Russia Bets on a “Drone Elite”: Students Lured into the Military with Lucrative Incentives

Russia is intensifying its efforts to recruit young specialists into its unmanned systems forces, offering students and technical professionals substantial financial packages and educational benefits amid the protracted conflict in Ukraine. According to Reuters, Russian universities and regional authorities are participating in a large-scale campaign to enlist drone operators and engineers, who are becoming a key component of modern warfare.
According to the report, students in engineering and aviation fields are being offered one-year contracts with salaries reaching tens of thousands of dollars, along with lump-sum payments, free education after service, as well as academic leave and housing. At some universities, the total compensation package can exceed $60,000–80,000 per year, significantly higher than the average income in many Russian regions.
At the same time, this does not indicate a new wave of mass mobilization. Authorities continue to rely on a contract-based recruitment model, focusing on financial incentives and the targeted selection of qualified personnel. Official data shows that more than 400,000 people signed military contracts in 2025, and recruitment is continuing in 2026, allowing the Kremlin to avoid politically sensitive decisions.
However, the expansion of recruitment specifically among students points to a deeper transformation in Russia’s military strategy. Unmanned systems are becoming central to combat operations, and drone operators are emerging as a highly valued category of military personnel. Established in 2025, the unmanned systems forces already number in the tens of thousands and continue to grow rapidly, reflecting the transition of warfare into a technological phase in which FPV drones, reconnaissance systems, and autonomous platforms play a decisive role.
Another factor is the nature of the war itself, which is increasingly taking on the characteristics of a war of attrition, where not only manpower but also technological superiority is crucial. According to analysts, drones already account for a significant share of battlefield losses, intensifying competition between the sides for skilled operators and engineers.
Against this backdrop, Russia’s recruitment model combines market-based incentives with elements of administrative pressure. In some regions, according to sources, companies are assigned quotas for sending employees to the military, while universities are drawn into recruitment campaigns. This creates a hybrid system in which voluntariness is formally preserved but is effectively supplemented by institutional mechanisms for mobilizing human resources.
In a broader context, these measures reflect Moscow’s attempt to avoid repeating the 2022 mass mobilization scenario while simultaneously improving the qualitative composition of its armed forces. The focus on students and young specialists suggests that future phases of the war will increasingly depend not on the size of infantry forces, but on the level of technological expertise and the effective use of unmanned platforms.
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27 May 2026


