Authored by Mrigakshi Dixit via Interesting Engineering,

In a move toward fully autonomous warfare,Ukraine’s Defense Ministry plans to procure 25,000 unmanned ground vehicles by mid-2026. This initiative aims to replace human soldiers with robotic systems for all frontline logistics and double the 2025 deployment rate.

Reportedly, Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorov stated thatthe ultimate goal is to have 100 percent of frontline logistics handled by robotic systems.

The strategy is already yielding results.In March alone, Ukrainian forces logged over 9,000 missions using ground robots for everything from delivering ammunition to evacuating the wounded.

A key development in this tech surge is the formal codification of the Bizon-L logistics robot.

Following a meeting with domestic manufacturers,Defense Minister Mykhailo Fedorovannounceda strategic shift to stabilize the industry by signing UGV contracts through 2027.

This move supports Ukraine’s ambitious goal to transition 100% of frontline logistics toroboticsystems, a transition already well underway.

These unmanned systems are proving vital for high-risk logistics and medical evacuations, insulating soldiers from the most dangerous aspects of frontline operations.

To streamline its defense supply chain,Ukraine has invested roughly $330 million (14 billion hryvnia) since January to deliver over 181,000 systems,including drones and electronicwarfareunits, via a direct digital procurement platform.

Central to this surge is theBizon-L, a logistics robot that was recently codified under NATO standards.

Source: ZeroHedge News