作者:阿什利·卡纳汉
福克斯新闻
发布时间:2026年3月14日 美国东部时间上午6:00
[视频:乌克兰军事科技公司宣称1400美元无人机拦截器是更廉价的防御选择]
Wild Hornets发言人亚历克斯·罗斯林向福克斯新闻数字版谈及无人机战争的演变,以及拦截无人机与传统防空系统之间的成本差异。
你现在可以收听福克斯新闻文章了!
随着伊朗设计的沙赫德无人机从乌克兰扩散到中东战场,相对廉价的无人飞行器正迫使全球最昂贵的防空系统之一投入使用,这引发了人们对这种作战方式长期可持续性的质疑。
在”史诗狂怒”行动之后,这个问题变得更加紧迫。伊朗无人机(据估计制造成本在2万至5万美元之间)针对该地区的美军及海湾盟国发动袭击。
美国及其盟友部队依赖爱国者导弹、末段高空区域防御系统(THAAD)电池、海军拦截器和其他系统来削弱这些袭击。
尽管许多来袭无人机已被拦截,但这些打击仍造成了损失:6名美国军人在科威特丧生,阿联酋和巴林的民用基础设施(包括机场和酒店)遭到破坏。
战斧导弹带头发起美军对伊朗军事武器库的打击——为何总统首先选择这种导弹
[图片:伊朗制造的无人飞行器(UAV)沙赫德-136在2024年9月21日德黑兰南部的军事阅兵中由卡车运载。(莫特扎·尼库巴兹尔/ NurPhoto via Getty Images)]
不断增加的损失加剧了人们对如何反击无人机群的担忧,同时又不耗尽每个成本数百万美元的拦截器库存。
自2022年俄罗斯入侵以来,乌克兰一直处于现代无人机战争的前沿,迅速调整战术并在战场无人机技术方面崭露头角。
乌克兰非营利军事科技公司Wild Hornets的发言人亚历克斯·罗斯林在接受福克斯新闻数字版采访时表示,乌克兰开发的拦截无人机为传统防空系统提供了一种成本大幅降低的替代方案。
随着美国升级对伊朗军事武器库的打击,大型炸弹来了
[图片:2024年9月4日,美国陆军第5营第7防空炮兵部队的爱国者发射装置在波兰东南部部署。(美国陆军Capt. Leara Shumate的照片)]
罗斯林称,虽然一枚美国爱国者导弹的成本约为400万美元,但他所在组织的拦截无人机每架生产成本可低至1400美元。
据该组织称,Wild Hornets所谓的”Sting”拦截器已击落数千架俄罗斯制造的沙赫德类型无人机,目前有效率达到90%,高于去年秋天约70%的水平,这是因为飞行员和雷达团队积累了经验并采用了改进的地面控制系统。
“乌克兰不得不智取敌人,他们没有火箭推进式手榴弹和反坦克导弹之类的装备,所以转向了这类无人机来平衡战场局势,”罗斯林告诉福克斯新闻数字版。
伊朗战争第11天:美国掌控天空,油价飙升,地区为下一步做准备
[图片:乌克兰组织Wild Hornets开发的”Sting”拦截无人机在训练设施中展示。(图片来源:Wild Hornets)]
《金融时报》报道称,在伊朗报复性袭击之际,五角大楼和至少一个海湾国家政府正在洽谈购买乌克兰制造的拦截器。
唐纳德·特朗普总统在3月初接受路透社电话采访时表示,如果乌克兰总统弗拉基米尔·泽连斯基提出帮助防御伊朗无人机的提议,他将愿意接受任何国家的援助。
泽连斯基周五在X平台(原推特)上发文称,基辅正派遣一个专家和军事人员小组前往海湾地区三个国家,协助对抗德黑兰的无人机。
美国驻伊拉克外交设施遭无人机袭击
[图片:俄罗斯制造、伊朗设计的沙赫德-136无人机残骸(俄罗斯称其为Geran-2)与其他回收的无人机、滑翔炸弹、导弹和火箭一同在哈尔科夫展出。(Scott Peterson/Getty Images)]
“我们知道在中东国家、美国和欧洲国家有一定数量的拦截无人机。但没有我们的飞行员、没有我们的军事人员、没有专门的软件,这些都无法运作,”他写道。
战略与国际研究中心导弹防御项目主任汤姆·卡拉科表示,对防空系统价格标签的关注可能掩盖了更紧迫的限制因素。
“产能比成本低廉更重要,”他告诉福克斯新闻数字版。
美军应对无人机塑造战争格局:”未来已来”
[图片:联军部队在叙利亚Al-Tanf基地的防御演习中发射Coyote Block 2C拦截器。(美国陆军Staff Sgt. Fred Brown的照片)]
点击此处下载福克斯新闻应用程序
卡拉科列举了低成本反无人机系统,包括Coyote拦截器和陆军的低慢小无人机综合防御系统(LIDS),作为已部署的应对多种无人机威胁的能力示例,而无需完全依赖爱国者等高端防空系统。
随着伊朗无人机战役的扩大,这场辩论不再仅仅是导弹与无人机之间的成本差距问题,而是传统防空系统能否支撑新时代大规模、低成本空中战争的问题。
阿什利·卡纳汉是福克斯新闻数字版的撰稿人。
One Ukrainian company’s ‘Sting’ interceptor drones can be produced for as little as $1,400 apiece
By Ashley Carnahan
Fox News
Published March 14, 2026 6:00am EDT
[Video: Ukrainian miltech company touts $1,400 drone interceptors as cheaper defense option]
Wild Hornets spokesman Alex Roslin speaks with Fox News Digital about drone warfare’s evolution and cost differences between interceptor drones and traditional air defense systems.
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As Iranian-designed Shahed drones proliferate across battlefields from Ukraine to the Middle East, relatively cheap unmanned aircraft are forcing the use of some of the world’s most expensive air defense systems, raising questions about the long-term sustainability of that approach.
The issue has taken on new urgency in the wake of Operation Epic Fury, as Iranian drones — widely estimated to cost $20,000 to $50,000 to manufacture — target U.S. forces and allied Gulf states across the region.
U.S. and partner forces have relied on a mix of Patriot missiles, Terminal High Altitude Area Defense batteries, naval interceptors and other systems to blunt the attacks.
While many of the incoming drones have been intercepted, the strikes have still exacted a cost, killing six U.S. service members in Kuwait and damaging civilian infrastructure, including airports and hotels in the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.
TOMAHAWKS SPEARHEADED US STRIKE ON IRAN — WHY PRESIDENTS REACH FOR THIS MISSILE FIRST
[Image: Iranian-made unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), the Shahed-136, are carried by a truck during a military parade in south Tehran on Sept. 21, 2024.(Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images)]
The mounting toll has intensified concerns over how to counter drone swarms without depleting interceptor stockpiles that cost millions of dollars each to replace.
Ukraine has been at the forefront of modern drone warfare since Russia’s 2022 invasion, rapidly adapting its tactics and emerging as a leader in battlefield drone technology.
Alex Roslin, a spokesman for the Ukrainian nonprofit miltech company Wild Hornets, told Fox News Digital in an interview that interceptor drones developed in Ukraine offer a dramatically cheaper alternative to traditional air defense systems.
HERE COME THE BIG BOMBS AS US ESCALATES STRIKES ON IRAN’S HUGE MILITARY ARSENAL
[Image: A U.S. Army Patriot launcher from the 5th Battalion, 7th Air Defense Artillery Regiment is deployed in southeast Poland on Sept. 4, 2024.(U.S. Army photo by Capt. Leara Shumate)]
While a U.S. Patriot missile can cost roughly $4 million, Roslin said his organization’s interceptor drones can be produced for as little as $1,400 apiece.
Wild Hornets’ so-called “Sting” interceptors have downed thousands of Russian-made Shahed-type drones and now achieve a 90% effectiveness rate, according to the group, up from roughly 70% last fall as pilots and radar teams gained experience and adopted improved ground control systems.
“Ukraine had to fight smart and didn’t have rocket-propelled grenades and anti-tank missiles, stuff like that, so they turned to these kinds of drones to sort of equalize the battlefield,” Roslin told Fox News Digital.
IRAN WAR, 11 DAYS IN: US CONTROLS SKIES, OIL SURGES AND THE REGION BRACES FOR WHAT’S NEXT
[Image: A pair of “Sting” interceptor drones, developed by the Ukrainian group Wild Hornets, are displayed at a training facility.(Credit: Wild Hornets)]
The Financial Times reported the Pentagon and at least one Gulf government are in talks to buy Ukrainian-made interceptors amid Iran’s retaliatory attacks.
President Donald Trump told Reuters in a phone interview in early March that he would be open to assistance from any country, when asked about an offer from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to help defend against Iranian drones.
Zelenskyy said Friday in a post on X that Kyiv was sending a team of experts and military personnel to three countries in the Gulf region to help counter Tehran’s drones.
US DIPLOMATIC FACILITY IN IRAQ STRUCK BY DRONE
[Image: The remains of a Russian-made, Iran-designed Shahed-136 drone, known in Russia as a Geran-2, are displayed with other recovered drones, glide bombs, missiles and rockets in Kharkiv on July 30, 2025.(Scott Peterson/Getty Images)]
“We know that in Middle Eastern countries, in the U.S., and in European states, there is a certain number of interceptor drones. But without our pilots, without our military personnel, without specialized software, none of this works,” he wrote.
Tom Karako, director of the Missile Defense Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the focus on air defense price tags can obscure the more pressing constraint.
“Capacity is even more important than cheap,” he told Fox News Digital.
US SCRAMBLES AS DRONES SHAPE THE LANDSCAPE OF WAR: ‘THE FUTURE IS HERE’
[Image: Coalition Forces fire a Coyote Block 2C interceptor during a base defense exercise at Al-Tanf Garrison, Syria, on March 12, 2025.(U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Fred Brown)]
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Karako cited lower-cost counter-drone systems, including the Coyote interceptor and the Army’s Low, Slow, Small Unmanned Aircraft Integrated Defeat System, or LIDS, as examples of capabilities already fielded to address many drone threats without relying exclusively on high-end air defense systems such as the Patriot.
As Iran’s drone campaign widens, the debate is no longer just about the cost gap between missiles and drones, but about whether traditional air defenses can sustain a new era of mass, low-cost aerial warfare.
Ashley Carnahan is a writer at Fox News Digital.
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