Friday 6 March, 2026
[email protected]
Resilience Media
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resilience Media
No Result
View All Result

Ukraine planning a national mobile carrier for military use

John BiggsbyJohn Biggs
February 18, 2026
in News
Share on Linkedin

Ukraine is moving to reduce one of its most critical battlefield vulnerabilities: dependence on a single commercial satellite provider for front-line connectivity. After nearly four years of heavy reliance on Starlink, officials are advancing plans for a dedicated military mobile operator, a secure 4G and 5G network designed to function where normal coverage is unreliable.

You Might Also Like

Ukrainian autonomy company The Fourth Law unveils an anti-Shahed drone

Ukraine’s autonomous weapons makers push for industrial scale

MSC got the urgency right. The hard part comes next

Recent regulatory steps, including proposed changes to Ukraine’s radio frequency distribution plan and the allocation of 30 MHz in the 700+ MHz band, would allow the Armed Forces to deploy protected private networks using encryption and specialized security protocols. The stated goal is not to replace satellite internet, but to ensure that if access is disrupted, command and control do not collapse.

Allowing and formalizing official network(s) would be a major step forward, not just for redundancy beyond Starlink, but as a foundation for real spectrum governance,” wrote Daniel Connery, a Ukrainian Army Technical Specialist. “With proper oversight, you can coordinate communications and EW across units, reduce interference, prevent unnecessary losses, and protect the pilots doing the fighting.”

The Ukrainian military is exploring two models. One would mirror a virtual operator structure, allowing the military to use civilian infrastructure with dedicated SIM cards, traffic priority, and hardened security settings. The other envisions a fully isolated system with its own frequency resources, network core, and base stations under direct military control. The latter is more complex and expensive, but it would reduce reliance on commercial providers and allow tighter oversight of infrastructure, power, and physical security.

Connery noted that a national carrier would prevent friendly fire in electronic warfare.

“Without centralized spectrum oversight, electronic warfare (EW) and communications efforts aren’t always coordinated across units. The result? EW friendly fire is still a real problem,” he wrote. “It happened to a friend of mine just last week. His drone was taken down by friendly EW interference… and he now has to pay $400 out of his $500 monthly salary to cover the loss.”

At the tactical level, LTE has already become a fallback option. Some units maintain layered connectivity, combining fiber, Starlink, and civilian 4G. If satellite links fail, they switch to mobile internet, provided base stations remain powered. Unfortunately, according to a ePravda report, civilian towers often shut down within hours of power loss, and terrestrial infrastructure is fixed and vulnerable to missile or drone strikes.

Ultimately, this move is about redundancy in the field, something that has become increasingly important with the difficulty and problems of Starlink access in the country.

Tags: mobilestarlinkUkraine
Previous Post

If Russia Wins: Lessons for the UK and Europe

Next Post

Klaus Hommels and Jan-Hendrik Boelens to speak at Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026

John Biggs

John Biggs

John Biggs is an entrepreneur, consultant, writer, and maker. He spent fifteen years as an editor for Gizmodo, CrunchGear, and TechCrunch and has a deep background in hardware startups, 3D printing, and blockchain. His work has also appeared in Men’s Health, Wired, and the New York Times. He has written nine books including the best book on blogging, Bloggers Boot Camp, and a book about the most expensive timepiece ever made, Marie Antoinette’s Watch. He lives in Brooklyn, New York. He runs the Keep Going podcast, a podcast about failure. His goal is to share how even the most confident and successful people had to face adversity.

Related News

Ukrainian autonomy company The Fourth Law unveils an anti-Shahed drone

Ukrainian autonomy company The Fourth Law unveils an anti-Shahed drone

byJohn Biggs
March 6, 2026

Ukraine-based autonomy company The Fourth Law has unveiled Zerov, an autonomous interceptor drone built to engage long-range strike UAVs in...

Ukraine’s autonomous weapons makers push for industrial scale

Ukraine’s autonomous weapons makers push for industrial scale

byLuke Smith
March 6, 2026

In the past five months in Ukraine, Major Maksym Gromov's unit launched 608 autonomous Lupynis drones against Russian adversaries. Four...

asphalt road between trees

MSC got the urgency right. The hard part comes next

byRobin Dechant
March 6, 2026

A few weeks on from the Munich Security Conference, something many of the Resilience Media community no doubt attended, I...

NATO Innovation Fund appoints a president, Ari Kristinn Jónsson

NATO Innovation Fund appoints a president, Ari Kristinn Jónsson

byIngrid Lunden
March 5, 2026

The NATO Innovation Fund, the VC formed out of the strategic alliance of NATO countries that counts most (but not...

SkySafe Wants to Be the Air Traffic Control for Drones

SkySafe partners with major energy sector player to build out drone defence

byJohn Biggs
March 5, 2026

Southern States LLC and SkySafe announced a partnership to integrate real time drone detection and airspace intelligence into Southern States’...

Uforce raises $50M at a $1B+ valuation to build defence tech for Ukraine

Uforce raises $50M at a $1B+ valuation to build defence tech for Ukraine

byIngrid Lunden
March 5, 2026

The United Kingdom and Ukraine look like they may have minted their first defence tech ‘unicorn’. Uforce (stylised ‘UFORCE’) —...

Anthropic, OpenAI, and the new rules of Defence AI

Anthropic, OpenAI, and the new rules of Defence AI

byCarly Pageand1 others
March 3, 2026

Anthropic is facing the prospect of being frozen out of US government work after refusing to relax safeguards on how...

Periphery CEO Toby Wilmington

Periphery and Midgard partner to secure robots against capture and reverse engineering

byPaul Sawers
March 2, 2026

Modern conflict has pushed autonomous machines into some of the most hostile operating environments. Drones are intercepted mid-flight, ground robots...

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

Klaus Hommels and Jan-Hendrik Boelens to speak at Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026

UK announces a £500 million defence package for Ukraine

UK announces a £500 million defence package for Ukraine

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

Senai exits stealth to help governments harness online video intelligence

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

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

Uforce raises $50M at a $1B+ valuation to build defence tech for Ukraine

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
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference 2026
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2026 Resilience Media

No Result
View All Result
  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference 2026
  • 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.