During a nighttime mission, several Ukrainian drones reached a Russian position and coordinated the moment of attack without direct human control. Analysts say it marks the first known routine use of swarm technology in combat, a step many consider a turning point in modern warfare.
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In 2024, Swarmer said it raised $2.7M to advance its STYX Swarm Management and MINAS autonomy platforms. They were field-tested in 10,000+ missions.

The technology, created by Ukrainian company Swarmer, links drones once launched. Typically, a reconnaissance aircraft charts the path toward the target, while bomb-carrying drones decide among themselves when and which of them will strike.
“You set the target and the drones do the rest. They work together, they adapt,” Chief Executive Serhii Kupriienko told The Wall Street Journal.
According to a Ukrainian officer, his unit has relied on the system more than a hundred times over the past year. Most missions use three drones, though others have fielded as many as eight, and tests have stretched to 25.
Without such software, each drone would need its own pilot; now one operator can direct many at once, saving time and manpower.
What is the underlying tech?
In 2024, Swarmer raised $2.7 million to advance its STYX Swarm Management System and MINAS autonomy platform. Both technologies enable AI-driven coordination among drones, reducing operator workload and enhancing resilience against jamming. Extensively field-tested in more than 10,000 missions, the systems have proven battlefield effectiveness and continue shaping Ukraine’s drone warfare strategy.
Why is this development significant?
Experts describe swarming as the fusion of AI and drones, enabling formations that could grow from small groups to very large numbers, able to saturate defenses. Ukraine has employed the system against Russian troops, trenches, equipment, and infrastructure. Direct communication between drones also makes them less vulnerable to signal jamming.
Researchers note the missions don’t yet match a fully autonomous swarm of hundreds reacting in real time. Still, Robert Tollast of the Royal United Services Institute told The Post even limited coordination among multiple drones demonstrates meaningful progress.
What makes this significant on the battlefield?
The system has encountered hurdles. Early on, drones overloaded networks by sending too much information to one another. Cost is another concern: Ukraine produced over 1.5 million drones last year, many of which are lost in battle.
Other militaries are pursuing similar capabilities. The United States tested more than 100 micro-drones in 2016, while Israel reported a swarm strike in Gaza in 2021. China, Russia, France and South Korea are also developing swarm programs.
Are there ethical concerns?
The rise of AI in combat has fueled debate about whether machines should make life-and-death decisions. The United Nations has called for the regulation of lethal autonomous weapons. Current U.S. and allied policy requires a human to approve strikes, and Swarmer says human operators must authorize any attack.
“Folks have been talking about the potential of drone swarms to change warfare for decades,” said Zak Kallenborn, a drone-warfare expert at King’s College London. “But until now, they’ve been more prophecy than reality.”
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