attacks."It is possible [China] is developing a launcher that can fit inside a standard commercial shipping container for covert employment of [missiles] aboard merchant ships," the Pentagon warned in its annual report on Chinese military power last year.Ukraine's ability to project its military power across Russia — with coordinated detonations thousands of miles apart — revealed how easily the illusion of domestic security can be shattered.The bottom line: The Ukrainians are executing, in real time, what Pentagon war planners have only modeled on paper."This is exactly what an asymmetric war looks like. This is exactly what the wars of the future will look like," Ukrainian presidential adviser Iryna Vereshchuk wrote on Telegram.

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