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

Ukraine’s trench war runs on an easily overlooked weapon: grenades

December 22, 2025
in News
Ukraine’s trench war runs on an easily overlooked weapon: grenades
A figure wearing camouflage throws a sparking grenade into the air as they stick out from the ground under a blue sky
Soldiers in Ukraine are using grenades in close-quarters trench fighting and dropping them from drones. Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu via Getty Images
  • Grenades are an easily overlooked weapon that is key in Ukraine.
  • They’re vital in close-quarters trench combat and are being dropped by drones.
  • A US veteran who fought in Ukraine said grenades are “your best fucking friends.”

Grenades — a standard but often unglamorous part of modern infantry combat — have become indispensable in Ukraine’s close-quarters and grueling fight against Russia’s invasion.

The war blends advanced technologies like drones and electronic warfare with grinding, World War I-style fighting, where soldiers sometimes battle at arm’s length in muddy trenches and bunkers. In those confined spaces, Ukrainian and Russian troops alike rely heavily on grenades.

Western officials and war veterans in Ukraine told Business Insider about the important role they play in Ukraine’s trench warfare. Their use has also evolved, with grenades increasingly getting tactical upgrades, including adaptations for drone drops and components made with 3D printing.

A man in a dark fleece and cap stands with his arm up beside a small black drone that's hovering in the air with two red grenades attatched to it.
Ukraine is dropping grenades from drones. Scott Peterson/Getty Images

The experience has highlighted a lesson for Western militaries less accustomed to modern trench fighting, the kind of combat that drives enormous demand for basic infantry munitions like grenades.

A lifeline for soldiers

Ukraine’s battlefield is littered with trenches unlike anything the West has seen for decades, with soldiers needing hides and defenses from the attack and surveillance drones that fly overhead, and the brutal fighting involves defending and taking these earthworks from the enemy.

A man in camouflage gear walks in a deep muddy trench under a grey sky
Trenches litter Ukraine, sparking a resurgence in old tactics. Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu via Getty Images

A US veteran who fought in Ukraine and spoke with Business Insider on the condition of anonymity said that “when you go through these trenches, hand grenades are your best fucking friends.”

He said the fights are so close-quarters that in some engagements with the Russians, “you could literally touch them with the muzzle of your rifle at times.”

Trenches are messy, uneven, and difficult to capture. “You’re basically trying to take the home of another individual who’s lived there for days, weeks, months at this point,” the vet said. “So they know every nook and cranny; they know every turn.”

A British man who fought for Ukraine previously told Business Insider that he carried grenades for both assault and reconnaissance missions and described the US and UK-made grenades as “prized” among Ukrainians.

Lt. Col. Davidson, a leader in the UK-led training program for Ukrainian soldiers called Operation Interflex, told Business Insider last year on the condition that only his rank and last name be used that “Ukrainians have got a heavy use of grenades.” That usage was worked into the training in response.

There is a wide range of grenades in use in battle, everything from fragmentation and explosive to flashbang and chemical.

A Ukrainian officer recently told Business Insider that smoke grenades can help to create poor visibility so injured soldiers can be evacuated, though it can also risk drawing unwanted Russian attention.

Combat video footage shared by Ukrainian units often shows grenades in action, including footage of US volunteers using them in an assault on a Russian trench.

Scale, supply, and adaptation

Ukraine’s grenades come from multiple sources, from old Soviet-era stocks to those of partner nations.

A January 2025 Department of Defense update said the US had provided “more than 50,000 grenade launchers and small arms” and “more than 500,000,000 rounds of small arms ammunition and grenades” to Ukraine. And the US isn’t the only supplier. The volume supplied reflects how central these weapons are to front-line combat. Ukraine also makes its own grenades.

It’s not alone, though. Russia is also heavily using these weapons, including in the booby traps it sets up in trenches and urban environments.

Ukraine feels it when it has shortages of grenades. Another US veteran told Business Insider on the condition of anonymity last year that, with US aid stalled and Ukraine suffering weaponry shortages, he was often told to be “careful practicing with grenades” so as not to waste too many.

And when it was time to swap positions, troops taking over would ask those departing to leave any remaining grenades and ammunition.

“That’s how desperate that situation got to where it’s like guys were literally getting ammo and grenades off of dudes leaving the area so that they could keep fighting.”

Grenades are still proving their worth

Grenades have long been a staple of infantry combat, including in the recent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But Ukraine’s conflict has pushed their use to levels more typical of large-scale, attritional warfare, where trench systems stretch for miles and fighting drags on for months and years.

A man in camouflage gear and a helmet stands holding a grenade inside a muddy trench.
Grenades are key in the close-quarters fighting that trenches force. Diego Herrera Carcedo/Anadolu via Getty Images

Western militaries did not anticipate the return of large-scale trench warfare, and in Ukraine that fighting has pushed grenades to the center of daily front-line combat.

Long a standard tool in close-quarters fighting, they have become especially prominent amid widespread trenches, ammunition shortages, and evolving tactics.

While they’re being used in close-quarters combat, grenades are also being dropped from drones in battles all along the front lines, hitting soldiers, bunkers, hideouts, and even vehicles.

Very recent footage from Novopavlivka front, drone dropping grenade RIGHT INTO RUSSIAN TANK HATCH.
It falls right into the hatch, destroying the tank from the inside.
Honestly, tanks were so rare this year at the battlefield, and this is just BEAUTIFUL to watch. pic.twitter.com/Ns4NKBH2Qp

— Dimko Zhluktenko 🇺🇦⚔️ (@dim0kq) December 17, 2025

A US Army Colonel said doing this has “proved dramatically effective” for Ukraine. The Army first tested dropping a live grenade from a drone this year. It’s catching up.

Ukrainian units and engineers are also 3D-printing parts to make old grenades work better with drones while printing plastic casings to fill with explosives to make custom grenades.

Worried about Russia sparking a wider war with Europe, much of the West is watching to see what lessons it can learn from Ukraine.

Maj. Maguire, a British military officer who led part of the Operation Interflex training and helped document lessons from Ukraine, told Business Insider that the scale and importance of grenade use in trench fighting have stood out. He spoke on the condition that only his rank and last name be used.

“There’s a massive demand for grenades,” he said.

The West is looking at trench warfare more, too, and rethinking how messy and dangerous trenches can be and the weapons needed for a fight.

Ukraine’s war has shown that even on a high-tech battlefield, sustained close combat in trenches still depends on basic infantry weapons and on having enough of them.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Ukraine’s trench war runs on an easily overlooked weapon: grenades appeared first on Business Insider.

Heritage staffers walk out amid latest strife at MAGA institution
News

Heritage staffers walk out amid latest strife at MAGA institution

by Washington Post
December 22, 2025

More than a dozen employees of the Heritage Foundation walked away from their jobs over the weekend as the right-wing ...

Read more
News

How Trump’s First Year Reshaped U.S. Energy and Climate Policy

December 22, 2025
News

I spent 85 days on cruises this year. Here are 5 travel mistakes I won’t be making in 2026.

December 22, 2025
News

Christmas Is Back in Bethlehem, but Peace and Joy Have Yet to Arrive

December 22, 2025
News

Trump Supreme Court battle could be dismantled by Congress members’ own history

December 22, 2025
Australia’s Ocean Glitch Is a Weird Wave Vortex Nobody Can Fully Explain

Australia’s Ocean Glitch Is a Weird Wave Vortex Nobody Can Fully Explain

December 22, 2025
The Game Reveals Why He Didn’t Show Up to Kendrick Lamar’s Massive ‘Pop Out’ Concert

The Game Reveals Why He Didn’t Show Up to Kendrick Lamar’s Massive ‘Pop Out’ Concert

December 22, 2025
Murder of MIT Fusion Scientist Getting More and More Bizarre

Murder of MIT Fusion Scientist Getting More and More Bizarre

December 22, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025