Sunday 1 February, 2026
[email protected]
Resilience Media
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resilience Media
No Result
View All Result

Russia is ‘Copying, Adapting, and Scaling’ Ukrainian Battlefield Innovations

Speaking at the Resilience Conference, two frontline officers say Moscow is adapting Kyiv’s best ideas

Resilience MediabyResilience Media
September 29, 2025
in News, Resilience Conference
Photo by Eugene on Unsplash

Photo by Eugene on Unsplash

Share on Linkedin

Russia is not only catching up with Ukraine’s wartime ingenuity but is also actively copying and scaling it, according to two senior Ukrainian frontline officers who spoke at the Resilience Conference on Monday

You Might Also Like

Move fast — but never break trust: Inside Lakestar’s defence retreat in St. Moritz

Ukraine is working with SpaceX and Elon Musk to prevent Russia from using Starlink connectivity to guide its drones

Frankenburg has raised up to $50M at a $400M valuation, say sources

Oleksandr Vorobiov, who heads training for Ukraine’s air defence forces, said Moscow has learned to replicate frontline tactics and systems developed by Ukrainian units. “They are scaling not their ideas. They are scaling your ideas,” he told the audience.

“They see what we are good at, and they can scale it, believe me. They start very slowly, like an elephant. But when they already run, it’s pretty hard to stop it. In technical products, they are just starting to run. And believe me, when they run in full power, I’m not sure that we will be able to overtake.”

Volodymyr Gorodnychyi, representing Ukraine’s Nemesis Regiment that specialises in attack drones, electronic intelligence and warfare systems, echoed the warning, pointing to Russia’s so-called Rubicon regiment.

“They scale our experience. We are intercepting not only big drones like Shahed, but also searching frequencies with special equipment,” he said. “They start to do the same. But moreover, they overtake us. They’ve built platoons whose only mission is to find our interceptor teams and destroy them. Once they do this, they again have the full power in the air.”

He added, “Rubicon is the most technologically advanced unit in the Russian armed forces. As soon as they come to some areas, we see direct input into our drones – their countermeasures are extremely advanced. For us, it’s a big threat.”

Both officers described how Ukraine has turned battlefield necessity into a live R&D lab, with improvised frontline workshops evolving into formalised projects that bring combat veterans into labs to work directly with startups and engineers.

“Every regiment has producers they work with,” Vorobiov explained. “We just call them and say, ‘We need to fix something.’ And they say, ‘Okay, what do we need to fix?’ It’s that fast. In modern war, strategy is urgent. If you think a product will last for years, you’re wrong. Every two or three months, it needs to be adapted.”

Founders and engineers are embedded close enough to test gear under realistic conditions and receive same-day feedback from the frontline. “At the initial stage, we test in a safe location, and then we move to combat as soon as we’re sure it’s ready,” Gorodnychyi said. “It’s quick. As soon as we get a product, we can test it the same day and provide feedback.”

The officers also highlighted the growing imbalance in resources. Kyiv alone can face hundreds of drones and missiles in a single night, with air defence involving as many as 100,000 Ukrainian personnel.

“We have the people. We don’t have enough weapons,” Vorobiov said. He pointed out the unsustainable economics of trying to shoot down cheap Shahed drones with Western missiles costing millions. “Expensive, ideal products don’t work now,” Oleksandr said. “Concepts work. Adaptation works. If you spend a million on a missile, in a month or two, it won’t be adaptable to reality.”

Asked what would happen if a 643-drone-and-missile attack like the one Kyiv endured this week were aimed at London, both officers were blunt.

Vorobiov said the UK and Europe would be unable to withstand such volumes: “You don’t have so many systems. Maybe the army positions would be okay. But Russia doesn’t hit the army,” he said. “They hit civilians, they hit factories. Europe and the West are not ready for such quantities.”

Gorodnychyi was only slightly more optimistic: “Yes, the RAF could protect against it – once or twice. But after two or three days, they would run out of missiles. We’ve already seen this in Israel.”

Both officers stressed that while Russia was slow at first, it is now accelerating, aided by Chinese support and a willingness to burn through resources. “They are scaling. They are scaling your ideas,” Vorobiov repeated. “When they run in full power, I’m not sure we will be able to overtake. That’s why we need to overtake them now.”

Tags: Nemesis RegimentOleksandr VorobiovUkraineVolodymyr Gorodnychyi
Previous Post

Isembard Launches MasonOS to Power the Next Generation of Factories

Next Post

NATO Warned: Defence Industry Bottleneck is Policy, Not Hardware

Resilience Media

Resilience Media

Start Ups. Security. Defense.

Related News

Move fast — but never break trust: Inside Lakestar’s defence retreat in St. Moritz

Move fast — but never break trust: Inside Lakestar’s defence retreat in St. Moritz

byTobias Stone
January 31, 2026

Last week, Davos dominated the headlines with what some might call a chaotic circus centred around Donald Trump. Further into...

Ukraine is working with SpaceX and Elon Musk to prevent Russia from using Starlink connectivity to guide its drones

Ukraine is working with SpaceX and Elon Musk to prevent Russia from using Starlink connectivity to guide its drones

byJohn Biggs
January 30, 2026

Ukraine is working directly with SpaceX to prevent Russian forces from using Starlink terminals to guide long range drones, according...

Frankenburg has raised up to $50M at a $400M valuation, say sources

Frankenburg has raised up to $50M at a $400M valuation, say sources

byIngrid Lundenand1 others
January 28, 2026

There are multiple thousands of kinetic and battle-ready drones being produced for use in Ukraine every month, but not just...

Ukraine says drone campaign logged nearly 820,000 verified strikes in 2025, with UAVs driving majority of battlefield interactions

Ukraine says drone campaign logged nearly 820,000 verified strikes in 2025, with UAVs driving majority of battlefield interactions

byJohn Biggs
January 27, 2026

Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence said drone operations accounted for hundreds of thousands of confirmed battlefield strikes in 2025, underscoring the...

\UK Advances Project NYX, shortlists Euro firms to Build Autonomous Wingman Drones for Apache Helicopters

UK Advances Project NYX, shortlists Euro firms to build autonomous “wingman” drones

byJohn Biggs
January 27, 2026

The UK Ministry of Defence has moved Project NYX into its next phase, selecting seven companies to develop prototype designs...

city skyline during day time

Russia-linked Sandworm hackers blamed for failed attack on Poland’s power grid

byCarly Page
January 26, 2026

Russia-linked hackers with a track record of sabotaging infrastructure operations were behind a failed attempt to disrupt Poland’s power grid...

Weekend Read: ‘History tells us what may happen next with Brexit & Trump’ ten years on

Weekend Read: ‘History tells us what may happen next with Brexit & Trump’ ten years on

byResilience Media
January 25, 2026

As internet culture takes part in the ‘Flashback to 2016’ meme, we are resurfacing our co-founder Tobias Stone’s pivotal essay...

How Rune Technologies wants to revolutionize military logistics

How Rune Technologies wants to revolutionize military logistics

byJohn Biggs
January 23, 2026

Peter Goldsborough, CTO of Rune Technologies, joined Resilience to talk about a part of modern warfare that rarely gets attention...

Load More
Next Post
NATO Warned: Defence Industry Bottleneck is Policy, Not Hardware

NATO Warned: Defence Industry Bottleneck is Policy, Not Hardware

Never Lift Revealed as Early Investor in Cambridge Aerospace as Startup Confirms $136M Raised

Never Lift Revealed as Early Investor in Cambridge Aerospace as Startup Confirms $136M Raised

Most viewed

InVeris announces fats Drone, an integrated, multi-party drone flight simulator

Twentyfour Industries emerges from stealth with $11.8M for mass-produced drones

Harmattan AI raises $200M at a $1.4B valuation from Dassault

Palantir and Ukraine’s Brave1 have built a new AI “Dataroom”

Hydrosat raises $60M for its thermal satellite imaging tech

Frankenburg has raised up to $50M at a $400M valuation, say sources

Resilience Media is an independent publication covering the future of defence, security, and resilience. Our reporting focuses on emerging technologies, strategic threats, and the growing role of startups and investors in the defence of democracy.

  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 Resilience Media

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 Resilience Media

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.