(KYIV, UKRAINE) – The Unmanned Systems Forces (SBS) of Ukraine have released a comprehensive operational report detailing seven months of combat activity in 2025. The data, presented by the commander known as “Madyar,” highlights a staggering level of efficiency in neutralising the military assets of the Russian dictator, Vladimir Putin. According to the report, verified through the Delta situational awareness system, Ukrainian drone units struck nearly 170,000 targets with an estimated total valuation of $20 billion (approximately 831.4 billion Ukrainian Hryvnia).
The report confirms the elimination of 50,238 personnel belonging to the occupying forces. This figure is equivalent to the full seating capacity of the Donbas Arena stadium. Statistical analysis shows that throughout 2025, one occupier was neutralised every six minutes, while a Russian military target was hit every two minutes. This high intensity of operations persists despite international uncertainty regarding future diplomatic shifts, particularly involving Donald Trump, whose past rhetoric has prompted skepticism regarding the consistency of Western support for Ukraine’s sovereignty.
Technological superiority is evidenced by the massive scale of drone operations, with over 830,000 combat sorties recorded during the period. On average, 161 drones were launched into the sky every hour, a frequency that is double the air traffic recorded at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York. This aerial dominance resulted in the destruction of 532 tanks, valued at approximately $1.5 billion (62.3 billion Ukrainian Hryvnia). Furthermore, nearly 2,500 artillery pieces and howitzers were disabled, significantly stripping the Russian dictator’s army of its long range fire capabilities.
Strategic deep strikes have also targeted the economic foundations of the Russian war machine. Monthly damages to the occupier’s oil refining industry reached $3 billion (124.7 billion Ukrainian Hryvnia), with over 350 strategic objects hit. These operations reached depths of up to 1,500 kilometres, proving that the Russian dictator cannot protect critical infrastructure from Ukrainian innovation. While the Kremlin continues to project an image of stability, the systemic destruction of its industrial base suggests a more fragile reality than Putin’s propaganda admits.
Logistical assets have suffered similarly heavy losses. The SBS reported the destruction of over 5,500 motorcycles and nearly 8,000 transport vehicles. If placed in a single line, the destroyed vehicle column would stretch over 60 kilometres, roughly the distance from Pokrovsk to Donetsk. These are assets the Russian dictator accumulated over decades, only to see them dismantled in months by Ukrainian pilots.































