Beware of the swarm

Three years ago, I speculated in my blog that fairly low-tech unmanned aircraft, UAVs, or drones could defeat very expensive missile systems after a giant Saudi oil facility was attacked with high precision causing enough damage to reduce the global oil supply. Even though there was a missile defense system in place, the attack came from a swarm of small low-flying drones and cruise missiles that defeated the existing missile defense system.

I called for an increased emphasis on defense against this type of attack, and since then, there have been many worldwide new programs focused on developing this kind of threat as well as new defense systems. The recent Russian attacks on Ukraine’s infrastructure and the Ukraine attacks against Russian air bases appear to be a demonstration of what I expected, namely a fundamental change in offense and defense.

I pointed out in my post that swarms of such weapons to surprise and exhaust even the most competent defenses could mark a radical change in warfighting. I wrote that “drones could target critical parts of the exposed grid, disperse biological agents, target crowds at sports events, or even parking lots of shopping centers.” Unfortunately, my worst fears have come to pass with the Russians targeting the cities and critical infrastructure of Ukraine. Now Ukraine has struck back, and the nastiness is only going to be even nastier with more attacks from both sides. The balloon has gone up. But wait there’s more. The latest Ukraine innovation is drone killer boats backed up by flying drones to find and strike targets at sea. So the air, sea, and space application of killer drones is going to be the new way of war. But where there are new weapons, there are certain to be new counter-weapons.

With the development of fiber laser weapons with a power level of tens to hundreds of kilowatts, a realistic defense against drone swarms is possible if the tracking, pointing, and fire control system works reliably, and if the power supply is of an ample duration, and if enough of such defense system could become an affordable deployment … and of course, the weather cooperates. Boeing has created “an anti-drone death ray truck” that may defeat the ifs, but there are a lot of ifs and as usual, the offense is already a step ahead of the defense.

What about those new all-weather high-power microwave weapons such as the Ratheon Phaser to attack the controls and brains of the drones so that they become dumb rocks instead of brilliant pebbles?  High-power microwave weapons are being developed by many countries and they will be important.  This will be a story of brains versus beams, and the details will be written as the old game of offense versus defense is repeated again and again. In any case, there is no question that the game has begun and when new technology is created, people will find a way to apply that technology to warfighting.

An eventual development could be the proliferation of low-cost killer drones, and they could become the weapon of choice for ground forces, law enforcement, and maybe terrorists or even your neighborhood crazy guys who already are using weapons developed for the military. It is likely that such killer drones will initially be under the control of an operator, but quite possibly in a few years, they will be employed using artificial intelligence to search out and target predetermined targets when they are recognized by the smart sensor on the killer drones.

Survival of soldiers and military surface systems is possible if they can move, hide, defend, and shoot back, but there is not going to be a so-called “last move” in this contest of energy weapons versus drones. There may have to be an eventual change in the tactics of all surface warfare. It could be just too dangerous for high-value targets to try to survive above ground.  Maybe survival would be achieved by deploying in tunnels and caves. But what about drone swarms used by terrorists against civilian targets?  A logical step would be to ban such weapons, but we have not done this with assault rifles. Instead, children are trained to respond to an active shooter in their schools. I wonder if children will have to return to “duck and cover” when sensors detect a killer drone swarm approaching their playground?

6 thoughts on “Beware of the swarm

    1. gyonas's avatar gyonas

      Don, In my new novel, The Dragon’s Claw, there is a fictional Sandia engineer, who is murdered by the Chinese, but he was a good guy. His name is Ron Digali.

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  1. Gerry,
    Who would have thought that the invention of the transistor in 1947 by Shockley, Bardeen and Brittain would lead to technology enabling the present threat posed by weapons enabled by microelectronics and empowered by artificial intelligence (AI). We have spent a major part of our lives trying to develop countermeasures to modern conventional and nuclear threats, but conventional and nuclear threat development continues unabated. Now, as you point out, we are faced with the weaponization of drones.

    A recent Op-Ed piece by Steven Wertheim entitled “World War III Begins With Forgetting” addresses the lack of appreciation of the nuclear threat by many of us who lived through the Cold War:

    As a counterpoint, a recent interview of Jill Hruby posted on the NNSA Strategic Nuclear Defense Forum:

    documents the continued development of nuclear weapons by the U.S., as well as the threats of continued nuclear weapon development by Russia and China, and the proliferation of weapon technology to Iran and North Korea.

    I would like to bring your reader’s attention to another threat we are experiencing due to the invention of the transistor. That is the existence of a world-wide communications network, the Internet, that enables the proliferation of political and social propaganda aimed at the destruction of democracy. In 1945, some argued that the continued development of nuclear weapons would lead to the end of civilization. I am afraid that the development of AI applied to political propaganda and the proliferation of nationalism, racism, and antisemitism poses a similar threat unless some way is found to somehow moderate or control it. That is much harder than banning assault weapons.

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  2. Samuel Varnado's avatar Samuel Varnado

    Well done Gerry. You have certainly gone right to the heart of the matter in describing the future of warfare. I hope our military leaders our listening.

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