Drones, once primarily used for surveillance, have evolved into weapons for hunting human targets in Ukraine.
During June and July, the Russian military dramatically increased drone attacks on civilians in the Kherson region, with the last two weeks breaking all records. Estimates suggest 50 people have been killed or injured in the attacks.
In the port city of Kherson, drones patrol the skies, hovering over devastated coastal suburbs and villages, searching for an old lady with a bucket here or a teenager on a bicycle there—to eliminate by dropping explosives.
“We’ve got something new here,” said Olha, a grocery store owner in Kherson. “It’s called skid, literally ‘a drop’.”
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Daily skid statistics are terrifying: on 24 July, a Russian drone dropped explosives on a woman in Romashkove village, hospitalising her with blast and cranial injuries and shrapnel wounds to her legs.
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The same day, a private house in Kherson’s suburbs caught fire after a skid attack. While firefighters were extinguishing the fire, a second drone attack damaged the fire truck with shrapnel. And in Kherson city, a drone attack on a 57-year-old woman, left her with a concussion, leg wound, and blast injuries.
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The following day, two drones struck residents in the suburb of Kindiyka, injuring a couple and killing a 51-year-old man.
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In Antoniivka, another suburb, a drone attacked a vehicle carrying humanitarian aid, injuring the driver, and another, later that day, wounded a 72-year-old woman. A resident of Sadove village, also 72, suffered blast trauma, concussion, and shrapnel wounds to his forearm after a drone attack.
Hiding under a tree in front of her high rise, Tatiana pointed out broken windows and shattered doors. For two months, drones have been patrolling the skies over her home, dropping explosives on civilian cars and people.
[Edit typo.]
Notice the reference to tactics, not to technology.
Loitering ammunition is a tactic that is only possible through drone technology.
But sure, intentionally terrorizing the civilian population as a tactic is as old as war itself…
You have heard of landmines? Other types of booby traps? Are these not also simply lying in wait to kill anyone who chances upon them?
Yes and there is a reason there is a global ban on them.
But there is also a big difference: locals usually know quite well where the land-mines are approximately and can avoid them pretty well. It doesn’t really instill terror to know that that field over there you better not walk over.
Loitering ammunition on the other hand is usually well audible, but it is not entirely clear where it lurks and what the targets are. Pretty much anyone anytime can be targets and often collateral damage is not an unwanted side effect of bombing a wedding etc. but the actual real intended effect to destroy community cohesion so that insurgents don’t have anywhere to hide or rest.