Cybersecurity
Business Insider3 days ago
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Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb drone attacks on Russian bases are now shaping how the US Army prepares to defend its own

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Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb drone attack on Russian bases is influencing US Army counter-drone strategies, as highlighted in a recent tabletop exercise at Fort Bragg.

Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb drone attacks on Russian bases are now shaping how the US Army prepares to defend its own

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The Big Picture
The US Army conducted a tabletop exercise at Fort Bragg, drawing lessons from Ukraine's June 2025 Operation Spiderweb, where over 100 drones struck Russian air bases. The exercise simulated drone and cyber attacks on US military infrastructure to test defenses. Officials emphasized the need for layered counter-drone systems, including kinetic options like the AI-powered Bumblebee interceptor and non-kinetic jamming. A key takeaway was the requirement for a common user interface to streamline drone identification and response. The Army also stressed the importance of cheap, scalable, and adaptable defenses to keep pace with rapidly evolving drone threats, as seen in Ukraine.
Why It Matters
Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb demonstrated that low-cost drone swarms can cripple high-value military assets, forcing the US Army to rethink base defense. The lesson is that no single counter-drone system is a silver bullet; effective defense requires a layered, adaptable mix of kinetic and non-kinetic tools. This shift from reactive to proactive, scalable protection will shape how the US military prepares for future conflicts where drone attacks are a given.

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A small quadcopter drone flies against a clear blue sky. The back of a man's head is seen in the foreground.
A small quadcopter drone flies against a clear blue sky. The back of a man
JIATF-401 is the US' interagency counter-drone task force focused on developing and employing systems to defeat small uncrewed aerial systems.

US Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Michael A. Richmond

  • A recent exercise simulated attacks on US military infrastructure, including drones and cyberattacks.
  • The drone threat was inspired by Ukraine's surprise Operation Spiderweb attack on Russia.
  • JIATF-401 is a counter-drone task force led by the US Army.

In a future war, an enemy could attempt to target US bases with cyber attacks and drone strikes to cripple American forces before the fighting even really begins.

It's a challenge that the US Army recently assessed during a tabletop exercise, drawing inspiration from real-world action, including Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb attack against Russia. There were important lessons on defending infrastructure from drones, including certain counter-drone systems, but also a reminder that no single system will be a silver bullet.

Last month, the Army gathered federal and local partners for its first summit on defending critical defense infrastructure at Fort Bragg, North Carolina.

The featured threats included attacks that could disrupt Army data and communications, shut down electricity and other essential utilities, and degrade the Army's ability to quickly gather forces in preparation for a conflict.

Brandon Pugh, the Army's principal cyber advisor, said the challenge is turning "best practices and lessons learned" into "a playbook" that "a local garrison commander," who "is not a cyber or physical protection expert," can use at "their garrison and their camps, posts and stations."

While many of the threat scenarios weren't tied to specific adversaries or enemies, the counter-drone element was specifically inspired by Ukraine's June 2025 Operation Spiderweb, which saw Kyiv sneak over 100 drones into Russian territory and launch them at nearby air bases. They struck dozens of grounded aircraft and destroyed others.

A similar threat to a US base or installation would need to be defended by a layer of counter-drone systems, officials said, including kinetic and non-kinetic options that can handle specific threats.

"Effective C-sUAS [counter-small uncrewed aerial systems] requires a tailored approach, employing capabilities that match the likely threat and take into account what needs to be protected," Lt. Col. Adam Scher, spokesperson for the US Army-led Joint Interagency Task Force-401, told Business Insider.

A television screen shows a drone's perspective as it targets an aircraft.
A television screen shows a drone
Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb surprise attack brought drones into Russian territory. The drones targeted nearby Russian air bases.

Oliver Contreras / AFP

A kinetic counter-drone solution is the Bumblebee, made by Perennial Autonomy, a low-cost attritable platform that uses artificial intelligence to physically intercept and destroy hostile small UAS. JIATF awarded Perennial Autonomy a $5.2 million contract for Bumblebee systems earlier this year.

Non-kinetic options, like electronic jamming, and passive defenses, such as netting or hardening, are also needed.

JIATF-401 is an Army-led task force that includes the Department of Defense and other federal agencies and works across the government to detect, track, and stop drone activity in and around military installations, as well as the broader US.

JIATF-401 replaced DoD's previous counter-drone task force. It recently tested a non-kinetic platform for detecting, tracking, and non-kinetically destroying drones at the US southern border.

During the training summit, teams examined how current counter-drone capabilities could best be used to defeat an attack like Ukraine's Operation Spiderweb. While the environments, infrastructure, and threats differed, the experience still prompted data that could improve counter-UAS tactics, officials said.

Scher told Business Insider that one key takeaway was the need for a common user interface that streamlines the use of counter-drone systems, reducing the time it takes soldiers to identify drones and decide which systems are best for neutralizing them.

Beyond Operation Spiderweb, US Army officials are drawing broader counter-drone lessons from Ukraine, where systems for detecting and defeating drones can become outdated within months as Russian tactics and technology evolve. One important takeaway for JIATF-401 is the need for defenses that are cheap, scalable, and adaptable enough to keep pace with a fast-changing threat.

Read the original article on Business Insider
Cybersecurity Drones Military Ukraine US Army Counter-Drone

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