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Working with Ukrainian troops convinced this elite British Army infantry battalion to go all in on drones

February 15, 2026
in News
Working with Ukrainian troops convinced this elite British Army infantry battalion to go all in on drones
A man in camouflage gear runs on a muddy and snowy field while holding a grey drone in the sky, under a grey sky and with a few trees behind him
Drones have been hugely influential for Ukraine, and allies like the UK are paying attention. Wolfgang Schwan/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • An elite British battalion is reshaping its training following its work with the Ukrainians.
  • It built an obstacle course, added flight-hour targets, and opened a “drone hub.”
  • Its commander said he underestimated how much his unit would learn from Ukrainian troops.

An elite British Army battalion is going all in on drones after working closely with Ukrainian soldiers and seeing how central these systems have become in modern warfare.

The 1st Battalion of the Irish Guards now has 78 of its 300 members qualified as drone operators, its commanding officer, Lt. Col. Ben Irwin-Clark, told Business Insider. The unit has big plans to increase its training and work with drones further.

“That just gives you an idea of how important this is,” he said.

The battalion has built a training facility with drone warfare in mind, and its soldiers are heavily invested, he said, sharing that he’s got soldiers asking if they can get in on the weekends and log some flying hours.

The inside of a structure with wooden and metal roof with white circle and square shaped objects hanging from the ceiling
The 1st Battalion Irish Guards has built a new training facility that includes a drone obstacle course. Sinéad Baker

“That to me is absolutely incredible. Soldiers asking to do extra training over the weekend tells me that we must be doing something right, and it’s capturing the imagination of that generation,” Irwin-Clark said.

Ukraine has shown that drones are part of the “future of warfare,” he said, and that means knowing how to use them in combat is something that soldiers “need to be experts at.”

Western militaries, including the UK and US, are studying the drone war in Ukraine closely. The conflict has become the most drone-saturated in history, forcing armies to rethink how they fight.

Some units are doing more than watching from afar though. The 1st Battalion of the Irish Guards was able to learn directly from Ukrainian soldiers during a UK-led training initiative called Operation Interflex.

While the operation is designed to train Ukrainian soldiers, the exchange has not been one-way. Ukrainian troops — many with recent front-line experience — have shared hard-won lessons. Ukraine has far more experience employing drones at scale than Western militaries.

Irwin-Clark said his battalion is “learning the lessons on behalf of the rest of the army by picking them straight up from Ukrainians who, in some cases, were coming straight to us from the front line, passing on the benefit of their knowledge.”

A man in camouflage gear and a helet launches a dark grey drone in the air under a blue sky and in a field of withered sunflowers
Ukraine has far more drone experience than its allies, and they are keen to learn from it. Lynsey Addario/Getty Images

He said he did not expect the learning to run so deeply in the other direction when the work first started. “I think what I hadn’t anticipated over a year ago when we started our stint on Interflex is how much we would learn.”

A battalion embracing drones

The battalion has built an obstacle course so soldiers can train to fly drones accurately. Irwin-Clark said he expects at least one module of each week’s training cycle to be drone-related.

Other battalion efforts include the recently built “drone hub,” a center where soldiers can fix drones, do virtual training, and use 3D printing to make drone parts. Irwin-Clark described it as “a new thing,” sharing that “no other unit in the British Army has one of these yet.”

The battalion printed its first drone body just last month. The aim is to eventually set up the hub in the back of a vehicle so that its technology, like 3D printing, can be accessible on the move and soldiers can make and repair drones in the field. Irwin-Clark said the effort is “in its infancy.”

A 3D printer on a table beside a laptop and 3D-printed bomblet shapes with posters on a grey wall that have information about staying alive and Russian weaponry types
The 1st Battalion of the UK’s Irish Guards has started a ‘drone hub’ that includes 3D printing of drone parts. Sinéad Baker

The 3D printing and use of simulators for drone training came directly from Ukrainian recommendations, Irwin-Clark said. These are practices Ukraine’s military has deemed essential.

The battalion has copied other pieces of Ukrainian doctrine that Ukrainian soldiers told it about, like using anti-drone nets and viewing 60 hours as the minimum flying time typically needed to be competent.

Irwin-Clark said the biggest shock for him was how fast his soldiers were able to demonstrate drone skills. “What surprised me the most was how quickly people picked it up.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Working with Ukrainian troops convinced this elite British Army infantry battalion to go all in on drones appeared first on Business Insider.

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