DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Under threat, Ukraine’s drone schools are going to great lengths to stay off Russia’s radar

December 20, 2025
in News
Under threat, Ukraine’s drone schools are going to great lengths to stay off Russia’s radar
A silhouetted figure reaching up and launching a drone with other figures, the sun, and a vehicle behind them
Ukraine’s drone operators are key to its fight against Russia’s invasion. PETRO ZADOROZHNYY / AFP
  • Drone schools in Ukraine are training operators for the fight against Russia.
  • Three schools told BI that they are targets and have to take steps to avoid Russian attacks.
  • This includes not revealing information, undergoing polygraph tests, and moving frequently.

The leaders of several drone schools training Ukraine’s operators for the fight against Russia say they’re targets and they have to act accordingly — tightly protecting information and even moving around.

Throughout its invasion of Ukraine, Russia has launched huge drone and missile barrages at factories, training sites, and civilian infrastructure across the country, often far from the fighting in the east, straining Ukrainian defenses and serving as a constant reminder that nowhere in the country is completely safe.

Drones are prolific on the battlefield in Ukraine. Operators are priority targets. It stands to reason the schools training them for war would be too. Officials from three drone schools told Business Insider that they take steps to avoid getting hit.

Tetyana, a Ukrainian veteran who goes by the call sign “Ruda” and is now the head of R&D for Dronarium, a drone training school with sites in Kyiv and Lviv, said that it must follow strict safety rules because “the entirety of Ukraine is not safe, missile-wise, drone-wise.”

Dmytro Slediuk, head of the education department at Dronarium, told BI the safety measures, including not disclosing publicly exactly where its training centers are located and also changing their location “from time to time,” are necessary to prevent Russia from interfering with its training

To keep certain location data from getting out, the school doesn’t allow photos and videos that might reveal where its facilities are based.

The school has been mentioned by Russia’s military bloggers, influential pro-war accounts that often circulate operational details and commentary to large audiences. Though they are typically in favor of the war, they are also sometimes critical of Russia’s performance and dispute some of its defense ministry’s claims.

Two figures stand in an open field beside a launcher with a grey winged drone in the air
Drone schools say they’re targets for Russia. Ivan Antypenko/Suspilne Ukraine/JSC “UA:PBC”/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images

Rybar, a media outlet with 1.5 million Telegram subscribers, listed Dronarium as an example of Ukraine’s drone training efforts. The UK has sanctioned Rybar, initially presented as a milblogger but actually a partially Russian government-sponsored information warfare operation, and the US has offered up to $10 million for information.

Tetyana said Russian outlets have been writing about the school since 2022, the year Russia started its full-scale invasion. “As long as they write and talk about us, it means that they are afraid of us,” she said. But it also means that they’re on Russia’s radar.

She said the school and its attendees strictly adhere to a set of critical cybersecurity rules, and said there are also general safety rules in place. “When the air raid siren is on, all training activities, all the work, everything gets suspended, and we deconcentrate and get into safe shelters.” She said no one is complacent.

Vitalii Pervak, CEO of another training school, Karlsson, Karas & Associates, said that safety steps are crucial because “the Russians are constantly hunting for places where military personnel gather.”

Ukrainian officials have confirmed that Russia has hit some Ukrainian military training sites, killing personnel. It’s the kind of thing air defenses can try to prevent, but Ukraine has suffered shortages throughout the war. Ukraine has also successfully hit Russian bases and gatherings of Russian personnel.

The key is to prevent Russia from gaining sufficient knowledge of the school to target it. Its steps include “everyone who works at KK&A, including the cleaners,” having to do a polygraph security interview.

He said they don’t share any information about the location of the training center or about the appearance of the instructors or cadets.

“Some of our employees may have relatives or acquaintances in occupied territories who could be tortured by Russians for indirect contact with someone who opposes Russia,” Pervak said. “This secrecy also protects the instructors and cadets themselves, as well as their relatives, from attacks by Russian agents.”

He said that while the added security “hinders publicity to some extent — good things should be spoken about loudly — war dictates its own conditions. We are well aware that failing to observe the principles of secrecy may result in the death of staff or cadets.”

Viktor Taran, the CEO of the Kruk Drones UAV training center, said that “Russia is interested in destroying us.”

“Thanks to God and air defence, we’re still operating.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Under threat, Ukraine’s drone schools are going to great lengths to stay off Russia’s radar appeared first on Business Insider.

Paraplegic engineer becomes the first wheelchair user to blast into space — laughing all the up, while on board a Blue Origin rocket
News

Paraplegic engineer becomes the first wheelchair user to blast into space — laughing all the up, while on board a Blue Origin rocket

by Fortune
December 21, 2025

A paraplegic engineer from Germany blasted off on a dream-come-true rocket ride with five other passengers Saturday, leaving her wheelchair ...

Read more
News

A funeral for the penny draws Lincoln impersonators and Victorian garb

December 21, 2025
News

‘We caught him!’ Target of Trump probe celebrates as president’s nominee exposed

December 21, 2025
News

Bowen Yang’s 5 Best ‘SNL’ Sketches

December 21, 2025
News

Feds save dozens of kids from sex traffickers in massive, multi-state sting

December 21, 2025
Supermodel Anok Yai, 28, diagnosed with congenital defect that’s ‘destroying’ her lungs

Supermodel Anok Yai, 28, diagnosed with congenital defect that’s ‘destroying’ her lungs

December 20, 2025
Trump and his new hand-picked Fed chair—whoever it will be—are going to clash ‘almost immediately,’ economists predict

Trump and his new hand-picked Fed chair—whoever it will be—are going to clash ‘almost immediately,’ economists predict

December 20, 2025
‘So much is missing’: Inflation report shows good news — but economists say not so fast

‘We downloaded everything’: Trump legal nemesis drops threat after Epstein files deleted

December 20, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025