The fighting in Ukraine has, in many ways, transformed the nature of warfare. As many as 80 percent of battle casualties are now inflicted by drones, not machine guns, artillery, or missiles. That number is likely to be similar for armored vehicles and other equipment at the front. As NATO commanders scramble to adapt to the new technologies and ways of fighting, their old military doctrines are no longer worth the paper theyโ€™re written on.

War is hard to watchโ€”real war, that is, not the stuff of video games or action movies. The closer you get to combat, the more jarring it becomes. Death comes randomly. The noise is terrifying; the fear is stifling. And most people canโ€™t bear to see what war actually does to the human bodyโ€”how a brief instant can transform a living, breathing person into ugly scraps of flesh.

War is hard to watchโ€”real war, that is, not the stuff of video games or action movies. The closer you get to combat, the more jarring it becomes. Death comes randomly. The noise is terrifying; the fear is stifling. And most people canโ€™t bear to see what war actually does to the human bodyโ€”how a brief instant can transform a living, breathing person into ugly scraps of flesh.

The fighting in Ukraine has, in many ways, transformed the nature of warfare. As many as 80 percent of battle casualties are now inflicted by drones, not machine guns, artillery, or missiles.

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