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Ukraine can’t match Russia’s Rubicon drone expansion: elite unit scales from company to battalion in months – Ukrainian drone commander

9 novembre 2025 à 13:06

Yurii Fedorenko, commander of Ukraine’s 429th separate unmanned systems regiment “Achilles”.

Yurii Fedorenko, commander of Ukraine’s 429th separate unmanned systems regiment “Achilles,” said Russia’s Rubicon center for unmanned systems can quickly scale from a company to a battalion thanks to manpower and financial resources Ukraine cannot match. He spoke to LIGA.net about the growing challenge.

Russia's "Rubicon" center creates a scalable advantage in drone warfare

Drone warfare has become one of the defining features of the war, with Russia investing heavily in organised, well-funded units that can quickly expand and adapt on the battlefield. These efforts have turned unmanned systems into a key part of Moscow’s military strategy, giving it an advantage in scale and coordination that Ukraine often struggles to match.

Fedorenko described Rubicon as a direct response to Ukraine’s “Line of Drones” - a nationwide project that coordinates Ukrainian drone units for reconnaissance, targeting, and operational support on the frontlines - with Moscow standardizing training, tasking, and logistics across its units. 

The structure allows Russia to rapidly expand personnel, provide the best equipment, and focus on narrow operational functions, unlike infantry or assault units that spread resources across multiple tasks.

State-backed recruitment and priority funding fuel Russian efforts

He noted that Russia recruits heavily through incentives and youth program linked to United Russia - Russia’s ruling political party - training thousands of 16-17-year-olds as future drone pilots who will be mobilized at 18. 

Fedorenko emphasized that Rubicon units have priority in receiving resources, including advanced technology and funding for research, development, and innovation centers.

A stark contrast: Ukraine's resource-constrained, colunteer-based model

According to Fedorenko, Ukraine cannot match these scales of expansion and funding, relying instead on teaching, equipping, and persuading volunteers to join, a slower and more resource-constrained process.

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