China's Military Outlines 'Unmanned Attrition' Doctrine Using Drone Swarm Saturation Attacks
China's military mouthpiece, the PLA Daily, has detailed a new doctrine of 'unmanned attrition warfare,' which focuses on using large drone swarms in 'saturation attacks' to overwhelm and exhaust adversaries.
The Chinese military's official mouthpiece has outlined a vision for future warfare centered on overwhelming adversaries with massive swarms of low-cost drones, a strategy it calls “unmanned attrition warfare.” According to a commentary in the PLA Daily on Tuesday, December 23, the key to victory lies in achieving “saturation attacks based on numerical superiority.”
The article, titled “Exploring the Winning Formula for Unmanned Attrition Warfare,” argues that future conflicts will require the flexible deployment of expendable unmanned systems to systematically wear down an opponent's more expensive, high-value military assets.
A Strategy of Exhaustion
The authors—identified as Zhou Xiaoli, Zhang Changfang, and Zhu Qichao—propose that by releasing large numbers of drones in concentrated formations, the People's Liberation Army (PLA) can launch simultaneous operations across multiple domains. The goal, they state, is to force an enemy “into a state of exhaustion and passive defence.”
The objective is to flexibly deploy low-cost unmanned systems to continuously deplete the opponent’s high-value combat assets, thereby achieving optimal combat effectiveness with minimal battlefield expenditure.
— PLA Daily
This approach relies on inducing exhaustion through “routine, incremental and sustained operations,” effectively turning the battlefield into a constant pressure environment for the adversary.
Multi-Domain Coordination and Asymmetric Advantage
The commentary also emphasizes the importance of coordinating unmanned forces across different battlefield sectors. For instance, it suggests that ground-based unmanned combat vehicles could be responsible for firepower and target guidance, while aerial drones handle reconnaissance and support missions. This integrated approach, leveraging the flexibility and intelligence of unmanned systems, is seen as a way to achieve an “asymmetric victory.”
To enhance the effectiveness of this strategy, the authors call for continued development in the autonomy, coordination, and intelligence of these systems. They also stress the need to integrate “traditional tactics with unmanned technology,” suggesting an evolution of military doctrine rather than a complete replacement.
This doctrine is more than a technical blueprint; it's a strategic challenge aimed at the West's reliance on expensive, high-tech platforms like aircraft carriers and stealth fighters. By proposing to trade cheap, expendable drones for multi-billion dollar assets, Beijing is signaling a focus on cost-imposing warfare, forcing potential adversaries to re-evaluate their entire defense procurement and operational calculus. It represents a classic asymmetric approach scaled for the AI era.
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