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A Bayraktar TB2 drone. The drones have carried out unexpectedly successful attacks in the early stages of Ukraine’s conflict with Moscow. File photo: AFP

Ukraine-Russia war: Cheap, lethal Bayraktar Turkish drones are scoring hits on the battlefield – and online

  • Turkey has supplied Ukraine with Bayraktar TB2 unmanned aerial vehicles, which carry lightweight, laser-guided bombs
  • Aerial videos of the destruction of Russian armoured vehicles has become a key tool for Ukraine’s information war
Ukraine war

Despite three weeks of Russian bombardment, Ukraine has kept up a stiff defence of its cities by using Turkish-made drones to carry out pop-up attacks on the invaders with a lethal effectiveness that has surprised Western military experts.

The Bayraktar TB2 unmanned aerial vehicles, which carry lightweight, laser-guided bombs, normally excel in low-tech conflicts, and Turkey has sold them to more than a dozen countries, including Azerbaijan, Libya, Morocco and Ethiopia.

The drones have carried out unexpectedly successful attacks in the early stages of Ukraine’s conflict with Moscow, before the Russians were able to set up their air defences in the battlefield, said Jack Watling of the London-based Royal United Services Institute.

“The (TB2s) shouldn’t be making a meaningful impact because they are medium altitude, slow-flying aircraft with a large electromagnetic signature and a large radar cross-section. And the Russians have very capable air defence systems, so they should be being shot down. The terrain is very open and gives good radar coverage,” Watling added.

He said Ukrainian forces “have been essentially flying in at a low-level and then coming up and raiding with them. So striking targets of opportunity”.

Over time, as the Russians get more organised and push out their air defences, Watling said “the freedom to employ those drones is diminishing. And so what we are now seeing is that the Ukrainians are having to be careful as to when they commit them”.

The Bayraktar TB2 unmanned aerial vehicles, which carry lightweight, laser-guided bombs. File photo: AP

In a briefing to Parliament on March 9, British Defence Minister Ben Wallace praised the drones, along with other weapons donated to Ukraine by the West.

“One of the ways they are delivering close air support or actual fire in depth is through the Turkish TB2 UAVs, which are delivering munitions onto their artillery and indeed their supply lines, which are incredibly important in order to slow down or block the Russian advance,” Wallace said.

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The drones also have scored success on social media. Their aerial video of the destruction of Russian armoured vehicles has become a key tool for Ukraine’s information war.

Vasyl Bodnar, Ukraine’s ambassador to Turkey, shared videos of drone attacks on Twitter, including one that appeared to show a convoy of destroyed Russian military vehicles. “Masallah” or “Praise be” he wrote in a caption on one of the videos.

A video using a song titled “Bayraktar” ‒ with sounds of explosions timed to coincide with the beats ‒ has been uploaded on YouTube and played on Ukrainian radio.

“So as long as they still fly in, as long as they’re still armed, they will be useful. They will mostly be useful for the propaganda side,” said Aaron Stein, director of research at the US-based Foreign Policy Research Institute. “The videos have enraptured people because you can see an air strike in high definition.”

Turkey began selling the TB2 drones to Ukraine in 2019, and Kyiv used them in fighting Russian-backed separatists in the eastern Donbas region – a move that Moscow called “destabilising”.

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Turkish officials have refused to disclose details of the drone sales to Ukraine, including how many were involved and whether Kyiv is being resupplied. Independent estimates put the number of TB2s in Ukraine at between 20 and 50.

“I think Turkey’s actually in the front, but not at the centre, at least not publicly, of this conflict,” said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research Programme and senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in Washington. “Its official policy regarding the war is what I would call ‘pro-Ukraine neutrality’. It acts neutral. It wants the war to end, but it is militarily helping Ukraine. … It has been selling these killer drones to Ukraine that are apparently doing an amazing job.”

The drones ‒ priced under US$2 million each according to estimates ‒ are produced by the Baykar defence company, which belongs to the family of Selcuk Bayraktar, the son-in-law of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Bayraktar is Baykar’s chief technical officer.

The TB2 has been credited with helping tip the balance of conflicts in Libya, as well as to Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan in fighting with Armenian-backed forces in the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region in 2020.

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Ankara has also used the drones against Kurdish militants in Turkey and northern Iraq as well as against Kurdish fighters in Syria.

Such less-expensive drones are likely to have a lasting impact on warfare as a useful tool of attrition, as well as being able to draw in the attention of more expensive enemy jets, Stein said.

“I’d call it the Toyota Corolla of drones. … It doesn’t do everything that your high-end sports car does, but it does 80 per cent of that, right?” he said. “So even for a high-end military, like the US, the basic concept of using in an attritable, cheap platform to strike a superior force has inherent value.”

An unspecified number of US-made drones will be among the additional US$800 million in military assistance to Ukraine announced Wednesday by US President Joe Biden. It also includes 800 Stinger anti-aircraft systems, 100 grenade launchers, 20 million rounds of small arms ammunition, and grenade launchers and mortar rounds.

The White House has been weighing giving Ukraine access to US-made Switchblade drones that can fly and strike Russian targets, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorised to speak publicly.

It was not immediately clear if the new drones that Biden said would be delivered to Ukraine include those or others.

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