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Saturday, June 20, 2026

The King of Battle is Not Amused

Artillery is shy for the moment because of the attention it receives. When it gets a little privacy, it will roar back.

Artillery is not dead, it is just hunted more effectively:

Drones currently account for 70 to 80 percent of losses on the Russia-Ukraine battlefield, supplanting artillery as the “King of Battle.” At first glance, this shift suggests that both Russia and Ukraine have transitioned away from traditional artillery in favor of cutting-edge drones as a means of delivering fires. The reality is that drones cannot replicate the firepower of artillery, which remains central to Russian and Ukrainian combat operations. This shift has occurred not because drones are superior to artillery, but because drones have made artillery far more difficult to employ. Both sides use drones extensively to locate and target enemy guns, forcing artillery units to adapt their tactics in order to survive and continue delivering limited firepower on an increasingly transparent battlefield.

I will add that the shell shortage pushed Ukraine to use what they could get--FPV suicide drones. The artillery problem of being targeted expanded from armored vehicle vulnerability on the front to the rear where artillery lives when the range and density of the drone recon and strike network expanded to the rear.

Just as tanks and other armored combat vehicles need expanded combined arms operations to fight in this environment, artillery must adapt equipment and tactics, too. 

And anything in the rear that exists within an expanded No-Man's Land now must, too, of course.

Anyway, the King of Battle is pleased at the offering of respect. 

NOTE: TDR Winter War of 2022 coverage continues here

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