Chinese UAVs News & Discussions

China unveils full-process demonstration of Atlas drone swarm operations system, expert highlights algorithm-enabled combat upgrades
By Liang Rui and
Liu Xuanzun
Published: Mar 25, 2026 02:10 PM

The Atlas drone swarm operations system opens the launcher and deploys drones. Photo: Screenshot from the military channel of CCTV News

The Atlas drone swarm operations system opens the launcher and deploys drones. Photo: Screenshot from the military channel of CCTV News

An official media report on Wednesday offered the first full-process demonstration of China's Atlas drone swarm operations system. A military affairs expert told the Global Times that the system not only showcases expanding battlefield applications for drone swarms, but also reflects rapid advances in algorithm-driven technologies, which are reshaping modern warfare by enabling autonomous coordination, precision engagement and system-level combat capabilities.

The domestically developed system consists of the Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle, the command vehicle, and the support vehicle, the military channel of CCTV News reported on Wednesday. Footage showed that the launch vehicle bears the logo of China Electronics Technology Group Corp.

The Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle made its debut at Airshow China 2024 that was held in Zhuhai, South China's Guangdong Province. A single Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle can carry and launch 48 fixed wing drones, while a single command vehicle can simultaneously control up to 96 drones in a swarm. Each drone can carry a variety of payloads, including electro-optical reconnaissance, strike munitions, and relay communications, and can be flexibly combined into different operational groupings, forming multifunctional swarms capable of complex missions, according to a previous report by CCTV News.

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

Meanwhile, the Swarm-2 vehicle employed a mechanism with three-second launch intervals, releasing one drone every three seconds to ensure safe spacing and flight paths for each unit, according to the report.

In addition, the type and sequence of drone launches can be flexibly configured based on 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, said the report.

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, avoiding mid-air collisions, CCTV News reported.

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, the CCTV News report said.

The report noted that such a large-scale aerial operation can be managed by a single operator controlling up to 96 drones, comparable to one person flying nearly 100 kites with a single line. The system also features drones of varying sizes, allowing for layered and complementary capabilities within the swarm.

Wang Yunfei, a Chinese military affairs expert, told the Global Times on Wednesday that the system could significantly expand battlefield applications, as it demonstrated modular task configurations.

First, in saturation attacks against enemy air defense systems, large numbers of drones can be launched in multiple waves and directions to overwhelm interception capacity, making it difficult for defenders to process and respond effectively, Wang said.

Second, in precision strike missions, unlike traditional long-range munitions, whose accuracy can be affected by atmospheric conditions and electronic interference, drones can loiter over targets and conduct persistent surveillance, enabling strikes at closer range and with higher accuracy.

Third, in deep-strike operations, drones with ranges extending hundreds or even thousands of kilometers can penetrate at low altitude with low speed and small radar cross sections, making early detection and interception more difficult and allowing effective strikes deep inside hostile territory, thereby blurring the traditional distinction between frontlines and depth areas, said Wang.

Technologically, the expert said that these capabilities are driven by China's advances in artificial intelligence and large models.

In complex battlefield environments, drones are required to perform highly sophisticated tasks such as target recognition, task allocation and route planning - processes that are difficult or inefficient to achieve through human control alone. With AI-enabled pre-training and embedded algorithms, drones can autonomously execute these functions and even adapt dynamically to changing battlefield conditions, Wang explained.

 
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China unveils Atlas drone swarm system

System can expand battlefield use, including saturation attacks on enemy air defenses, precision strikes, deep-strike missions, says military expert​

Saadet Gokce |25.03.2026 - Update : 25.03.2026


China unveils Atlas drone swarm system
File Photo

China has unveiled its first full-process demonstration of the Atlas drone swarm operations system, state media reported Wednesday, showcasing a platform designed to coordinate large numbers of drones for reconnaissance and strike missions.

The domestically developed system includes a Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle, a command vehicle and a support vehicle, according to the military channel of CCTV News.

Footage showed the launch vehicle carrying the logo of state-owned China Electronics Technology Group Corp, the Global Times reported.

The Swarm-2, introduced in 2024, can carry and launch 48 fixed-wing drones, while a single command vehicle can control up to 96 drones at once.

Each drone can carry different payloads, including electro-optical reconnaissance systems, strike munitions and relay communications equipment. They can be flexibly grouped into multifunctional swarms for complex missions, according to a previous CCTV News report.

The latest report Wednesday said the system conducted coordinated reconnaissance during testing, autonomously identified the command vehicle among targets and launched drones at a test range with three visually similar targets.

The Swarm-2 vehicle released one drone every three seconds, the report said.

The type and order of drones launched can be adjusted based on mission needs. Reconnaissance drones may be deployed first to gather intelligence, while electronic warfare drones can be sent ahead of attack drones to disrupt enemy systems.

The drones can autonomously adjust to environmental factors such as airflow disturbances and create dense, precise formations in a short time.

The report said a single operator can manage large-scale aerial operations, controlling up to 96 drones.

The system also includes drones of different sizes.

Chinese military affairs expert Wang Yunfei told the Global Times the system could greatly expand battlefield use, including saturation attacks on enemy air defenses, precision strikes and deep-strike missions.

He added that with AI-enabled pre-training and embedded algorithms, the drones can independently carry out tasks such as target recognition, task allocation and route planning while adapting to changing battlefield conditions.

 
The program is titled "Unmanned Competition." In addition to introducing the drone swarm combat spear, it also features two types of laser defense shields.

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A single operator can simultaneously control 96 drones, which include different functions such as reconnaissance, electronic warfare, attack, and backup.

In the film, three different sizes of drones that can be installed are shown.
 
The program is titled "Unmanned Competition." In addition to introducing the drone swarm combat spear, it also features two types of laser defense shields.

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A single operator can simultaneously control 96 drones, which include different functions such as reconnaissance, electronic warfare, attack, and backup.

In the film, three different sizes of drones that can be installed are shown.
Name Atalas, obviously ready for export.
 
The two laser weapons are the Light Sword 11 (guangjian11)and the Light Sword 21, respectively.

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Pakistan should work toward buying this system, I mean these small drones will cause Havoc among the enemy systems, AD and soldiers. Drones will be dominating skies in future, and not just long endurance heavy payload carrying ones, but small FPV and Kamikaze ones too.
 

China already has a giant drone with the payload capacity of a manned fighter jet, and what’s most unsettling is that the “Jetank” can launch entire swarms into the air​

By Kevin Montien
Published On: March 25, 2026 at 12:30 PM

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What happens when a massive new drone is designed to do two very different jobs? China’s Jetank, also known in official Chinese reports as “Jiutian,” has completed its maiden flight in Shaanxi, and its size alone turns heads. But the bigger story may be what this aircraft could do far from the battlefield.

By China’s own description, the platform is built for remote cargo delivery, emergency communications, disaster relief, surveying, and even forest firefighting.

At the same time, state media and CCTV have highlighted its swarm-launching module and other military uses.

That mix gives the Jetank a unique place in the wider environmental debate, because dual-use aircraft can help protect fragile landscapes, or add new risks, depending on how they are deployed.

A giant platform with a long reach​

Official figures put the drone at 16.35 meters (about 53.6 feet) long with a 25-meter wingspan, a maximum takeoff weight of 16 metric tons, a payload capacity of 6,000 kilograms (about 13,228 pounds), 12 hours of endurance, and a ferry range of 7,000 kilometers (about 4,350 miles).

It completed its first flight in Pucheng, in northwest China’s Shaanxi Province. In practical terms, that places Jetank in a class far above the small quadcopters most people picture when they hear the word “drone.”

AVIC and other official reports say the aircraft uses a modular payload system, which means it can be reconfigured for different tasks rather than locked into one mission.

That system is meant to support heavy supply delivery to remote mountains and islands, rapid communications recovery during emergencies, disaster assessment, geographic surveying, mineral exploration, cultural relic surveys, maritime law enforcement, and forest firefighting.

That is a long list, and it is clearly meant to signal that this is more than a one-purpose machine.

Still, the military side is impossible to ignore. CCTV and other state media reports have described an open architecture, eight hardpoints, and a “heterogeneous hive” module that can carry large numbers of smaller drones or loitering munitions. So yes, it can deliver aid, but it can also project force. And that is where the story gets complicated.

Why the environmental angle matters​

For ecology and emergency planners, the most interesting promise is not the swarm feature. It is the idea that a large UAV could move heavy cargo into hard-to-reach places without new roads, long truck convoys, or the delays that often follow mountain emergencies.

Anyone who has seen a fresh access road cut into a hillside knows the damage can linger long after the machinery leaves.

China’s own reporting on other heavy-lift drone projects shows why that matters. In Yunnan, drone-assisted power line logistics cut road-building costs by 80% and labor by 60% in a fragile karst region, while another project spared nearly 7 hectares of rainforest and more than 30,000 trees in an elephant corridor.

Those numbers are not from Jetank missions, but they do show how airborne delivery can sometimes shrink the footprint on the ground.

The Chinese Jetank (Jiutian) heavy-lift drone on a runway, featuring a 25-meter wingspan and 12-hour endurance.
China’s massive Jetank drone, also known as Jiutian, recently completed its maiden flight in Shaanxi, showcasing a modular design capable of both disaster relief and military swarm operations.

That is why Jetank’s civilian mission list deserves attention. A platform that can carry heavy supplies, restore communications when phones go dead after a storm, map disaster zones, and support forest firefighting could be useful in places where every hour counts and every bulldozed slope leaves a mark.

For remote islands or mountain communities, that may sound less like futuristic tech and more like practical infrastructure.

The green promise has limits​

There is an important catch, though. Jetank is a large, heavy aircraft, and CCTV has described it as using a turbofan engine, so no one should mistake it for a zero-emissions solution. Its environmental value, for the most part, would come from avoiding some ground disturbance and speeding emergency response, not from making aviation clean.

The other limit is governance. The same modular design that makes the aircraft flexible for relief work also makes it flexible for combat support, electronic warfare, and swarm operations. In other words, the platform itself is not “green” or “harmful” by nature.

Its impact depends on the missions, the rules, and the transparency around how it is used.

What readers should keep in mind​

Jetank’s first flight is a real aviation milestone, but the environmental relevance comes from the quieter details. China’s official descriptions point to remote logistics, emergency rescue, mapping, disaster assessment, and forest firefighting as core civilian uses, and those are the areas worth watching first.

If even part of that list moves from brochures to real operations, the aircraft could matter in places where trucks struggle and helicopters are costly.

At the end of the day, this is a story about dual-use technology wearing two faces. One face points to faster aid, less ground disruption, and better access to isolated terrain. The other points to a future of larger drone swarms and expanded military reach.

 

China's Atlas Drone Swarm Launches 48 Drones in 3-Second Intervals

CCTV showcases AI-driven swarm system enabling coordinated reconnaissance, electronic warfare, and precision strikes

Published 2026.03.26. 15:01

The 48 drone launch tube covers on the Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle open and close collectively. /CCTV


The 48 drone launch tube covers on the Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle open and close collectively. /CCTV

China has unveiled for the first time a demonstration video of the "Atlas Drone Swarm Operation System," designed to integrate and operate multiple drones for reconnaissance and attack missions.

The military channel of Chinese state broadcaster CCTV showcased the demonstration video of the Atlas Drone Swarm Operation System on the 25th under the title "No-Man's Land, Episode 1: Swarm Attack."

The video shows the lids of 48 drone launchers mounted on a ground combat vehicle stationed on a test field opening one by one, followed by drones being launched in succession. The launches occur at approximately three-second intervals, with the drones charging straight toward virtual targets to strike them.

The Atlas Drone Swarm Operation System consists of a Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle equipped with drones, a command vehicle, and a support vehicle. The Swarm-2 ground combat vehicle was first unveiled at Airshow China held in Zhuhai, Guangdong Province, in 2024. A single ground combat vehicle can carry 48 fixed-wing drones, while a command vehicle can simultaneously direct up to 96 drones. The system adopts a mechanism that launches drones at three-second intervals to ensure safe distances and flight paths for each drone.

Each drone can carry various payloads, including reconnaissance equipment, attack equipment, and communication relay devices. According to CCTV, the system allows flexible configuration of drone types and sequences based on mission requirements, enabling responses tailored to diverse combat situations. For instance, reconnaissance drones are first deployed to gather intelligence, followed by electronic warfare drones to disrupt enemy radar and communication systems, and finally attack drones to strike targets. The system reportedly enables dozens of drones to form sophisticated formations based on "swarm intelligence." CCTV stated, "It essentially grants a smart brain, enabling communication, information sharing, and real-time position adjustments."

Drones launch at approximately 3-second intervals. /X


Drones launch at approximately 3-second intervals. /X

Regarding this "swarm drone" system, Chinese military expert Wang Winfei told the Global Times, an English-language state-run Chinese media outlet, "The ability to reconfigure drone setups based on missions significantly broadens the range of practical battlefield applications."

He added, "In saturation attacks against enemy air defenses, launching multiple drones in waves from various directions can overwhelm interception capabilities," and "In precision strike missions, drones can achieve higher accuracy than conventional long-range munitions."

 
Another most interesting find by @foolsball on Twitter again regarding Chinese CCAs. 😮

"At least two UADFs (likely Type E) spotted at the Jingbian UAV test and training site. Their darker paint scheme also differs from the usual light grey paint scheme found on PLA UAVs."


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China's new CH-7 UAV completes fully autonomous takeoff​

09:01, 28-Mar-2026

China's CH-7 UAV demonstrated fully autonomous taxiing and takeoff, highlighting its advanced flight control and onboard systems.

After receiving clearance, the aircraft independently entered the runway, with sensors detecting and avoiding obstacles while the flight control and self-check systems operated in real time to ensure optimal performance.

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Wow ... Interesting! Looks at first sight without enlargement like just 3 J-16 far far away and much too blurry ... but now I think more like one J-XDS and two CCAs?

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Pakistan should work toward buying this system, I mean these small drones will cause Havoc among the enemy systems, AD and soldiers. Drones will be dominating skies in future, and not just long endurance heavy payload carrying ones, but small FPV and Kamikaze ones too.
Imagined an entire infantry gather point or armour vehicle coloum being wiped out, then posted the video online, it will send shocks to the enemy.
 
How do we know if it's not PSed!


We don't know, but IMO it is not psed:
Even more interesting is this image + video below:

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