“We are fighting a 21st-century war with 19th-century visibility.”… The wheat did not move. That was the first thing Lieutenant Halyna noticed when she reviewed the drone feed—frame by frame, pixel by pixel. In theory, the summer wind over the Zaporizhzhia front should have bent the fields into soft, rippling waves. Instead, parts of the golden surface remained unnaturally still, like a held breath. “Mark that grid,” she said quietly. The operator hesitated. “It could just be wind shadow.” Halyna shook her head. “Or fiber-optic lines.” By 2026, both sides had learned to distrust the sky. ⸻ The war had evolved into something paradoxical. It was, on paper, the most technologically saturated conflict in history—millions of drones, AI-assisted targeting, real-time satellite overlays. Ukrainian planners liked to say that over 80% of battlefield effects now involved unmanned systems. And yet, on the ground, it still felt like the 20...