Footage of a drone operator by the Ukrainian “Nemesis” unit “carpet bombing” a Russian position with his UAV.



by MilesLongthe3rd

16 comments
  1. Oh my, but that is so sweet to behold – FUCK ruzzia-FUCK pootin. SLAVA UKRAINI HEROYAM SLAVA 🇺🇦 🇺🇦 🇺🇦

  2. Is this a new research unlocked situation? I haven’t seen anything like this before.

  3. This is what is so terrifying to imagine in regards to what a drone fleet could theoretically accomplish. If you had simply 100 of these same drones (something easily already in existence, just scattered all about the frontline) and you simply had them choose a region, you could let these things simply run without hesitation.

    Just dozens of drones moving in a specific dance, emotionlessly dropping bomb after bomb to totally carpet a zone before pulling back, a new drone taking its place.

    You handle the logistics well enough, you could even possibly have replenished drones fly from base to keep the bombing campaign up, all while surveillance drones hover only a few feet about the bomber layer, cameras scanning for any threat or movement.

    We are entering a scary age, and it’s more important than ever we make clear who is fighting for a just purpose.

  4. Mileslong, this is too short.

    Extended version will be appreciated.

  5. I have actually been waiting (not frolicking) to see this

  6. The drop mechanism is brilliant. One at a time in rapid succession prevents them from interrupting each other the way a single large drop would do.

  7. Those look too small to be foot crusher munitions they’re dropping. From the IR signature, my best guess is some kind of petal mines or anti-infantry mines. I’ve never seen them dropped in sequence like that.

  8. How long until we see high-speed drones carped bombing?

  9. Looks like a dugout with some sticks and dirt covering the top. Might be a Russian drone operator position and they’re trying to collapse the roof. If they do they might hit the munitions or drone inside and make it a good night

  10. This is way too juicy. Anybody knows what kind of explosive ammo this is?

  11. This is new to me. OP, do you know the mechanism/type of bomb they used to do this?

    Would it be better if they used incendiary bombs in the Russian shelters? The downside is that it would be impossible to loot the Russian materials.

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