2026-07-09T12:33:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS)新闻
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更新于:2026年7月9日 / 美国东部时间中午12:38 / 哥伦比亚广播公司(CBS)新闻
乌克兰基辅电——今年3月初,一架美国制造的侦察机在乌克兰附近波涛汹涌的黑海海域上空盘旋,搜寻下方的俄罗斯目标。当它靠近乌克兰南部海岸外的一处天然气田时,监控实时画面的操作人员发现了疑似俄罗斯士兵和军事装备出现在一座石油钻井平台上的迹象。
乌克兰海军随即呼叫了一批海上无人机,对该钻井平台发起攻击。当附近一架俄罗斯Ka-27直升机降落以疏散人员和装备时,一架乌克兰无人机俯冲而下,与直升机相撞后爆炸。
此次交火使俄罗斯损失了超过150万美元的军事装备,据乌克兰海军称,还摧毁了俄罗斯用于袭击邻近乌克兰地区的一处关键平台。这是乌克兰更具攻击性战略的早期案例之一——使用远程攻击无人机消耗俄罗斯的资源。
2026年6月18日,俄罗斯首都莫斯科东南部郊区的俄气石油(Gazprom Neft)莫斯科炼油厂区域冒出黑烟,莫斯科市长称这是乌克兰发起的“大规模”无人机袭击所致。塞法·卡拉坎/阿纳多卢通讯社 via 盖蒂图片社
乌克兰总统弗拉基米尔·泽连斯基随后宣布开展为期40天的“施压行动”,该行动将于8月初结束,目的是迫使俄罗斯结束战争。
那架发现石油钻井平台的侦察机——是由美国防务公司Shield AI制造的名为“V-BAT”的远程监视无人机——在此次行动中发挥了越来越重要的作用。
“我们专注于那些造价高昂、具有战略价值或难以替换的目标,”代号为“内盖夫”(Negative)的乌克兰海军V-BAT操作员说道。
这些无人机深入俄罗斯境内的侦察飞行,让基辅得以扩大对俄罗斯军事、能源和物流基础设施的打击范围。
“它最大的优势之一是航程,”这名无人机操作员表示。“因为V-BAT可以从远距离进行观察,我们能够确认目标是什么,收集详细图像,并在无需过于接近目标的情况下提供情报。”
据乌克兰国防部长米哈伊洛·费多罗夫称,今年6月,乌克兰的打击行动范围几乎扩大了一倍,深入俄罗斯前线以外30多英里的区域。
黑海及其周边地区的打击行动尤其奏效。周二晚间,乌克兰军方袭击了黑海海域的9艘油轮,这些油轮属于俄罗斯的影子舰队。上个月,俄罗斯官员暂停了向克里米亚——这个自2014年起被俄罗斯占领的乌克兰南部半岛——平民的天然气供应。
费多罗夫表示,乌克兰的无人机很快将把克里米亚“变成一座孤岛”,使其与俄罗斯本土隔绝。
这项战略的成功在一年前似乎还难以想象。2025年3月,美国停止向乌克兰提供用于打击俄境内目标的某些情报,迫使基辅转向其他合作伙伴。
法国总统埃马纽埃尔·马克龙今年1月表示,乌克兰目前获得的三分之二情报来自法国。
“随着美国退缩,我们显然开始尝试更多地与欧洲国家接触,”乌克兰“归来活着”国防基金会的防务专家塔拉斯·赫姆特在今年早些时候的一次采访中表示。“他们的技术可能在某些方面有所局限,但他们的决策速度比美国人更快。”
侦察无人机也帮助填补了情报缺口。乌克兰制造商通过为本国的监视飞机加装星链(Starlink)终端,提升了其航程。但操作员表示,V-BAT拥有独特的性能。
“我们也使用其他几款系统,但没有一款能达到V-BAT的航程。它们在续航能力或通信方面都无法与之相比,”代号“内盖夫”的无人机操作员说道。
2026年6月3日周三,俄罗斯圣彼得堡港上空冒出黑烟,此前乌克兰发动了无人机袭击。美联社
专家表示,无人机提供的情报不仅对选择目标至关重要,还有助于识别挡在前方的俄罗斯防空系统。乌克兰防务专家法比安·霍夫曼称,乌克兰近期深入俄罗斯境内打击行动取得成功的关键原因之一,是一场持续多年的“塑造行动”,该行动已摧毁了俄罗斯的防空资产。
乌克兰官员表示,V-BAT帮助确定了俄罗斯更昂贵的防空系统位置,比如S-400防空系统。这架无人机还搭载了人工智能软件,可根据已知的俄罗斯防空系统位置规划飞行路线。
在乌克兰的Shield AI员工表示,他们从无人机任务中获得的数据和反馈,对其飞机和软件的持续改进至关重要。据路透社今年早些时候的一项调查显示,在过去18个月里,V-BAT在全球各地的飞行中坠毁了50多次。
乌克兰的操作员表示,只有在战时环境中才能做出必要的改进。
“例如,如果俄罗斯的电子战系统开始使用某一特定频率,我们的操作员就会上报该信息。当这些频率发生变化时,我们会收到新的报告并做出调整,”乌克兰退伍军人、Shield AI现场操作员亚历克斯说道。“这些信息非常重要,因为它能让我们了解如何升级飞机。”
正在以极少有和平时期军队能企及的速度适配技术的乌克兰士兵表示,他们希望更多美国企业能与他们共同开发技术。
“我们一直作为团队合作。我们奔赴战场获取我们所需的重要信息,而他们则收到用于升级飞机所需的信息,”代号“内盖夫”的无人机操作员说道。“因此,这对双方都有提升。”
American-made technology guiding Ukraine’s strikes into Russia
2026-07-09T12:33:00-0400 / CBS News
By
Updated on: July 9, 2026 / 12:38 PM EDT / CBS News
KYIV, Ukraine — In early March, an American-made reconnaissance aircraft glided above Ukraine’s choppy Black Sea waters, scanning for Russian targets below. As it approached a gas field just off Ukraine’s southern coast, operators monitoring the feed saw what appeared to be Russian soldiers and military equipment on top of an oil rig.
Calling in a fleet of sea drones, Ukraine’s navy began firing on the rig. When a nearby Russian Ka-27 helicopter landed to evacuate personnel and equipment, a Ukrainian aerial drone swooped down, exploding on contact with the aircraft.
The engagement cost Russia over $1.5 million in military equipment, and according to Ukraine’s navy, destroyed a key Russian platform for strikes into neighboring Ukrainian regions. It was one early example of a more aggressive Ukrainian strategy to use longer-range strike drones to deplete Russia’s resources.
Black smoke billows from the area of Gazprom Neft’s Moscow oil refinery, located on the southeastern outskirts of Moscow, on June 18, 2026, following what the Russian capital’s mayor described as a “large-scale” drone attack by Ukraine. Sefa Karacan/Anadolu via Getty Images
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has since declared a 40-day “influence operation” that expires in early August to coerce Russia into ending its war.
The reconnaissance aircraft that spotted the oil rig — a long-range surveillance drone known as the “V-BAT,” manufactured by the American defense firm Shield AI — has played an increasingly important role in this campaign.
“We focus on targets that are expensive, strategically valuable, or difficult to replace,” a Ukrainian naval V-BAT operator, who goes by the call sign “Negative,” said.
The drones’ reconnaissance flights deep inside Russia have allowed Kyiv to expand its strikes targeting military, energy and logistics infrastructure.
“One of its biggest advantages is its range,” the drone operator said. “Because the V-BAT can observe from long range, we’re able to confirm what’s there, collect detailed imagery, and provide intelligence without getting too close to the target.”
In June, Ukraine nearly doubled its strikes more than 30 miles beyond Russia’s front lines, according to Ukrainian Minister of Defense Mikhailo Fedorov.
The strike campaign in and around the Black Sea has been especially effective. On Tuesday night, Ukraine’s military struck nine oil tankers in the Black Sea, operating as part of Russia’s shadow fleet. Last month, Russian officials suspended gas sales to civilians in Crimea, the southern Ukrainian peninsula occupied by Russia since 2014.
Fedorov said his drones will soon turn Crimea “into an island,” isolating it from Russia’s mainland.
The strategy’s success might have seemed unthinkable a year ago. In March 2025, the U.S. stopped providing certain forms of intelligence for Ukraine to strike inside Russia, forcing Kyiv to turn to other partners.
French President Emmanuel Macron said in January that two-thirds of the intelligence Ukraine receives now comes from France.
“With the United States stepping back, we have obviously started to try to engage European countries more,” Taras Chmut, a defense expert with Ukraine’s Come Back Alive Foundation, said in an interview earlier this year. “They may be somewhat more technologically limited, but they are faster in making decisions than the Americans.”
Reconnaissance drones have also helped fill the void. Ukrainian manufacturers have increased the range of their own surveillance aircraft by equipping them with Starlink terminals. But operators say the V-BAT offers unique capabilities.
“We use a few other systems, but none of them offer the same range as the V-BAT. They can’t compete with it in terms of endurance or communications,” Negative, the drone operator, said.
A plume of black smoke is seen over the port of St. Petersburg, Russia, Wednesday, June 3, 2026, after a Ukrainian drone attack. AP
The intelligence the aircraft provides is crucial not only for selecting targets but also for identifying Russian air defenses that stand in the way, experts say. According to Fabian Hoffman, a Ukrainian defense expert, one of the key reasons for Ukraine’s recent successes striking deep into Russia is a yearslong “shaping campaign” that has taken out Russian air defense assets.
Ukrainian officials say the V-BAT has helped identify the location of Russia’s more expensive air defenses, such as its S-400 systems. The aircraft also has AI software on board that programs its routes based on the locations of known Russian air defenses.
Shield AI employees in Ukraine say the data and feedback they receive for the drones’ missions is crucial to their aircraft and software, which require constant improvements. According to a Reuters investigation earlier this year, the V-BAT has crashed more than 50 times over the past 18 months in flights across the world.
Operators in Ukraine say the wartime environment is the only place where necessary changes can be made.
“For example, if Russian electronic warfare begins operating on a particular frequency, our operators report that information. When those frequencies change, we receive new reports and adjust,” Alex, a Ukrainian veteran and Shield AI field operator, said. “That information is important because it allows us to understand how we need to update the aircraft.”
Ukrainian soldiers, who are adapting technology at a pace few peacetime militaries can match, said they hope more American companies will develop technologies alongside them.
“We are working all the time as a team. We go into the field and get the important information we need for us and they are receiving information that they need to update the aircraft itself,” Negative, the drone operator, said. “So it improves both them and us.”
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