
Ukraine’s Navy released footage on 14 July showing three types of unmanned systems working through a single strike sequence. A Barracuda kamikaze sea drone opened by striking an abandoned vessel that Russian forces were using as an observation post. An uncrewed boat armed with an unguided rocket module then hit the shoreline where Ukrainian forces said Russian shelters were located. Finally, a naval drone acting as a UAV carrier launched reconnaissance and FPV drones that located and struck camouflaged Russian positions.
“Look how the Barracuda’s multi-tier strike system works,” the Navy said.
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The pattern this fits
The demonstration lands inside a year of rapid Ukrainian naval-drone evolution that has moved well beyond the kamikaze-boat attacks that first drove Russia’s Black Sea Fleet out of Sevastopol. In April 2026, an uncrewed Ukrainian boat shot down a Russian Shahed drone with an interceptor launched from its deck—what Ukraine called a world first.
In May, Ukraine’s military intelligence (HUR) showed the Katran sea drone carrying 27 AI-guided interceptors built to kill Shaheds that follow rivers toward Kyiv. On 14 July—the same day as the Barracuda footage—a Ukrainian unit used a naval drone as a landing craft to put an armed ground robot onto the Russian-held Kinburn Spit.
Ukrainian Barracuda naval drone sneaks through Dnipro wetlands to blow up Russian ammo site (VIDEO)
The common thread is the removal of the human from the point of contact. Ukraine is assembling naval operations in which surface drones strike, carry, launch, and defend—and the sailor stays ashore.
Ukraine sank Russian ship that shot at its sailors in 2018 with Sargan-3000 naval drone
What comes next
Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence has said it is developing a new system for naval drones that would go beyond destroying targets to intercepting sanctioned vessels in the Black Sea and escorting them to port for confiscation. According to HUR unit commander with the callsign “Ninth,” the concept centers on the upgraded multipurpose Katran drone.
That doctrine would sit alongside a campaign already underway: Ukraine’s drone operators had struck 116 Russian vessels supplying occupied Crimea in nine days by 14 July—the destructive arm of the same push to seal off the peninsula by sea.