Defense Trends

France fast-tracks combat-ready military robots as Ukraine war accelerates innovation

The French army has explored the use of ground robots since 2021, but the war in Ukraine, where drones are reshaping warfare, has enormously accelerated their evolution.

An experimental dog robot is displayed during the CoHoMa Challenge event in a French Gendarmerie national military training camp in Beynes west of Paris, on May 6. [Ludovic Marin/AFP]
An experimental dog robot is displayed during the CoHoMa Challenge event in a French Gendarmerie national military training camp in Beynes west of Paris, on May 6. [Ludovic Marin/AFP]

By AFP |

France's armed forces are on schedule to develop battle-ready robots by 2040, according to participants in a test bringing together the military with engineers, researchers and defense contractors.

"We hope to have something fairly evolved within three years, with the first ground robot capabilities ready to equip our forces," said the army's commander of future combat, Gen. Bruno Baratz.

At the recent competition event over several weeks -- the third such exercise since the armed forces set the 2040 target four years ago -- robots fitted with legs, wheels and treads navigated obstacles and evaded traps at a base west of Paris to test their ability to hold ground against enemy forces.

From surveillance to mine clearing, robots are "already very useful for protecting our units, said Gen. Tony Maffeis, chief of the army's technical branch, during the Collaboration-Man-Machine (CoHoMa) challenge.

An experimental machine-gun robot is displayed during the CoHoMa Challenge event in a French Gendarmerie national military training camp in Beynes west of Paris, on May 6. [Ludovic Marin/AFP]
An experimental machine-gun robot is displayed during the CoHoMa Challenge event in a French Gendarmerie national military training camp in Beynes west of Paris, on May 6. [Ludovic Marin/AFP]

"Now we need to prove they can be more effective when they come into contact with an adversary," he said.

"The robot must facilitate combat, not hold it back," Maffeis added, underscoring the challenges that still stand in the way of deploying robots into the field -- especially when it comes to navigating rough terrain.

A competition like this "allows us to get out of the lab and tackle a realistic mission," said Baptiste Lepelletier, one of the participants.

Robotics 'booming' in Ukraine

The French army has explored the use of ground robots since 2021, but the war in Ukraine, where drones -- cheaper and more abundant -- are reshaping warfare, has enormously accelerated their evolution.

"Ground robotics is booming in Ukraine, but it's still complex and less developed, so it's important to explore what practical uses they could have," said army chief of staff Gen. Pierre Schill.

One problem is that they cannot operate effectively without aerial drones to guide them.

French defense firm Thales brought one robot that features a launch pad for a drone that scouts for obstacles and maps a route.

The military said it has already incorporated some developments from two previous CoHoMa challenges but sees even bigger changes in the next few years.

But before they are used in combat, the first applications will be in logistics, with drone convoys or robotic mules carrying gear.

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