Neo–Deep Battle Fires: Russia’s Drone and Missile Campaign Across Ukraine (Oct 2025)
Earlier this week, a map shared on X by Big Serge visualized Russia’s ongoing drone and missile campaign across Ukraine in October 2025. Such maps have become predictable, yet the growing tempo and scope of these strikes highlight a doctrinal evolution — the application of deep battle logic through modern precision fires. Call it Neo–Deep Battle Fires.

Red / Orange lines: cruise missiles (e.g., Kalibr, Kh-101, Iskander-K)
Yellow / Green lines: Shahed/Geran-2 loitering drones
Blue or Purple lines: air-launched missiles (e.g., Kh-22, Kh-59)
These converge on Ukrainian cities and regions, including Kyiv, Kharkiv, Odesa, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, and Lviv.
What is Deep Battle?
If you’re unfamiliar with the term, see my longer piece Soviet Deep Operations Doctrine: Origins and Key Theorists. Briefly: Soviet Deep Battle was developed in the 1920s–1930s to break the stalemate of positional warfare. It used combined-arms echelons to concentrate mobility and shock at decisive points, allocating minimum forces to secure flanks while the main mobile force punched deeply into the enemy’s operational depth. The goal was to destroy the enemy’s command, logistics, and reserves — collapsing the entire defensive system rather than grinding down a frontline by attrition.
A central component of classical Deep Battle was massive artillery and airpower: preparatory barrages to blind and suppress defenders, followed by waves of mechanized exploitation.
Artillery’s historical role
Artillery — the “god of war” — enabled Deep Battle by suppressing defenses, destroying command nodes, and disrupting logistics far behind the frontline. In the interwar years and during World War II, synchronized indirect fires, air strikes, and maneuver created windows of opportunity for breakthroughs and deep exploitation.
Note: “Deep Battle Fires” is not an official Soviet or Russian doctrinal label. It’s an analytical term used to describe the practice of applying fires deep into an opponent’s system.
Russian artillery and fires today
Russia’s contemporary fires emphasize precision and efficiency. Drones provide spotting, terminal guidance, and battle-damage assessment, while modern artillery employs precision-guided munitions (PGMs) for greater accuracy and efficiency. Smart shells have made targeting far more precise.
Increased Vulnerability: Dense troop concentrations are now highly vulnerable to detection and strike, forcing units to disperse and dig in. What artillery cannot destroy, first-person-view (radio-controlled) drones can—serving as smart shells, while others act as miniature cruise missiles.
Centralized vs. Decentralized: While long-range strikes remain centrally coordinated, drone integration has enabled greater decentralization at the tactical level, creating a hybrid fire-control model. Where WWII-era doctrine relied on massed, saturating barrages, modern practice prefers fewer, more accurate strikes supported by sensor networks.
Key changes include:
- Shift to accuracy: Fewer rounds, higher probability of effect per shot.
- Drone integration: Unmanned systems enable targeting, correction, and assessment in near real-time.
- Precision munitions: Guided artillery and smart projectiles increase lethality per round.
- Rapid counterbattery: Radar + drones enable quick interdiction of enemy guns.
- Dispersal & vulnerability: Dense concentrations are easier to detect and strike, driving forces to disperse.
- Mix of centralization/decentralization: Tactical decentralization for survivability, operational centralization for coordinated long-range fires.
Comparative summary
WWII Deep Battle (classical)
- Mass & quantity: massed artillery barrages.
- Preparatory barrage: large pre-attack fires to suppress and blind.
- High rate of fire: intense short windows of saturation.
- Decisive blunt effect: artillery as a sledgehammer enabling mechanized exploitation.
Modern Russian Fires (Neo–Deep Battle Fires)
- Shift to accuracy: “less is more” — maximize effect per round.
- Integrated with drones: sensor-to-shooter links improve efficiency.
- Precision-guided munitions: smart shells and guided munitions.
- Improved counterbattery: rapid detection and interdiction of enemy guns.
- Increased vulnerability: dense formations are high-value, high-risk targets.
Operational effect and implications
Russia’s massed drone and missile strikes project effects across Ukraine’s depth, mirroring Deep Battle’s objective: degrade logistics, morale, and sustainment beyond the front. Drones act as low-cost precision bombers and guided weapons, saturating air defenses and forcing Ukraine to disperse forces across a far wider area.
Operational outcomes include:
- Attrition by depth: continuous pressure on logistics, power, and transport erodes operational tempo.
- Spread of defenses: units and air defenses are stretched thin, reducing local combat superiority.
- Psychological & economic strain: recurring strikes increase civilian stress and divert resources.
- Strategic paralysis: a reactive defender loses initiative and offensive options.
- Systems vulnerability: concentrated logistics and energy nodes are high-payoff targets; predictable transport corridors enable persistent interdiction.
- Repair & resilience gaps: slow repair cycles and centralized infrastructure amplify damage effects.
Conclusion
Unlike in World War II — when Deep Battle focused on the front line and the operational depth immediately behind it — modern Russian operations have expanded the concept to encompass an entire national battlespace. Russia is gradually extending vertical envelopment across the full breadth of Ukraine, employing drones, loitering munitions, and missile strikes to make every layer of Ukrainian territory, from trench to power grid, unsafe.
Neo–Deep Battle Fires preserves the classical Deep Battle objective — collapsing an opponent’s defensive system across depth — but replaces massed, saturating barrages with networked presision using automation and AI: drones, precision‑guided munitions, and sensor‑to‑shooter links, together with strike assessment in near‑real time, create a semi‑autonomous cycle of reconnaissance, targeting, and destruction that achieves the same operational effect through surgical, distributed fires rather than brute volume.
The result is an evolved form of Deep Battle: not confined to linear fronts or shallow depths, but multidimensional—horizontal, vertical, and informational. The tools have changed—from barrages to algorithms, from mass to precision—but the logic endures: to paralyze the enemy’s defensive system across the total battlespace.
Sources
Citino, Robert M. “Going Deep: The Red Army in World War II.” Robert M. Citino – Accessed 9/27/2025. https://www.historynet.com/going-deep-the-red-army-in-world-war-ii/
