Ukrainian engineers have developed and tested a new autonomous air defense system designed to help counter the relentless waves of Russian drone attacks. The system, known as Sky Sentinel, is a domestically produced, AI-powered turret capable of autonomously detecting, tracking and engaging aerial threats such as the Iranian-made Shahed-136 drones frequently used by Russia.
According to UNITED24, the official fundraising platform of the Ukrainian government, launched by President Volodymyr Zelensky in May 2022:
“Human intervention, such as a soldier manually aiming the turret, is not required. Deploy the Sky Sentinel into a combat position, feed it radar data, and it does the rest: detects, locks on, tracks the flight paths, calculates the shot and fires. All on its own.”
Sky Sentinel is armed with a .50-caliber M2 Browning machine gun and uses an advanced sensor suite to intercept low-flying targets at speeds of up to 800 km/h. It is designed to operate autonomously once deployed and configured, offering a scalable response to the high volume of drone threats Ukraine continues to face.
Since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February 2022, over 45,000 attack drones have reportedly been launched against ウクライナ, targeting infrastructure and civilian areas across cities such as Kyiv, Kharkiv, Odesa and Sumy. The pace of attacks, sometimes exceeding 100 drones per day, has pushed Ukrainian air defenses to adopt lower-cost, autonomous solutions that can complement more expensive interceptor missile-based systems.
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Sky Sentinel’s relatively low unit cost, estimated at around $150,000, is relatively cheap in comparison with the price of interceptor missiles, which can run into millions, and the cost of the Shahed’s themselves at around $100,000.
Developers say that between 10 and 30 systems are needed to defend a typical city, which is still much less costly than deploying traditional missile systems.
While the system’s full range remains classified, the M2 machine gun used has a known effective range of roughly 1.5 kilometers against airborne targets. During trials, Sky Sentinel reportedly demonstrated the ability to neutralize threats significantly smaller than the Shahed drone and, in some conditions, even cruise missiles.
Though Russia continues to upgrade its Shahed platforms, with some recent claims suggesting AI control via mobile networks and video streaming through Telegram, Ukrainian officials and electronic warfare specialists have largely dismissed these reports as implausible.
Military electronics expert Serhii “Flash” Beskrestnov noted that while some Shaheds may transmit limited telemetry, they still rely on satellite navigation and remain susceptible to jamming.
The emergence of systems like Sky Sentinel offers an alternative to increasingly unreliable electronic warfare techniques and a shift toward automated, hard-kill countermeasures that are affordable, scalable and adaptable to frontline and urban environments.
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投稿画像クレジット Mykyta Shandyba via UNITED24





