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Ukraine has scaled up an AI-enabled mid-range strike campaign designed to sever Russian supply lines and hit rear-area targets, officials and open-source analysts say.
Kyiv this month launched a UAH 5 billion “Logistics Lockdown” programme (about $113 million) to expand mid-range drones — including US-made Hornet systems with AI target-recognition and Starlink-linked control — able to strike vehicles, depots and command posts tens to hundreds of kilometres from the front.
BBC Verify analysed at least 14 recent attacks on convoys in southern occupied Ukraine and analysts have documented scores of destroyed transport vehicles more than 20km from the front.
The decentralised e-Points procurement system is financing sortie-proven units directly, while partners including Germany and Norway plan joint production of thousands of mid-range systems.
Think-tank ISW and other analysts say the campaign has forced Russia to shorten convoys, disperse stocks, restrict civilian movement on key routes and has contributed to a recent erosion of Russian territorial gains.
Kyiv’s defence ministers say the effort aims to “deny the enemy the ability to conduct sustained offensive operations.”
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