American Autonomous Ground Vehicles Deploy in Ukraine Combat Zones
The battlefields of Ukraine have become the world's first
active combat testing ground for American-made autonomous ground vehicles,
marking a revolutionary shift in modern warfare. Over 100 self-driving ATVs
built by California-based Forterra have been operating in Ukraine's conflict
zones for the past nine months, representing the largest operational deployment
of autonomous ground vehicles in any conflict by any US defense technology
company.
Based on Polaris ATV platforms, these Lancer vehicles can
transport 750 kilograms of cargo, far surpassing Ukraine's locally built
battery-powered UGVs that carry only up to 250 kilograms.
Since arriving last October, these autonomous vehicles have
driven more than 2,500 miles across challenging terrain, completed over 1,100
missions, carried 777,440 pounds of total weight, and performed 52 casualty
evacuations.
Ukrainian soldiers initially approached the technology with
skepticism, but after modifications including Starlink satellite antennas, the
Lancers proved invaluable, with one soldier describing them as "fucking
fantastic" and stating frontline units are "dying to get more."
Ukrainian forces have
primarily been teleoperating them in combat zones because the vehicles are too
valuable to lose, and current autonomous systems cannot yet identify unexpected
enemy forces and react appropriately without human oversight.
Forterra is working to combine self-driving car algorithms
with generative AI software to address this limitation, though they face
competition from startups like Scout AI, Field AI, and Overland AI all trialing
UGVs with the US military.
The Institute for
Defense Analyses notes Ukraine has moved from a handful of garage-built robots
to industrial-scale fleets, with the Defense Ministry planning to sign
contracts for 25,000 unmanned ground vehicles in the first half of 2026, more
than double the total from 2025.
The US Army
leadership has acknowledged that ground autonomy is achievable now and that
investing in these tools is a priority for future combat readiness.