Ukraine is using powerful quadcopters to destroy nearly a third of all the Russian air threats it hits, commander says

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Ukrainian interceptor drones are often propeller-driven.

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  • 30% of Russian air threats downed over Ukraine were hit by interceptor drones, a top commander said.
  • It's a further sign of how the novel, inexpensive technology is growing in the country.
  • Ukraine said in December that it was producing nearly 1,000 of these drones per day.

Ukraine's interceptor drones now account for almost a third of the Russian aerial threats destroyed, a top officer in the country's branch for uncrewed air defenses said.

"If we take into account the share of interceptor UAVs in the destruction of air targets, we have already reached the mark of 30%," said Col. Yuriy Cherevashenka in a video interview published on Monday by Ukraine's air force.

"That is, every third drone target that is destroyed in Ukraine is destroyed by an interceptor UAV," he added.

His comments signal a milestone in the Ukrainian use of interceptor drones. These are typically small, inexpensive quadcopters optimized to fly fast enough to catch Russian one-way attack drones.

These air defense drones were an emerging novelty in the earlier years of the war, but Ukraine began accelerating their development in late 2024 as a cost-effective answer to Moscow ramping up its regular drone attacks on Ukrainian cities.

A year later, Ukrainian officials said in December that the country was producing 950 interceptor drones per day.

Russia launches thousands of long-range drones into Ukraine every month, and has been known to sometimes accumulate over 800 of them to attack in a single night. Its most common attack drone is a locally built version of the Iranian Shahed loitering munition.

Interceptor drones are built to destroy these aerial threats by ramming into them or deploying an explosive warhead. Much of a successful interception relies on the skill of the pilot and crew, who must spot the Shahed quickly, approach its trajectory, track its position, and then fly their drone into the Russian device.

Not all interceptors are quadcopters, but many are designed with four propellers and a dome-like frame to reach extreme speeds, since the typical Shahed can reach up to 115 mph, while more advanced versions are estimated to reach 230 mph.

Interceptor drones carry small warheads that explode

Cherevashenka said that Ukrainian officials initially worried about dealing with 350 Shahed attacks a month.

Now, however, it's common for Ukraine to fight 350 Shahed attacks per day, he added.

"Compared to 2022, when the first drone arrived in September over Kyiv, it had a 40-kilogram warhead and was a primitive drone flying by coordinates," the colonel said. "Now, we have 14 types of warheads for the strike drones of the Russian Federation."

Cherevashenka further warned that Russia has been incorporating artificial intelligence into its Shaheds and is known to use mesh networks to guide them.

Earlier this year, Ukraine reported that Russian troops were regularly accessing Starlink networks via black market terminals, including to guide Shahed attack drones. The complaints prompted SpaceX to cut connectivity over the war zone and allow access only to terminals on an official Ukrainian whitelist.

"We understand that this is not the end, that they will increase their capabilities," Cherevashenka said of Russia's drone industry. "Moreover, this year they have invested in the production of twice as many drones as last year."

Interceptor drones form just one part of Ukraine's multi-layered air defense network. The country also commonly deploys truck-mounted machine-gun crews to shoot down Shaheds, reserving interceptor munitions for higher priority threats, such as Russian cruise or ballistic missiles.

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