cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/55291154
Japan is reassessing how it prepares for war, turning to Ukraine’s battlefield experience and low-cost drones capable of intercepting Shaheds as tensions around Taiwan and Chinese military activity continue to rise, The Japan Times reported on July 14.
Japanese defense officials are paying closer attention to the way Ukraine uses inexpensive FPV drones and other unmanned systems to destroy or intercept weapons that cost many times more.
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That battlefield equation is challenging Japan’s traditional reliance on expensive, highly advanced defense systems. Ukraine has demonstrated that large numbers of affordable drones can provide an effective answer to costly military equipment and mass aerial attacks.
The lessons are particularly relevant as Tokyo prepares to defend remote islands and respond to potential large-scale pressure in the Indo-Pacific.
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If it comes to a contest between production capacity for weaponized drones between Taiwan and China, I think that Taiwan is going to be in trouble. China overwhelmingly dominates global drone production capacity.
If it came to a contest of that sort between the US and China, the US isn’t, in 2026, going to be able to compete in mass either.
searches
https://www.auvsi.org/advocacy/advocacy-initiatives/partnership-for-drone-competitiveness/at-a-glance/
The US does have various projects to aim to counter that, but does not yet, as of 2026, have that sort of capability. If China started maximum production of weaponized drones right now, using existing civilian and military infrastructure, I don’t think that we’d presently have a defensive-type counter. We’d probably have to go on offense, try to destroy their industrial capacity.
One project I recall some discussion about is Replicator.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replicator_(United_States_military)