The war in Ukraine is transforming Russian military doctrine under combat conditions. The central insight: wars between near-peer powers are fought as wars of attrition, in which economic capacity determines victory or defeat (Vershinin, RUSI 2024). The RUSI study on tactical developments documents the transition to flexible, drone-supported combat groups (RUSI, 2025).
CSIS identifies six key areas: autonomous systems, information and communication, industrial resilience, logistics transformation, electronic warfare, and the changing significance of ground forces (CSIS, 2025).
Specialized drone units ("Rubicon Centers") have revolutionized the Russian reconnaissance and strike chain. According to Mick Ryan's CSIS analysis, they are characterized by structural innovation, technological standardization, and tactical superiority -- including fiber-optic-guided drones that are immune to electronic countermeasures (Ryan, CSIS 2025).
The saturation of the battlefield with drones has drastic consequences: within 15 kilometers of the front line, vehicle movement has become practically impossible. Ukraine produced approximately 2 million drones in 2024; Russia can manufacture about 30,000 Shahed-type drones per year. The integration of artificial intelligence increased the hit rate of autonomous drones from 10-20% to 70-80% (CSIS: Drone Warfare).
China pursues the concept of "Intelligentized Warfare" -- the integration of AI, big data, and autonomous systems across all levels of warfare (Air University, 2022). The RAND Corporation documents three developments: strategic reassessment, a proprietary hybrid warfare model, and systematic undermining of US alliance structures (RAND, 2024).
Particularly significant is China's role in sanctions evasion: approximately 90% of goods on Russia's G7 export control list originate from China, with dual-use deliveries exceeding $4 billion in 2024 (USCC, 2025). Military cooperation is deepening in areas such as joint exercises and technology transfer (CEPA, 2024).
Russia has established an impressive war economy despite sanctions (SIPRI, 2025):
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Planned military expenditure 2025 | 15.5 trillion rubles |
| Share of GDP | 7.2% |
| Military and security spending as share of budget | approx. 40% |
| Increase over pre-war levels | Doubled |
The IISS reports a tripling of missile production (IISS, Military Balance 2025). In October 2025 alone, Russia deployed approximately 5,300 Shahed drones, 74 cruise missiles, and 148 ballistic missiles (CSIS: Air Attacks October). CSIS analyzes the cost-effectiveness of this strategy in a separate study (CSIS: Cost-Effectiveness).