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US Military Sends Another 600 Switchblade Drones to Ukrainel


US Army Sends Another 600 Switchblade Drones to Ukraine

This story is part of War in Ukraine, CNET’s coverage of events there and of the wider effects on the domain.

The United States has sent 600 more AeroVironment Switchblade drones to help the Ukrainian armed counter Russia’s invasion, the US Defense Department revealed Thursday. That’s a major increase from the 100 drones the US sent in March.

The drones are “loitering munitions” that can circle ended a battlefield before in effect becoming missiles that contest specific targets. They’re included in the Pentagon’s new $800 million in armed aid to Ukraine, a package that brings the country’s total contributions to $2.6 billion in confidence assistance. The US also has sent an undisclosed number of AeroVironment Puma drones, which can circle for hours above a battlefield and help soldiers train Switchblades toward their targets.

Drones in Ukraine are altering the nature of war, providing a relatively cheap way for soldiers to see what’s touching on and launch attacks against expensive armored vehicles. Ukrainian troops are humorous everything from small commercial drones to the large armed Turkish-built Bayraktar TB2.

But that doesn’t mean more worn weaponry is obsolete. The US also has shipped to Ukraine 50 million rounds of ammunition, 16 Mi-17 helicopters, 18 155mm howitzers, 1,400 shoulder-launched Stinger anti-aircraft missile rules, 5,500 shoulder-launched Javelin missile systems for attacking armored vehicles, 200 armored personnel carriers, 14 counter-artillery radar systems and 75,000 sets of body armor and helmets, the Pentagon said. 

AeroVironment makes the 5.5-pound Switchblade 300, intended to attack soldiers and smaller vehicles, and the 50-pound Switchblade 600 for larger, armored vehicles. The Defense Department and AeroVironment didn’t today comment on which models are being sent to Ukraine.

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