China-Drone Swarm Operations System

China’s drone swarm system shows precision strike capabilities

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  • ID : 8471877
  • Dateline : March 25, 2026
  • Location : China
  • Category : Tech
  • Duration : 1'19
  • Audio Language : Chinese/Nats/Narration
  • Source : China Central Television (CCTV)
  • Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland
  • Published : 2026-03-25 19:03
  • Last Modified : 2026-03-25 21:35:35
  • Version : 1
  • ID : 8471877
  • Dateline : 25 mar, 2026
  • Location : China
  • Category : Tech
  • Duration : 1'19
  • Audio Language : Chino/Nats/Narración
  • Source : China Central Television (CCTV)
  • Restrictions : No acceso a la parte continental de China
  • Published : 2026-03-25 21:30
  • Last Modified : 2026-03-25 21:35:35
  • Version : 1

China-Drone Swarm Operations System

China’s drone swarm system shows precision strike capabilities

Dateline : March 25, 2026

Location : China

Duration : 1'19

  • English
  • Español


China - March 25, 2026 (CCTV - No access Chinese mainland)
1. Various of Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle of Atlas drone swarm operations system launching drones; drones flying
2. Operator of Atlas drone swarm operations system working
3. Various of screens showing test range, drone swarm
4. SOUNDBITE (Chinese) Zhang Wei, engineer, Research Institute of Intelligent Technology, Institute of Intelligent Technology (starting with shot 3/ending with shot 5):
"Our drone swarm has autonomously identified the command vehicle. Next, we will carry out an autonomous strike. Let's take a look at the footage from the drone's first-person perspective. We can see that a drone has successfully locked onto the target and is moving closer and closer. Let's see if it can hit it."
5. Screen showing designated target
6. Various of drone striking target
7. Various of drones flying; screen showing drone swarm
8. Animation of drone swarm


China on Wednesday unveiled footage showing the first full-process demonstration of its domestically developed, advanced Atlas drone swarm operations system.

The system, consisting of the Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle, the command vehicle, and the support vehicle, not only demonstrated expanding battlefield applications for drone swarms but also China's rapid advancement in algorithm-driven technologies, which are increasingly reshaping modern warfare.

In the footage, three visually similar targets were set up in the strike zone at a test range. The Atlas system rapidly carried out coordinated reconnaissance, autonomously identified the command vehicle among the targets, opened the launcher, and launched a swarm of drones. The drones quickly locked onto the target mid-air and struck it with precision.

The Swarm-2 vehicle, bearing the logo of the China Electronics Technology Group Corp, employed a mechanism with 3-second launch intervals, releasing one drone every three seconds to ensure safe spacing and flight paths for each unit.

A single Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle can carry and launch 48 fixed-wing drones, each capable of carrying a variety of payloads, including electro-optical reconnaissance and strike munitions, and can be flexibly combined into different operational groupings, forming multifunctional swarms capable of complex missions.

In addition, the type and sequence of drone launches can be flexibly configured based on the operational needs. Reconnaissance drones can be deployed first for intelligence gathering, while electronic warfare drones can precede attack drones to suppress adversaries, allowing tailored responses to different combat scenarios.

Powered by swarm intelligence, nearly 100 high-speed drones can form dense and precise formations within a short time during mission execution. They are also capable of autonomously adjusting to environmental factors, such as airflow disturbances, to avoid mid-air collisions.

The system's swarm-control algorithms effectively equip each drone with a "smart brain", enabling communication, information sharing, and real-time positional adjustments to maintain coordinated formations.

Such a large-scale aerial operation can be managed by a single operator controlling up to 96 drones.

The system also features drones of varying sizes, enabling layered, complementary capabilities within the swarm.

The Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle made its debut at the 15th China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition, also known as Airshow China, held in Zhuhai City, south China's Guangdong Province, in November 2024.


ID : 8471877

Published : 2026-03-25 19:03

Last Modified : 2026-03-25 21:35:35

Source : China Central Television (CCTV)

Restrictions : No access Chinese mainland

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