惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
GbyAI
GbyAI
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
Project Zero
Project Zero
C
Cisco Blogs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
P
Privacy International News Feed
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
A
Arctic Wolf
Security Latest
Security Latest
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
T
Tenable Blog
雷峰网
雷峰网
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
V
V2EX
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
T
Threatpost
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
月光博客
月光博客
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
S
Secure Thoughts
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
I
Intezer
博客园 - 【当耐特】
B
Blog RSS Feed
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
I
InfoQ
博客园 - 叶小钗
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
H
Help Net Security
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes

Forbes - Aerospace & Defense

American Airlines Pilots Seem To Waver On Desire To Join ALPA France’s Only Aircraft Carrier Has Arrived In The Middle East How Ukraine Turned Its Defense Into A System Of Battlefield Control Frontier Merger Could Have Saved Spirit Airlines, Says Ex-Exec Of Both USS Gerald R. Ford Entered The Atlantic Ocean And Is Coming Home How The U.S. Coast Guard Can Make DHS Secretary Mullin A Success USS Nimitz Continues To Host Foreign Officials On Final Goodwill Tour How Drones Are Changing The Drug Wars American Airlines Pilots Would Welcome Activist Investors The U.S. Navy’s Largest Supercarrier Has Departed The Middle East Ukraine’s Drone Strikes Reach Moscow, Threaten Putin’s Victory Day Parade Donated Qatari 747 Completed Flight Testing For Air Force One Service How Ukraine’s Innovation Enabled It To Exploit the US War With Iran Iran’s Outdated Air Force Went On The Offensive During U.S.-Israel War Japan’s Terra Drone Bets On Ukraine’s Cheap Way To Stop Shaheds Iran War Sparks Surge In Demand For Cost-Effective Anti-Drone Rockets The Battle For Chasiv Yar: How Drones Reshaped Urban Combat This U.S Navy ‘Flattop’ Was Given A Five-Year Service Life Extension It’s 10PM. Do You Know Where Your AI Agents Are? The U.S. Navy Has A Carrier Problem, It Doesn’t Have Enough In Service American Airlines Customers Now Test Happy. This Rising Exec Helped. Will New Stalker Drones Make Reaper Obsolete? Democrats And Republicans Near Discharge Petition For Ukraine Aid Planet Labs Satellites Upend Wars While Beaming Their Images Worldwide U.S. Navy Warship Back In Port After Completing Lengthy Deployment New Report Emphasizes Downsides of a Militarized Economy As Russian Threats Explode, U.S. And Allies Race To Defend Spacecraft U.S. Paratroopers Start Training With Bumblebee Drone Interceptors How U.S. Special Operations Forces Are Adapting To Fight With New Tech USS Gerald R. Ford’s Record-Long Deployment Could Be Coming To An End The Strait Of Hormuz Is Exposing The Future Of Space Warfare How Ukraine Could Launch Drones From Libya To Strike Russia’s Tanker Spirit Airlines Unions Want What Trump Wants: ‘Lend Us Some Money Now’ US Navy Supercarrier Transiting The Strait Of Magellan To The Atlantic Elon Musk’s Jilting Mars To Build Moon City Could Spark His Downfall U.S. Air Force To Fly B-1B Lancer And B-2 Spirit Well Into Late 2030s Asymmetric Warfare Becoming Decisive In The Iran And Ukraine Conflicts Russian Molniya-2 Drone Able To Evade Ukrainian Counter-Drone Defenses UAE’s Sophisticated Air Defense More Diverse Than Ever After Iran War Drones Are The Biggest Military Revolution In A Century US Blockade On Iran May Bring Back Prize And Booty Russia Faces Economic, Civil & Political Challenges During Ukraine War Another U.S. Navy Supercarrier Is Preparing For Its Next Deployment U.S. Army Pairs Drone With Bunker Buster Bomb In First Use Ambush Drones 101: Learning A New Type Of Warfare Russia Adapting New Fires Tactics To Overcome Artillery Challenges Three US Navy Supercarriers Are In The Middle East, CENTCOM Confirmed The War In Iran Is Saving The A-10 Thunderbolt II, At Least For Now Why Israel’s Economy Is Thriving Now SpaceX’s IPO Could Leave Tesla Eating Rocket Dust China’s Growing Interest In Opening The Strait Of Hormuz Pentagon’s New Drone Defense Marketplace Sees $13 Million In Purchases American Airlines Makes Surprise Gains With Customers, Survey Says Watch DAWG: Where Pentagon’s $55 Billion Drone Gamble Could Go Wrong United Airlines CEO Stirred Up A Hornet’s Nest With Merger Hint “Defeat” By Drones Teaches U.S. Army Hard FPV Lessons The Easy Way American Airlines CEO, As He Plays A Bad Hand, Tells Rival To Butt Out Three U.S. Navy Aircraft Carriers Will Soon Be In The Middle East Ukrainian Drones Are Cutting Off Ammo Resupply To Russian Artillery The Best Ways To Sleep On Planes: Seats To Suites And ‘Nests’ New Book Offers New Insights Into Growth of the Military Tech Sector Our Nation’s Space Nuclear Policy Needs All Three Of Its Legs A Fire Broke Out On Another US Navy Supercarrier, Three Sailors Injured The Doolittle Raid Legacy: Buy The Air Force We Need To Fight And Win FPVs Get Medieval With “Flying Sword” Bladed Drone Zelenskyy Expands Defense Deals With Europe After Middle East Visit Trump’s Hormuz Blockade Has Been Planned For Years 5 Things To Know About The Blockade On Iran A US Navy Aircraft Carrier Is Circling Africa To Reach The Middle East Drones And EW Are Not Enough To Get Russia Across The Oskil River The Administration’s New Budget Slashes Domestic Public Investment by Hundreds of Billions of Dollars US Navy Supercarrier Set To Break Record For Longest Modern Deployment Will Iran War Result In Nuclear Weapon Transfers To The Middle East? China Seizes An Island While The World Is Watching Iran What’s At Stake In Hungary’s Election For Ukraine And Russia 5 Under-The-Radar Winners And Losers In The Iran War So Far Oldest US Navy Supercarrier Sailing In ‘Southern Seas 2026’ Exercises A Crazy Expensive U.S. Drone Disappeared Over Strait Of Hormuz Ukraine’s Heavy Lift Drones For Casualty Evacuation (VIDEO) Ukraine Turns To Middle East As U.S. And EU Aid Slows Amid Iran War The Air Defense Array That Shielded Iraqi Kurdistan During Iran War Drone Swarms Could Be Russia’s Answer To Ukrainian Kill Zones Hungary Prepares For Elections As EU, Ukraine, And U.S. Await Results Instead Of An Aircraft Carrier, This Ship Will Recover The Orion Spacecraft Daring, Costly Rescue Mission Highlights The Case For Drones Game Of Drones And Fighter Jets In Eastern Libya The Age Of Space Maneuver Warfare Is Imminent Pentagon Request Of $1.5 Trillion Does Not Do Enough To Address Iran’s Drones Russia Planning Long-Range Drone Control Stations In Belarus, Ukraine Warns US Navy Supercarrier USS Gerald R. Ford Isn’t Coming Home Yet New Ukrainian Jammer Makes Russia’s Latest Glide Bombs Useless (Again) Artemis II, Hollywood And Moon Landing Conspiracy Theories As The War In Iran Continues, Trump Threatens To Withdraw From NATO Fourth US Navy Supercarrier Has Headed To Sea, Conducting ‘Routine Operations’ NASA Artemis II astronaut health risks explained 5 Facts About Artemis II Now That It Has Launched NASA Artemis II timeline 8 key moments to watch live Why U.S. Gatling Guns Are Not Stopping Iran’s Shahed Drones Artemis II launch photos Orion begins historic moon mission The US Navy Needs More Aircraft Carriers – It’s All About The Base
Drone Hide And Seek: FPVs Are Changing The Rules Of Urban Warfare
David Hambling · 2026-05-05 · via Forbes - Aerospace & Defense
FPV urban window entry d

A Ukrainian FPV drone enters a building in search of Russian troops

Ukraine MoD

It is a military axiom that whatever new technology comes along, the “Poor Bloody Infantry” still need to take and hold ground. Even in the drone-saturated battlefields of Ukraine where drone-on-drone combat is increasingly common, human fighters are a crucial element.

However, the rules are subtly shifting. Before, there was literally no alternative to sending foot soldiers in first to buildings and trenches. Now the situation has altered. Soldiers still go in, but an increasing number of videos from Ukraine show the drones going in first.

Piloting an FPV around the inside of a building, as in the famous 2021 “Bowling Alley” video, may be routine in the movie world, but in the war zone in 2022 it was a stunt for elite pilots only. Now increasing numbers of videos show FPVs searching through buildings and trenches and locating and engaging the enemy.

Two things are obvious. One is that tactics from the pre-drone age need to be updated fast for the new reality. The other is that drones are carrying out operations with progressively fewer humans in the front line and the trend will continue.

The Eternal Challenge Of Urban Conflict

Even as technology transformed warfare in the early 20th century it was accepted wisdom that everything still came down to the foot soldier. Progressively more capable airpower, tanks and even nuclear weapons did not change this basic truth. As British WWII commander Field-Marshal Wavell wrote in his 1948 essay In Praise of Infantry 1948 , “All battles and all wars are won in the end by the infantryman.”

T.R. Fehrenbach put it more forcefully in his 1963 book “This Kind of War” -- "You may bomb it, atomize it, pulverize it and wipe it clean of life—but if you desire to defend it, protect it, and keep it for civilization, you must do this on the ground, the way the Roman legions did, by putting your young men in the mud."

Even 1950s techno-optimist science fiction doubted whether technology would ever change things. The infantryman protagonist of Robert Heinlein’s 1959 classic Starship Troopers does not think he can be replaced: “Maybe they’ll be able to do without us someday. Maybe some mad genius…will devise a weapon that can go down a hole, pick out the opposition, and force it to surrender or die — without killing that gang of your own people they’ve got imprisoned down there.

This view is embedded in current training manuals. While it may be possible to reduce urban strongholds with heavy artillery or aircraft, taking a town rather than destroying it is a job for foot soldiers. The Eight Rules of Urban Warfare and Why We Must Work to Change Them written by John Spender for the Modern War Institute in 2021, reiterates the challenges of fighting in dense urban environments, drawing on the Battle of Mosul in 2017.

US Marines in Fallujah, 2004. Urban warfare was similar to WWII.

AFP via Getty Images

Briefly,Spender notes that urban environments provide abundant hard cover, giving the defender concealment and protection from even heavy weapons. Reconnaissance and surveillance literally run into a brick wall. Attackers are visible and vulnerable as they approach, while defenders typically maintain freedom of movement by creating routes through and under buildings, going underground when needed.

The three-dimensional battlefield is difficult to control, with many blind spots and an opponent who may be able to concentrate firepower at will. Fighting tends to be at very close range, negating much of the advantage of a technologically superior force.

Seen from this viewpoint, taking an urban area is not much changed from WW2 or even WW1.

When drones come into play, the situation changes radically.

Made For Three-Dimensional Warfare

In a typical video from Ukraine a drone enters through a window and passes through three rooms before finding a Russian hiding in a damaged closet. Another shows a hunt for Russians moving around inside a damaged building. A third shows how one searches a building and tracks down a Russian who entered previously.

These operations are not confined to small buildings. One sped up video shows an FPV searching through a large apartment block.

An FPV from Ukraine's Signum unit with a thermal imager locates a Russian soldier indoors

Ukraine MoD

The advance on an enemy-held block, hazardous to foot soldiers, is not a problem for drones. Small and agile, flying at 40 mph or more, they are extremely difficult targets for small arms fire even at low altitude. And if an opponent does opt to shoot at an incoming FPV, they make their location visible to other drones.

Navigating in three dimensions is tough for infantry, especially when defenders have destroyed or booby-trapped the stairwells and are shooting from above. Drones do not need stairs or ladders, and the sixteenth floor is as accessible as ground level.

Drones do not have the same situational awareness as foot soldiers, and the continuous buzzing of their rotors gives away their position. They may be easy to locate, especially inside buildings where the operator has to maneuver carefully and rotate the drone to get a 360-degree view of the room. But life expectancy of an FPV is exactly one flight. When one gets destroyed the operator is ready with the next. Drone casualties are not a problem.

21st century trench clearing using an FPV

Ukraine MoD

Signal loss can be an issue, as low-powered radios may lose touch in a dense urban environment. This has not been solved. In Ukraine, the main solution is fiber-optic drones, which are more than maneuverable enough to handle indoor spaces. In Gaza and elsewhere, some drone operators use mesh radio, where each drone acts as a node in the network, so they only need to connect to the nearest drone and not all the way back to the operator.

Xtend, whose drones are used extensively in Gaza, note that their drones are used to clear out tunnels. In the civilian world, drones map out dangerous mine workings beyond the each of radio.

Some of Xtend’s drones for indoor operations have shrouded rotors which are easier to use in enclosed spaces, as they can bounce off walls and other obstacles rather than breaking a rotor blade. Russian sources claim that Ukraine is using similar “Tiny Whoop” drones for urban operations. In some cases the rotor blades are visible, suggesting conventional FPVs are being shown with unusual skill. with considerable skill rather than special drones. In other cases, the lack of visible rotors and the presence of a “fisheye” wide angle lens suggests that there are special drones for infiltrating buildings.

XTENS's Scorpio drone is designed for indoor operations with shrouded rotors to negotiate tight spaces

XTEND

Looking ahead, the surveying technique of Simultaneous Location And Mapping (SLAM) allows a sensor-equipped drone to build up a complete 3D model of its environment as it goes. Applied to military operations this would allow commanders to map out every cubic inch of space in a building and spot where there are hidden rooms or areas which have not been cleared.

Precision And Discrimination

FPVs are capable of entering buildings and engaging enemy fighters. Even small drones can carry powerful warheads. In one example an FPV operator locates a Russian inside a cottage, and the blast seen from outside demolishes the entire structure.

If that was all they could do, FPVs would only be another version of heavy artillery or air power destroying targets in cover. As Heinlein notes, the challenge is killing selectively, forcing the enemy to surrender without harming bystanders.

FPV operators can take surrender and many examples have been redorded. In one , reported by Ukrainian military news source Militanyi, a drone operator of the 31st Brigade located a Russian inside a building injured by a previous drone strike who wished the surrender. Instead of striking, the drone led him out to captivity. There are videos of similar incidents on X.

FPVs can hit captors while sparing captives. In a rescue mission in March, the Morok ("Darkness") assault group of Ukraine's 225th Separate Assault Regiment freed two PoWs by hitting their guards with FPVs.

This gets close to Heinlein’s requirement for “a weapon that can go down a hole, pick out the opposition, and force it to surrender or die— without killing that gang of your own people they’ve got imprisoned down there” which he thought would still be impossible in the 23rd century.

Barriers And Mouseholing

The obvious counter to drones is plenty of wire mesh or netting, and trenches are now invariably covered to prevent drone entry. Trench systems have frequent weighted net or bead curtains to prevent drones moving freely. Fighting positions in urban areas will need similar protection. Interior doors, if intact, will also stop the first drone.

However, even in WWII, urban combat featured extensive use of “mouseholing,” getting around by means of holes in walls to avoid areas covered by enemy fire. Mouseholes are typically around 24” in diameter, in contrast to full breaches which are more like 36” across and 50” high. Mouseholes are created by small explosive charges weighing a few pounds which can easily be carried by FPVs.

Drone operators already use a lead FPV to blast a hole in a wall or window which a second drone flies through, a tactic seen in this video. Many videos from China show this tactic being used with kinetic lead drones to break glass windows.

Specialized breaching drones and accumulated expertise from Ukraine should produce a battle manual on drone urban mobility. Expect FPVs to bypass obstacles to gain access throughout buildings.

Urban combat requires a lot of ammunition – up to four times as much as rural operations -- and FPV-led operations will require a significant stockpile of drones. But if these are available, any urban area may, in principle, be searched and cleared before the first soldier sets foot in it.

This is still uncharted territory. Drone warfare is still evolving. But already we are at a stage where it makes little sense to send a human in until the drones have done everything they can to ensure that an objective, whether it is a trench or a city block, is thoroughly clear of hostiles. Anything that involves sensing squads of infantry to close with enemy positions invites needless casualties.