Taiwan Develops Plywood Kamikaze Drone

Taiwan Develops Plywood Kamikaze Drone
plywood drone Taiwan

The Taiwanese Ministry of National Defense has introduced a new multi-role unmanned aerial system developed at the state-run Plant 202 in collaboration with private-sector manufacturers.

The program, aimed at meeting the demands of asymmetric warfare, emphasizes mass production, low cost, and operational versatility. According to National Defense Online, the lineup includes a fixed-wing strike drone designed for ramming explosive attacks against long-range targets.

The unusual design is a lightweight, plywood-built loitering munition, featuring a rectangular airframe made from durable yet inexpensive wood panels. The ministry notes that this approach accelerates manufacturing and reduces unit cost — a method already employed by both Ukraine and Russia in ongoing combat operations.

Officials stressed that the program is tailored to the tactical needs of Taiwan’s armed forces, with an emphasis on mobility, concealment, and integration of both reconnaissance and strike functions into single platforms.

The new drone has completed a full cycle of field testing and functional evaluation with military units.

The ministry says the project is a key step toward expanding Taiwan’s indigenous defense capabilities, ensuring its forces have rapid-access solutions for emerging threats while maintaining cost efficiency in production.

Sources: Focus Taiwan;  Defence Blog