Ministry of Defense of Ukraine/Screengrab via X
- Russia has equipped its cheap “Molniya” strike drones with more battery power and better cameras.
- The modifications allow Russia to use these drones for a new purpose — battlefield reconnaissance.
- Moscow doesn’t need to rely too heavily on its more expensive reconnaissance drones.
Russia has boosted the range and vision of its fixed-wing Molniya drones, turning cheap, crude aircraft into more capable platforms that can now scout as well as strike in Ukraine.
The upgrades let Moscow lean more on the Molniya (“lightning” in Russian) for battlefield reconnaissance, replacing the pricier surveillance drones like the Supercam and Orlan-10.
Russia has been equipping some of its Molniyas with additional batteries to extend their range, a high-definition camera, and a mesh modem for better communications, Serhii “Flash” Beskrestnov, an advisor to Ukraine’s defense ministry, told Business Insider.
The Molniyas have historically been considered one-way attack drones that carry a warhead and explode on impact. They have been adapted for other missions, though, including carrying smaller first-person-view (FPV) quadcopters, resembling a mothership.
Beskrestnov, a prominent Ukrainian drone warfare expert, said Russia began operating newly modified Molniyas around two months ago and has increasingly used them for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) purposes since then.
The Molniya ISR variant lacks a warhead and is instead equipped with advanced surveillance electronics, including a microcomputer and a rotating camera with a 10-fold optical zoom, according to a US military weapons information portal.
The modified Molniyas are significantly cheaper than the more traditional fixed-wing Supercam S-350 or the Zala Z-16, well-known Russian reconnaissance drones estimated to cost up to $100,000 apiece. The inexpensive Molniyas are made of light materials such as plywood, foam, and aluminum.
Dmytro Smolienko via Reuters Connect
Beskrestnov said that Russia can obtain 10-15 Molniyas for the same price. The saturation of Ukrainian interceptor drones over the battlefield has pushed Moscow to opt for cheaper, more expendable assets for reconnaissance and targeting.
He speculated that this shift is driven by increased Ukrainian interceptor activity.
Dimko Zhluktenko, a soldier in Ukraine’s 413th Unmanned Systems Regiment, said the modified Molniya drones are relatively easy to manufacture, giving Russia an ideal price for reconnaissance missions. He called these efforts “the war of scale” in a social media post earlier this month.
Neither Russia’s defense ministry nor its US embassy responded to a request for comment on the Molniya ISR developments.
Russia and Ukraine have been constantly modifying their drones during the war to try to gain an advantage before the other side either catches up with the technology or develops a defensive countermeasure.
One of the biggest changes is a shift from radio links — easily jammed — to fiber-optic cables that are largely immune to the electronic warfare saturating the battlefield.
These fiber-optic cables have primarily been used to operate smaller FPV drones. However, Russia has begun using them with larger, fixed-wing platforms such as the Molniya.
Russia and Ukraine have taken their innovations a step further with unusual armaments, in some cases equipping drones with air-to-air or surface-to-air missiles to hunt down aircraft.
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