Posted on 03/28/2022 2:45:51 PM PDT by Zhang Fei
The unit was started by young university-educated Ukrainians who had been part of the 2014 Maidan uprising and volunteered to use their technical skills in the resistance against the first Russian invasion in Crimea and the Donbas region. Its founder, Volodymyr Kochetkov-Sukach, was an investment banker who was killed in action in 2015 in Donbas – a reminder of the high risks involved. The Russians can latch on to the drone’s electronic signature and quickly strike with mortars, so the Aerorozvidka teams have to launch and run.
Honchar is an ex-soldier turned IT marketing consultant, who returned to the army after the first Russian invasion. Taras, who asked not to use his surname, was a management consultant, who specialised in fundraising for the unit and only joined full-time as a combatant in February.
In its early days, the unit used commercial surveillance drones, but its team of engineers, software designers and drone enthusiasts later developed their own designs.
They built a range of surveillance drones, as well as large 1.5-metre eight-rotor machines capable of dropping bombs and rocket-propelled anti-tank grenades, and created a system called Delta, a network of sensors along the frontlines that fed into a digital map so commanders could see enemy movements as they happened. It now uses the Starlink satellite system, supplied by Elon Musk, to feed live data to Ukrainian artillery units, allowing them to zero in on Russian targets.
The unit was disbanded in 2019 by the then defence minister, but it was hastily revived in October last year as the Russian invasion threat loomed.
The ability to maintain an aerial view of Russian movements has been critical to the success of Ukraine’s guerrilla-style tactics. But Aerorozvidka’s efforts to expand, and to replace lost equipment, have been hindered by a limited supply of drones
(Excerpt) Read more at theguardian.com ...
Zhang Fei, thanks for the pings!
Lots of good stuff !🎚🇺🇸
I originally thought he was going to fire an RPG, then realized the mistake immediately.
He had a really good position to wreck the tank.
Wrong ordnance -
He isn’t likely to make the same mistake twice.
[He isn’t likely to make the same mistake twice.]
But, how do you what "difficulties" they are facing when all you get is Ukrainian and Biden regime propaganda? I don't believe a thing you're posting.
Again, you're very, very disappointed when Russia gets everything it wants out of this war.
To The Ukrainian soldiers I say “Drone On!
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