【AI前沿】Russia pressures university students to become wartime drone pilots
Bad educationRussia pressures university students to become wartime drone pilotsUniversities promise no frontline duty and perks if students enlist in military.Jeremy Hsu–May 15, 2026 6:19 pm|35Shaman, a 19-year-old drone operator for the Russian military, flies a quadcopter drone during a demonstration event organized by members of the Berkut Military-Sports Cossack Club in a shopping centre in Voronezh, Russia on January 24, 2026.Credit:TATYANA MAKEYEVA / AFP via Getty ImagesShaman, a 19-year-old drone operator for the Russian military, flies a quadcopter drone during a demonstration event organized by members of the Berkut Military-Sports Cossack Club in a shopping centre in Voronezh, Russia on January 24, 2026.Credit:TATYANA MAKEYEVA / AFP via Getty ImagesText settingsStory textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidthStandardWideLinksStandardOrange Subscribers onlyLearn moreMinimize to navRussian universities are promising free tuition and up to $70,000 to students who are willing to serve as drone pilots in the Russian military for a year—all while claiming students can avoid the risk of frontline combat duty in Ukraine. But there has already been one confirmed battlefield death and possibly more among the new cadre of student drone pilots.That specific recruitment offer appeared on pamphlets distributed at Bauman Moscow State Technical University, according toBloomberg. Other universities have dangled incentives such as tax holidays, loan forgiveness, and sometimes free land. The independent magazineGrozacounted at least 270 Russian academic institutions promoting military contracts to their students in the fifth year of the war that began with Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.This new wave of recruitment is targeting a population of approximately 2 million men attending Russian universities, including gamers and students with technical skills that could make them suitable trainees as drone pilots, according to Bloomberg. Russia’s Defense Ministry has specifically called for drone pilot recruits with expertise in flying drones, model aircraft, electronics, and radio engineering, with computer skills also being desirable,NBC Newsreported.However, the effort carries the risk of further depleting Russia’s future educated workforce on top of the country’s existing brain drain—aresearch studyfound that 24 percent of top Russian software developers active on GitHub may have left the country within the first year of the war. Some students have also expressed a similar lack of enthusiasm for the Russian war effort. “No one wants to join,” a student named Andrey told NBC News. “No one is interested.”Nonetheless, Russia’s effort to recruit student drone pilots goes toward its goal of having 168,000 drone operators by the end of 2026, according to theKyiv Independent. In that sense, Russia is copying the success of Ukraine’sUnmanned Systems Forcethat became the world’s first standalone military branch focused on drones in June 2024.The Russian recruitment efforts have typically promised that university students can serve as drone pilots without risking their lives in bloody infantry assaults on Ukrainian trenches and fortifications. But safety is a relative term as constant surveillance and the threat of drone strikes or artillery fire has created a “kill zone” stretching as far as 25 kilometers on both sides of the frontlines, according to the commander of Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Force in an interview withUkrainksa Pravda.The Russian-language news service ofBBC Newsidentified 23-year-old Valery Averin as the first known death among the new wave of Russian university students who trained and deployed as drone operators. Averin’s adoptive mother, Oksana Afanasyeva, was informed of her son’s death in a mortar attack on April 6 near the Russian-occupied city of Luhansk in eastern Ukraine.“The child had been training on a drone for three months, and now we’re throwing him into an assault, into the meat grinder, someone who had never served in the army,” Afanasyeva told BBC News.Russia has lost an estimated 1.3 million soldiers as battlefield casualties since the start of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, according to aNATO officialcited by news reporting in February 2026. By comparison,Ukrainian casualtieswere estimated as being between 500,000 and 600,000 over approximately the same period, including killed, wounded, and missing soldiers.Into the meat grinderElite university students are still luckier than many Russian men—including trained specialists—who are being sent directly into frontline combat. Going back to 2023, the Russian space corporation Roscosmos was alreadyrecruiting its own employeesto join a militia for the war in Ukraine. By early 2026, Russia had organized three “motorized rifle regiments” for frontline duty by pulling personnel from its Navy, Aerospace Forces, and Strategic Missile Forces, according to the Ukrainian publicationEuromaidan Press.The Russian military’s de