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A $2,000 Cardboard Drone Hit Russian Fighter Jets. Now Every Military Wants One
Ukraine's Aussie-made cardboard drones are rewriting warfare, and Japan just noticed. This video breaks down how these affordable and easily assembled military drones are impacting the Ukraine war, similar to designs Ukraine has used to attack Russian fighter jets.
In this video I look at Australia's Corvo PPDS, what Ukraine actually proved at Kursk a couple years back, why cardboard defeats radar through irrelevance rather than stealth, and why Japan's entry into this arms race in 2026 tells you exactly where the next decade of warfare is heading.
Join the channel as a member! We’re building a global community of people who are passionate about Ukrainian victory, honoring alliances, and hate dictators as much as I do: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnRmC8k3qzn0Qxq-nQOWmOA/join
For deeper written analysis, you can find me on Substack at https://www.wesodonnell.com
Glory to Ukraine. Glory to the heroes. Crimea is Ukraine.
Video Sources: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lk-r6s_yNU169RaEBmsE31OWsjeS2_vtOF0E1F69igA/edit?usp=sharing
#ukraine #ukrainewar #drone #russiaukrainewar #militarytechnology #technology #militarysecrets #Australia #Japan
About This Video
About the Creator
Wes O'Donnell brings you "A $2,000 Cardboard Drone Hit Russian Fighter Jets. Now Every Military Wants One" — a 11 minutes 12 seconds video released on May 13, 2026 . Since its debut, the video has garnered 241.9K views and 11,882 likes on YouTube.
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