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‘A new kind of war’: Inside Ukraine’s hidden factories mass-producing combat drones
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‘A new kind of war’: Inside Ukraine’s hidden factories mass-producing combat drones

Jimmie Dempsey
Last updated: May 23, 2026 1:47 pm
Jimmie Dempsey Published May 23, 2026
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LVIV, Ukraine: Exclusive — The same Iranian-designed Shahed drones that rain down Lviv in Ukraine nearly every night are now being hunted by weapons built just miles away — inside hidden factories where former students and office workers assemble kamikaze drones and interceptor systems around the clock.

What began as an improvised wartime effort has evolved into one of the world’s fastest-growing military drone industries — one Ukrainian official says Kyiv now leads NATO in battlefield innovation and can offer hard-won lessons for the U.S. and Israel as they confront the same Iranian drone technology across the Gulf.

“Drone technology completely changed the situation in the frontline,” Lviv Mayor, Andriy Sadovyi, told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview, “Maybe in six months, maybe in one year, we will have technology to land 1,000 drones in one moment.

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“If we will have more deep collaboration between Ukraine, the United States, Israel and Europe, we will prepare special equipment for our victory,” he said.

Dmytro, CEO of a Ukrainian drone manufacturer producing roughly 1,000 drones a week, told Fox News Digital, “We are three or four steps ahead of other countries…this is a new kind of war,” he said. “It is a war of IT technology.”

Cheap drones now allow small battlefield units to identify and destroy tanks, armored vehicles and even sophisticated air defense systems that once required expensive missiles or fighter aircraft.

That transformation is visible throughout western Ukraine, where defense technology hubs, secret workshops and testing facilities now operate, while in the cities air raid sirens regularly interrupt daily life.

Factory working putting together drones

Inside the workshop Fox News Digital visited, workers moved rapidly between tables stacked with propellers, fiber-optic cable and other classified drone components. The workers say they no longer see themselves as civilians temporarily helping the war effort. Many now view drone production as essential to Ukraine’s survival.

Vitaliy, one of the technicians assembling kamikaze drones destined for the front line, said he now builds hundreds of drone components a day. “Targets will be vehicles, tanks, troopers, positions,” he told Fox News Digital.

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Ukrainian army drone operator.

Referring to President Donald Trump’s statement that he will end the war, Vitaliy said, “I feel honored because I’m helping my country to get peace much faster,” Vitaliy added. “Peace through strength — this is our motivation. But it is mostly on us, for sure,” he said.

Ukraine’s domestic drone production has expanded at a staggering pace. Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Serhiy Boev said earlier this year the country aims to produce more than seven million drones in 2026, up from roughly four million in 2025.

From AI-assisted battlefield systems to drones resistant to Russian electronic warfare, Ukraine’s wartime innovations are exposing vulnerabilities in traditional Western military doctrine.

At another defense technology hub in Lviv, rows of interceptor drones, unmanned ground vehicles and remotely operated weapons systems fill a showroom demonstrating Ukraine’s rapidly evolving battlefield ecosystem.

“We have around 250 tech companies in the system,” said Volodymyr Cherniuk, co-founder of Iron, a Ukrainian defense technology cluster.

Some drones are designed for reconnaissance. Others for evacuation, logistics or direct strike missions. One heavy-lift drone used for nighttime attacks has earned the nickname “Baba Yaga” from Russian troops, which Cherniuk translated as “boogeyman.”

Another interceptor drone is designed specifically to hunt Iranian-made Shahed drones that Russia uses in nightly attacks on Ukrainian cities.

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“They can go 300 kilometers per hour,” Cherniuk said. “One hundred grams is enough to shut down a Shahed.”

“We have a lot of Americans, Canadians, Europeans who come here and want our data, feedback from the front line,” Dmytro said. 

The wreckage of a Shahed-136 drone lies on display among other damaged weapons collected as evidence in Kharkiv.

As Fox News Digital reported from Lviv, air raid sirens repeatedly echoed across the city, a reminder that western Ukraine remains within reach of Russia’s expanding drone campaign.

Russia has dramatically escalated its aerial assaults in the recent week after the end of the short ceasefire, launching massive drone barrages targeting cities and logistical hubs across Ukraine, including areas near NATO territory close to the Polish border.

Ukraine has also increasingly demonstrated its ability to strike deep inside Russian territory with long-range drone attacks targeting areas around Moscow and Russian energy infrastructure.

But the evolving drone war has also increasingly spilled beyond Ukraine and Russia’s borders into NATO territory.

In recent weeks, drones linked to Ukrainian long-range strike operations entered the airspace of Baltic alliance members including Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, triggering political fallout and renewed concerns about regional air defenses. Latvian Defense Minister Andris Sprūds resigned after drones crashed near fuel storage facilities close to the Russian border.

Ukrainian drone attacking Russian factory

Ukrainian and Baltic officials blamed Russian electronic warfare and GPS spoofing for redirecting the drones off course, arguing Moscow is increasingly using electronic warfare not only defensively, but also to create instability and political pressure inside NATO countries.

The incidents underscore how the same Iranian-designed Shahed drones Russia uses nightly against Ukrainian cities — and similar long-range drone technologies increasingly used by both sides — are reshaping modern warfare far beyond the battlefield itself.

Read the full article here

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