
Now, the UK-based Telegraph has reported an incident that takes the use of these drones to the realm of strategic weapons.
Ukrainians used British Malloy T-150 heavy-lift drones to demolish a bridge over the Konka River, a Dnipro tributary in Kherson oblast.
Ukrainian site Militarnyi, which tracks the conflict, notes Kyiv’s months-long effort to destroy the span. Airstrikes and US HIMARS rockets failed repeatedly.
Bridges rank among critical infrastructure. The destruction of a bridge easily cuts off one side from the other. The destruction of a bridge can affect an enemy in many different ways. It can cut off the frontline from the rest of the country, isolating it and causing a defeat by making it difficult for the enemy to resupply.
Hitting bridges with unguided munitions is fiendishly difficult — picture fighter jets screaming at 800-900 km/h, targeting slender piers or narrow decks from thousands of feet up amid evasive maneuvers. These “vital points” also draw fierce air defenses, compounding the challenge.
After repeated failures to strike the bridge using conventional methods, military authorities in the war-torn nation ordered the 426th Marine Unmanned Systems Regiment to destroy this elusive target, according to the Ukrainian portal.
The unit deployed Malloy T-150 drones, each hauling 68 kg payloads.
Over 30 days, operators air-dropped over 1.5 tons of explosives in 50 kg loads onto the bridge’s key supports. A single push of a button then triggered the collapse.
What traditional tools couldn’t achieve, drones accomplished through ingenuity. As lab innovations advance drone tech, so does battlefield creativity — solidifying drones as indispensable tools in modern arsenals.
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