Global Rush For “Non-Red” Suicide Drones Begins As Taiwan Sees Booming Orders
Four years of war in Ukraine have rewritten how warfare is fought, accelerating the urgent need for low-cost aerial unmanned systems and ground robots. It has also prompted Taiwan to emerge as a supplier of low-cost suicide drones.
Taiwan’s national news agency, the Central News Agency, reported that a Taichung-based Taiwanese drone manufacturer is now focused on producing a domestically made variant of Iran’s Shahed one-way attack drone.
CNA said Carbon-Based Technology’s main exports are “triangular-wing drones with a control range of over 90 km, and catapult-launched small attack drones.”
CNA noted that demand for these attack drones is soaring, with “plans to expand the factory three to five times.” The company is facing “production capacity” constraints due to surging orders.
“The payload can be adjusted according to mission requirements, conforming to the current global military ‘asymmetric warfare’ trend,” CNA stated, describing CBT’s suicide drones.
CNA noted, “The Russia-Ukraine war sparked a global surge in demand for “non-red” (non-Chinese) drones. This, combined with Taiwan government support, brought rapid overseas interest and orders from countries including Japan, India, and Southeast Asia.”
The acceleration of suicide drone production also comes as the possibility of a Chinese invasion remains a very real threat, drawing heavily from lessons learned in Ukraine.
The broader takeaway is that Taiwan views drone manufacturing as both a national security capability and an industrial policy to supply Western militaries.
As we have outlined before, militaries around the world are entering a major procurement cycle to stockpile low-cost one-way attack drones, as lessons from Ukraine and the Gulf region rapidly reshape modern warfare.
Tyler Durden
Wed, 05/20/2026 – 05:45
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/Nytmh9U Tyler Durden


