Ukraine’s crowdfunding raises $10m in 24 hours to buy kamikaze drones

Nearly $10 million has been raised in 24 hours to buy loitering munitions, often known as kamikaze drones, for Ukrainian Armed Forces.

Thousands of Ukrainians have chipped in together to buy an advanced thousand kamikaze drones for Ukrainian troops after coordinated Russian missile strikes on civilian targets in cities across the country.

According to Serhiy Prytula, who organized the initiative, an initial 50 Ram II drones, designed and built by Ukrainian companies, will be bought with the money, along with three control stations.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

“We’ve raised $9.6 million!! Thank you, generous and noble Ukrainians! We will make sure these funds are well spent on effective support of our Armed Forces,” Prytula said.

The Ram II is a Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicle equipped with a 3kg explosive payload and is designed to engage beyond line-of-sight ground targets.

According to Militarnyi, the kamikaze drone is moving at a speed of up to 70 km/h. It searches for enemy objects on the ground using cameras with a tenfold zoom within a radius of up to 30 km from the launch site and within 55 minutes. It is stated that electronic warfare equipment can “muffle” communication with the operator, but in this case, the drone returns to the base by itself and lands with a parachute.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Canada orders more ACSV armored vehicles, some for Ukraine

Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney traveled to General Dynamics Land Systems-Canada's facility in London, Ontario, alongside National Defence Minister David J. McGuinty, to formally...

Israeli firm unveils non-kinetic system to stop drone swarms

Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) introduced HYPNOSIS, a navigation warfare system built to counter large numbers of drones and other satellite-guided aerial threats by scrambling...

Russia’s decoy tactic aims to blunt Ukraine’s relentless drone strikes

Russian forces have grown increasingly willing to sacrifice a fake air defense system rather than a real one, a pattern that keeps surfacing in...

Russia’s cutting-edge drone upgrade is a $2 camping compass

Somewhere in a Russian drone factory, an engineer looked at a satellite-jamming crisis that has cost the Kremlin countless drones and countless rubles, and...

Ukrainian official dismisses claims of jamming ballistic missiles

A Ukrainian government official just told the country's electronic warfare industry to stop overselling itself, and the missiles falling on Kyiv this month are...