President Donald Trump said on Aug. 25 that the United States is intensifying its focus on drone warfare, calling it the most significant shift in combat since World War II.
Speaking in the Oval Office alongside South Korean President Lee Jae Myung, Trump said the Pentagon is studying “very carefully” how drones are reshaping the battlefield, pointing to the war in Ukraine as an example of how unmanned systems have become central to modern fighting.
“This is the biggest thing that’s happened in terms of warfare,” Trump said. ”There has been nothing like this since the Second World War.”
Trump said the use of drones on the battlefield has demonstrated a “whole new form of war” and hinted that the Pentagon would look to incorporate lessons from Ukraine into U.S. military planning.
“We’re actually studying it, from the standpoint of [Defense Secretary] Pete Hegseth and everybody, we’re studying it and studying it very carefully. This is a whole new form of war,” Trump said. “It’s a whole new form of fighting. It’s drone fighting. It’s a drone war.”
The president’s comments underscore how unmanned aerial vehicles have become a dominant factor on the modern battlefield. Examples of their use in Ukraine range from cheap quadcopters dropping grenades to long-range systems striking deep inside Russian territory.
Ukrainian units have relied heavily on swarms of small, inexpensive drones to blunt a larger Russian army, while Moscow has turned to Iranian-designed Shahed drones to strike targets in Ukraine.
Analysts say the war marks the first large-scale conflict where drones have rivaled artillery and armor in importance.
“Bots before boots,” Kaye wrote, adding that the real future of war is autonomous unmanned intelligent systems, or A-UIs, which are drones that operate without humans nearby and can carry out around-the-clock missions “with no risk, no fatigue, and no hesitation.”
“We are on the verge of the most profound shift in warfare since mechanization, yet some are still thinking too small about drones,” he wrote.
Kaye said that treating drones as mere “tools for foot soldiers,” as if they were a rifle or a radio, “completely misses the point.”

“Drones are not just an add-on to intantry—there are a replacement for entire missions that humans should no longer be doing,” he added.
Kaye said the winning side on the battlefield of the future will be the one that embraces “full-scale, robotic force projection.”

Trump has been raising the theme for months.
In May, speaking to cadets at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, he said the Ukraine war had revealed the “terrible” devastation that drones can inflict on the battlefield, with autonomous weapons “coming down at angles and with speed and with precision.”
“We’ve never seen anything like it. And we’re learning from it,” Trump said.
Push for Drone Dominance at Home
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy followed with a proposed rule on Aug. 5 to enable routine “beyond visual line of sight” flights for commercial drones, eliminating a waiver process that industry leaders said had slowed innovation.“We are making the future of our aviation a reality and unleashing American drone dominance,” Duffy said in an Aug. 5 statement. “From drones delivering medicine to unmanned aircraft surveying crops, this technology will fundamentally change the way we interact with the world.”
“Our adversaries collectively produce millions of cheap drones each year,” Hegseth wrote. “U.S. units are not outfitted with the lethal small drones the modern battlefield requires.”

He said he was rescinding restrictive policies that hindered production and constrained access to these “vital technologies,” giving frontline commanders the ability to acquire and experiment with new systems.
“I am delegating authorities to procure and operate drones from the bureaucracy to our warfighters,” he wrote.
Emil Michael, undersecretary of defense for research and engineering, said the Pentagon plans to keep pushing rapid innovation and expand drone production, with cost, resilience, firepower, and range as key driving factors.






