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Russia’s New War Plan Shifts to Cheap Mass Drone Production Over Missiles

2 min read
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Photo of Roman Kohanets
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Drone
A self-defense unit volunteer shows an intercepted FPV drone in Belgorod, the main city of Russia's western Belgorod region bordering Ukraine, on March 12, 2026. (Source: Getty Images)

Russia is cutting back missile production and redirecting resources toward a major expansion in drone manufacturing, according to the New York Post on March 16.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy framed the shift as part of a broader race to dominate the next phase of the war, as Moscow leans harder on cheaper mass-produced drones while Ukraine presses for deeper cooperation with Washington on air defense and drone manufacturing.

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In the same interview, Zelenskyy told the that Kyiv is ready to help the US counter Iranian-style drone threats, arguing that Ukraine’s battlefield experience now has global relevance.

The reported pivot reflects both cost and scale. Zelenskyy has warned that Russia has already launched more than 57,000 Shahed drones at Ukraine, while intelligence reviewed by Kyiv indicates Moscow has ordered up to seven million FPV drones this year.

That follows Ukraine is preparing its own production on a comparable scale, underscoring how the war is increasingly being shaped by industrial drone output rather than missile stockpiles alone.

“This is what we are seeing. Their order is seven million FPV drones. We also have seven million planned,” Zelenskyy stated, describing what he presented as a direct signal that Russia is channeling money and production capacity into unmanned systems at a faster pace.

The shift also carries strategic implications beyond Ukraine.

As fighting in the Middle East exposes the difficulty of stopping large drone swarms with costly traditional interceptors, Kyiv is pitching its low-cost counterdrone experience as a model for Western partners.

This aligns with Zelenskyy’s warning about Russia’s production changes, suggesting the drone expansion reflects both battlefield adaptation and broader capacity growth.

This dynamic is already translating into procurement decisions among Ukraine’s partners.

The Pentagon-backed selection gives the Ukrainian manufacturer a new foothold in the US defense market, turning a battlefield-proven FPV platform into a product with formal procurement traction inside the American military system.

The company’s quadcopter advanced through the Drone Dominance program after demonstrating combat utility in Ukraine, where FPV drones have become one of the war’s defining tools for low-cost precision strikes.

That track record appears to have helped convert operational credibility into a contract signal from Washington.

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