Will laser-based Air Defenses make the current kinetic state of Drone Warfare obsolete, and how soon? #CIA #DroneWarfare #Lasers Pic.: Drone warfare is already DEAD – how pennies-per-kill lasers are the future of battle… but come with newAI OverviewLaser-based air defenses will not make kinetic drone warfare obsolete, but they will completely transform it. By […]
Will laser-based Air Defenses make the current kinetic state of Drone Warfare obsolete, and how soon? #CIA#DroneWarfare#Lasers Pic.: Drone warfare is already DEAD – how pennies-per-kill lasers are the future of battle… but come with new AI Overview Laser-based air defenses will not make kinetic drone warfare obsolete, but they will completely transform it. By providing a nearly limitless “magazine” at a cost of just pennies per shot, lasers solve the problem of wasting expensive missiles on cheap targets. Instead, they will force drones to evolve with heat-resistant shielding and faster swarm tactics. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] The Timeline: How Soon?
Now (2026): Systems are actively moving out of the lab and into the field. The U.S. DoD has initiated pilot programs deploying directed-energy systems at five U.S. military bases. Globally, Israel’s 100kW Iron Beam and South Korea’s Cheongwang are on the cusp of operational deployment. 2027: The UK is accelerating the deployment of its DragonFire laser onto Royal Navy destroyers, while other NATO allies ramp up naval and ground-based directed-energy programs. The Next Decade: Lasers will act as primary point-defense shields for fixed sites, ships, and vehicles, fundamentally altering the economics of the battlefield. [6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13]
The Limits of Lasers Despite their speed of light and low cost, lasers are not a silver bullet. They face several fundamental hurdles:
Atmospheric Interference: Fog, rain, dust, and smoke can scatter the beam and drastically diminish a laser’s effective range (usually limited to about $1$ to $2$ km). Dwell Time: Lasers require time to “burn” through their targets. This limits a laser’s capacity to handle massive, simultaneous “bandwidth” swarms compared to rapid-fire kinetic methods. Drones Fighting Back: Attack drones will adapt by using reflective and ablative coatings, or spinning in-flight to prevent the laser from focusing on one spot. [1, 6, 14, 15, 16, 17]
The Future of “Cat and Mouse” Because lasers require an unobstructed line-of-sight and are limited by severe weather, they won’t replace kinetic weapons like rapid-fire anti-aircraft guns, electronic warfare, or interceptor drones. Instead, a multi-layered air defense network will emerge. The current kinetic state of drone warfare will simply force robotic warfare into a rapid technological escalation rather than making it obsolete. [6, 14, 15, 16, 18] If you are interested in how other countermeasures are shaping up, I can:
Detail how High-Powered Microwave (HPM) defenses fry electronics Explain the role of anti-drone interceptor drones (kamikaze drones hunting other drones) Discuss how drones themselves are using AI and autonomous tracking to bypass air defenses [6, 11, 19, 20, 21]
Let me know what you would like to explore next!
AI responses may include mistakes. –
share.google/aimode/KlXMIeQW… No, laser-based air defenses will not make drone warfare completely obsolete, but they will force a rapid, multi-tiered technological evolution. High-energy lasers are fundamentally shifting the economic calculus of defense away from expensive kinetic interceptors, though physical and tactical limitations ensure that lasers will function as a complementary inner layer of air defense rather than a total replacement. [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] The transition is happening immediately: initial nationwide operational integration arrived at the end of December 2025, with widespread multi-national deployment pacing out through 2027–2028. [6, 7, 8, 9] The Shift in Warfighting Economics The primary disruption from lasers is economic, resolving the unsustainable “math problem” where defenders use million-dollar missiles to down $500 commercial-off-the-shelf drones. [3, 10, 11, 12, 13]
Pennies-per-shot: Systems like the UK’s DragonFire cost roughly $13 (£10) per shot. Australia’s “Apollo” system operates at under 10 cents per shot. Infinite Magazines: Lasers remove the bottleneck of physical ammunition storage, operating continuously as long as the platform has a stable power supply. [8, 14, 15, 16, 17]
Deployment Timelines Laser integration is no longer a future concept; it is an active battlefield reality. [18]
Active Deployment (Late 2025 – Early 2026): Israel’s 100-kilowatt Iron Beam completed operational testing and achieved initial nationwide deployment by the IDF in December 2025. Concurrently, Russia deployed its “Laser Buzz” system to counter small FPV drones on frontlines, and the Pentagon designated five primary bases to receive anti-drone directed energy platforms. Near-Term Scaling (2027): The British Royal Navy and Army are on course for frontline deployment of DragonFire by 2027. The U.S. Navy is scaling its Joint Laser Weapon System to 150–300 kW systems to target both drones and cruise missiles. Widespread Adoption (2028 and beyond): Major NATO allies are taking delivery of mass-production tactical lasers capable of destroying up to 20 drones per minute. [1, 6, 8, 9, 14, 15, 19, 20]
Why Kinetic Methods and Drones Will Survive Lasers possess innate physical weaknesses that prevent them from entirely replacing kinetic weapons (like autocannons, automated shotgun systems, and missile interceptors): [2, 3, 21, 22, 23]
Atmospheric Degradation: Laser beams suffer from scattering and attenuation. Rain, fog, heavy smoke, and dust drastically increase the required “dwell time” to melt a target, dropping efficiency right when an attack is most likely to occur. Line-of-Sight and Horizon Limits: Lasers cannot fire beyond the horizon or through terrain obstacles. Ground-based systems have an effective anti-drone engagement range often restricted to 1–3 kilometers. The “Dwell Time” Vulnerability: Unlike a kinetic shell that causes instantaneous destruction upon impact, a laser must remain perfectly focused on a single spot of a drone for several milliseconds to seconds to burn through components. High-speed, high-bandwidth swarm attacks can mathematically overwhelm a single laser’s maximum “kills-per-minute” capacity. Drone Countermeasures: Drone manufacturers are already adapting. Future drones will bypass laser efficacy using reflective or ablative heat-resistant coatings, rapid-spinning chassis designs to distribute thermal energy, and localized shielding over critical electronics. [2, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29]
If you would like to explore this topic deeper, let me know if you want to focus on the specific laser programs of a particular military, the technical mechanics of drone countermeasures, or how high-powered microwaves (HPM) fit into the defense equation.
In the east of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, AFC/M23 rebels, backed by Rwanda, have withdrawn from certain areas under US diplomatic pressure. The Congolese army has moved in to regain control. This marks the most significant development on the ground in months.
#DRCongo #M23 #USA
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“Варварская конверсионная терапия сродни пыткам”, – заявила комиссар ЕС в интервью Euronews
ЕС должен бороться с “варварскими” и “позорными” методами конверсионной терапии, которые наносят вред ЛГБТК+ сообществам Европы. Об этом заявила еврокомиссар по вопросам равенства Хаджа Лахбиб в эксклюзивном комментарии для Euronews.
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“Варварская конверсионная терапия сродни пыткам”, – заявила комиссар ЕС в интервью Euronews
ЕС должен бороться с “варварскими” и “позорными” методами конверсионной терапии, которые наносят вред ЛГБТК+ сообществам Европы. Об этом заявила еврокомиссар по вопросам равенства Хаджа Лахбиб в эксклюзивном комментарии для Euronews.
ЧИТАТЬ ДАЛЕЕ : http://ru.euronews.com/2026/05/14/14-may-itw-euto-2-hadja-lahbib
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Ghana has started evacuating 300 citizens from South Africa, following a wave of xenophobic attacks targeting migrants from other sub-Saharan African countries. Details by FRANCE 24 correspondent in Accra, Justice Baidoo.
#Ghana #evacuation #SouthAfrica
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Presidents Trump and Xi hold talks in Beijing. A judge orders new trial for Alex Murdaugh. The US military rescues 11 people stranded in the Atlantic Ocean after a plane crash. Kouri Richins sentenced to life in prison for her husband’s murder. Plus, the NHL rookie of the year celebrates his win with cancer patients.
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Author – Gaëlle Le Pavic, Postdoctoral Researcher & lecturer at Ghent Institute for International and European Studies; Associate researcher at United Nations University – CRIS.
This work is part of the “Incomplete atlas of conflicts and cooperation in Eastern Europe”, produced by the VisLab, Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography (IfL). Editorial team: Iaroslav Boretskii, Georg Gartner, Sofia Gavrilova, Sebastian Lentz, Eric Losang, Jana Moser, Mela Žuljević.
About the case: ‘Inside/Outside the Contested Border’ presents fragments from Gaëlle Le Pavic’s PhD research and fieldwork tracing the contested borderlines between Transnistria and Moldova, and between Abkhazia and Georgia. In visualising this case, we experiment with ways of representing de facto states and their contested borders through blurred, shifting, and overlapping symbols. Through layered scrollytelling, we follow Gaëlle’s journey in the field, tracing how these borderlines are rendered visible through research practice.
Context
In 1991, the dissolution of the Soviet Union resulted in fifteen independent republics and newly sovereign borders—some accepted, others contested, leading in several cases to conflict and war. This broader process underpins the separation of Transnistria from Moldova and Abkhazia from Georgia in the early 1990s.
Even the name Transnistria is contested. Moldova considers the territory an integral part of its sovereign state and refers to it as the Transnistrian region, while the region’s authorities refer to it as the Pridnestrovskaia Moldavskaia Respublika (PMR). In September 2024, the Transnistrian authorities formally banned the term Transnistria, equating it with “fascism” and “Nazism,” and promoting the Russian-language designation Pridnestrovie instead
Following centuries of shifting rule, the territory that is today referred to as Transnistria became part of the Soviet Union and was incorporated into the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1940. Unlike most of present-day Moldova, however, it had not been part of interwar Romania. As the Soviet Union began to collapse, fears of Moldovan–Romanian unification, disputes over language policy, and disagreements over geopolitical alignment with Russia prompted Transnistrian elites to declare separation in 1990.
Armed conflict followed in 1992 and ended with a ceasefire agreement that allowed Russian troops to remain in the region as “peacekeepers”, a role that has been widely criticised. Despite maintaining a military presence, Russia has neither formally recognised Transnistria’s independence nor agreed to its annexation, despite a 2006 referendum in which a majority of voters reportedly supported closer integration with Russia. Today, questioning the relationship between Transnistria and Russia is criminalised in Transnistria, and thus, any expression of support must be critically assessed.
Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, concerns emerged that Transnistria might serve as a staging ground for a second front in support of Moscow. No such escalation occurred. Somehow counterintuitively, the Transnistria authorities opened temporary shelters for Ukrainians fleeing the war. International organisations were permitted to operate alongside local ones, providing humanitarian assistance and limited social services to forcefully displaced Ukrainians.
While there are parallels with the relationship between Abkhazia and Georgia, important differences also emerged. Relations between the two were shaped by imperial competition and shifting arrangements of autonomy during Russian expansion into the Caucasus in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Under Soviet rule, Abkhazia experienced fluctuating institutional status and periods of political repression, contributing to competing historical narratives and grievances.
As the Soviet Union disintegrated, diverging national projects, demographic tensions, and fears of Georgian dominance following the dissolution of the USSR, culminated in the 1992–1993 war between Georgian and Abkhaz forces. The conflict resulted in the mass displacement of ethnic Georgians and Abkhazia’s effective separation following the 1994 ceasefire agreement.
Interpretations of the war remain deeply contested. Abkhazian scholars emphasise that most combatants were local, presenting the military outcome as an expression of legitimate self-determination. Georgian scholars, by contrast, underline the decisive involvement of fighters from the North Caucasus, arguing that without their support, Georgia would have retained control over the territory.
The 2008 Russia–Georgia war and Russia’s subsequent recognition of Abkhazia’s independence further entrenched the dispute. These developments reinforced Georgia’s position that Abkhazia is Russian-occupied territory and contributed to the ongoing impasse in conflict-resolution efforts.
Access
Access to Abkhazia and Transnistria has changed over time and remains fluctuating. After Transnistria’s separation from Moldova, entering the region was, as several respondents put it, “like going through an airport security check.” Access has eased in the last decade. I was able to enter twice, in 2014 and 2021. During my first visit, I had to complete paperwork and register within Transnistria; the second time, the procedure was easier. On both occasions, I received a slip of paper functioning as a “migration card,” since Transnistrian customs officers cannot stamp passports.
During my 2021 stay, I conducted observations in Bender, Ribnitsa, and Tiraspol, and visited several civil society organisations (CSOs) providing social services in these locations. I observed their work and spoke with staff members. The visit was meant to be followed by a longer stay from March to May 2022, but Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine made this impossible. Instead, I volunteered with a Moldovan grassroots organisation giving food, clothing, medicines, and hygiene products to Ukrainians fleeing to Moldova. I reflected on this painful and moving period in a blog post for the United Nations University (CRIS).
By contrast, access to Abkhazia—previously easier—has been heavily restricted since the COVID-19 pandemic. This has prevented many residents from visiting relatives and made on-site research impossible for (Western) scholars. I have therefore never been able to enter Abkhazia. Instead, I documented how the division with Georgia shapes social dynamics from the Samegrelo region, on the Georgian-controlled side. I reflected on the implications of this “non-access” in a blog post for the De Facto Research Unit at the University of Tartu.
Across three stays in 2021, 2022, and 2025, I conducted participant observation in Samegrelo CSOs, organised focus groups with social service users inside and outside these organisations, and carried out semi-structured interviews and informal conversations with a wide range of stakeholders. These included representatives of international organisations and donors working across the conflict divide. Some were international staff, others Georgian or Moldovan citizens, and one was an Abkhaz working for one of the seven UN agencies in Abkhazia.
These encounters and observations generated rich empirical material, accompanied by ongoing reflections on knowledge production. I remain aware that while I publish in (non)academic outlets and present at international conferences, many people living in the regions I study are excluded from such spaces due to limited (financial) resources, limited English proficiency, and other structural barriers. In an effort to challenge this imbalance, I am currently co-authoring an academic article with an Abkhaz scholar for submission to an English-language peer-reviewed journal.
Transnistria
The ‘migration card’ I received when entering Transnistria on October 6, 2021. The card is granted until 16/10/2021 for a ‘private’ visit – as I did not know yet where exactly I would stay, the Transnistrian acting customs representative wrote a random address in the city of Bender, n°1 Panin Street.
Transnistrian Ruble is issued by the “Transnistrian Central Bank” located in Tiraspol. This currency can only be used in Transnistria. I changed Moldovan Lei to obtain these Transnistrian Rubles. The character featured is Alexander Vasilyevich Suvorov (1729–1800), a Russian imperial military commander, involved in securing Russia’s southwestern frontier. He is traditionally credited with founding Tiraspol as a fortress town on the Dniester River.
Interestingly, one of the 50 Ruble Transnistrian banknotes displayed the figure of Taras Shevshenko (1814-1861), a major Ukrainian poet. Ukrainian language is among the three languages recognised as official in Transnistria, together with Moldovan and Russian languages.
The first fortress I saw when I entered Transnistria after a 30-minute marshrutka drive from Chișinău was the one in Bender1, the only Transnistria-controlled major city located on the right bank of the river Dniester. Built during the Ottoman Empire in the late 15th-early 16th century, as a major stronghold to guard the Dniester frontier. The fortress changed several times during the Russo-Turkish wars of the 18th century and was eventually incorporated into the Russian Empire. The fortress remained a military site until the 2000s and was then restored and redeveloped as a museum and tourist site that I visited. European funds supported this restoration, but no mention to this is visible.
1Bender is used in Transnistrian and Russian-language narrative, while Tighina is preferred in Moldovan and Romanian languages.
On the contrary, European support to the Transnistrian Civil Society Organisation (CSO) “Children Development Centre”, based in Bender, is visible with the flag and the mention, “project financed by the European Union”. Since 2018, a law in Transnistria has prohibited CSOs from receiving foreign funding if they engage in any kind of ill-defined political activities. However, CSOs providing social services can receive foreign (Western) funding. Yet, very few of them display it publicly.
European presence in Transnistria is also visible via the attraction of its member state, which became a workplace for many Transnistrian inhabitants: “Work in Europe” and the mention of Poland and Germany are visible in one of the many small announcements to “work” in different European Union countries, such . One of my interviewees mentioned that many in Transnistria used to work in Russia, but this has changed, especially since the introduction in 2014 of a visa-free regime with the EU for 90 days for Moldovan passport holders. Many in Transnistria hold a Moldovan passport.
Map of Tiraspol, the administrative, political, and symbolic centre of Transnistria, one announcement reads: “the motherland is not for sale”. What struck me during my first visit in 2014 was the display of sovereignty symbols such as police forces, flag, coats of arms, and the major use of the Russian language (as figured in the map).
When I visited Tiraspol in October 2021, I pictured this status figuring a horse-rider and the figure 31, marking the 31 years of Transnistria’s unilateral separation from Moldova in 1990. Up until today, Transnistria has not been recognised by any other sovereign country.
The Dom Sovetov (Дом Советов, “House of Soviets”) used to host the local and regional soviet and is now used for Transnistrian de facto government institutions, thus contributing to a performance of governance and sovereignty where former Soviet institutions are transformed to do new political work. The statue standing in the front features Lenin signalling a rejection of the de-Sovietisation movement at stake in many places that used to be included in the USSR.
Contrasting with the Lenin statue, the one of Taras Shevchenko, the Ukrainian poet, stands in front of the building of the “Taras Shevchenko Transnistria State University (PGU)”, the main higher education institution in Transnistria. It is hosted in the pedagogical institute founded in 1930. interestingly, this statue has become a rallying point of Ukrainians living in Transnistria during celebrations such as the “National Flag Day”. About 25% of the Transnistrian population self-identifies as Ukrainian. As of 2025, about 9000 Ukrainians are forcefully displaced to Transnistria due to Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Offering a striking contrast with the Taras Shevchenko statue, this billboard in Ribnitsa reads “For a future with the great Russia” that I pictured in October 2021. The billboard features the coats of arms of Russia (top-right) and Transnistria (bottom left). This symbolises a pro-Russian attitude, at least of the Transnistrian authorities in charge.
Billboard a meter away from the previous one featuring “For a future with the great Russia” in another street of Ribnitsa: side in yellow: “invited to work abroad, do not end up in Slavery”; side in white: “know about the migration rules” “without break from 9 am to 9 pm” “anonymous, free of charge”.
The billboard publicizes a hotline to help (potential) victims of domestic violence and human trafficking. The services were supported by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), USAID, an International Non-Governmental Organisation and operated by a local civil society organisation. Initially, the phone number did not account for the phone dial difference in Transnistria, rendering the number more expansive for Transnistria-based population. Donors accepted to change the number at the demand of the CSO operating the hotline. This example shows the impacts of unrecognised borders and statehood on access to social services.
Abkhazia
Ganmukhuri beach pictured in August 2025. On the black Sea, the beach is both a resort and a site of the contested border between Georgia and Abkhazia. Both functions coincide next to each other. The camouflage bunker that we see on the picture is part of a security zone controlled by Georgia. One of my interviewees referred to this a “a buffer zone” between the Georgian and the Abkhazian controlled territories. Several respondents mentioned that he presence of the Russian FSB forces since 2012 has tensed the situation, ending most of the informal practices that mitigated the impact of the contested territorial divide, cutting across a space where dense economic-social ties exist.
The same beach, just 100 meters from the other side of the previous picture, featuring the stop sign and the camouflage bunker. A striking contrast showing how daily life unfolds amid securitized environments.
Same beach viewed from above, we can barely see the contested border between Georgian and Abkhazia-controlled territories, yet it’s there. The bunker’s roof is visible, and further, there is a Russian military base.
Bus stop in the Rukhi village – the last one before the “controlled crossing point” at Enguri (Georgian version)/ Ingur (Abkhazian version). Since the closure of three other crossing points between the territories controlled by Abkhazia and Georgia, Enguri/Ingur is the main one, with on average 2500 crossings daily, marked by important seasonal variations.
In some parts, the contested border is visible, as here, it is marked by barbed wire that I pictured in August 2022. Georgia considered this as part of a “creeping broderisation strategy” undermining Georgia’s territorial sovereignty. On the contrary, Abkhazian authorities and part of the population continue to see Russia as a “security guarantee” against Georgia, even after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. However, the role of Russia is also debated in Abkhazia, including publicly by journalists, political analysts, and civil society representatives.
The visible, barbed wire and ditches pictured in August 2022, part of the same above-described dynamics.
In some sections the divide between the Georgian and Abkhazian-controlled territory blinds in nature, like in this picture. Only by taking a closer look, one may be able to see a metallic tower at the top of the left corner, which stands on the Abkhazian side and is used as a surveillance device.
Another example of the blinding of the divide into a flourishing natural landscape, in the vicinity of the Phakhulani/Saberio controlled crossing point, which I pictured in 2022.
Controlled crossing point at Phakhulani/Saberio, August 2022, Georgia; to access this area, a special permission from the Georgian police is necessary, and the Georgian police filter the access to this second pedestrian-only “controlled crossing point” or checkpoint. The flag waving is the Abkhazian one, the sign reads “stop control” in Cyrillic, the billboard is in the Abkhazian language, and an observation and communication tower stands on left-top corner. This scenery illustrates the humanmade character of borderization, understood as the process of border edification, here in a situation of territorial contestation.
The “controlled crossing point” at Enguri – before crossing the bridge – August 2025. This crossing point is the main one, and is especially busy in the summer period due to family visits, hazelnut picking and trade activities. Enguri/Ingur is the only crossing point where cars can cross.
Many are also using a mashrutka, while some cross by foot. Any car crossing must change its registration plates. A shop on the Georgian-controlled side is selling Georgian registration plates, and most likely, another shop is doing the same on the other side, turning the contested border into a source of (small) income.
During my previous visit in 2022, “duty-free shops” opened on the Abkhazian-controlled side, amid a warmongering rhetoric on a “possible second front”. Izida Chania, an Abkhazian journalist, published an article in the Echo Kavakz titled in Russian Воюем или торгуем? Are we at war, or are we trading?
This emphasises the instrumentalisation of the territorial divide to serve the antagonist goals of the minority in charge, while for the majority in Georgia, the territorial divide remains a burden.
The “controlled crossing point” at Enguri – on the bridge – August 2025. A mashrutka and a pedestrian are crossing.
The “controlled crossing point” at Enguri / Ingur – just before crossing the bridge – October 2021. On this Friday evening, the bridge is almost empty, and only two pedestrians crossed during my 1-hour observation. A member of a local civil society organisation had negotiated our access to this point of the bridge with the Georgian police. Parliamentary elections were held at that time in Georgia, and both sides accused each other of closing the bridge to prevent Georgians residing on the Abkhazian-controlled side from casting their vote in Georgia. They tend to vote mostly for the National Movement, the opposition of the current ruling party, Georgian Dream.
EUMM monitor observing what is framed by the EU and other international organisations such as the UN as an “Administrative Boundary Line (ABL)” between Georgia and Abkhazia pictured in 2025. the EU monitoring mission (EUMM) was set up in September 2008 in the aftermath of the Russian-Georgia war over South Ossetia, also spanning Georgia and Abkhazia. Although EUMM’s mandate covers both Abkhazian and Georgian-controlled territories, effectively, the mission is limited to observations on the Georgian-controlled side.
The EUMM documents new signs of borderization, such as the erection of an observation tower or additional barbed wire, yet it cannot take any action to prevent or dismantle them. In contrast, Russia’s recognition of Abkhazia as a state facilitates Russia’s engagement not only in political and strategic areas but also in economic and social aspects. More than three decades after the Agreement on a Cease-fire and Separation of Forces was signed by parties to the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict in Moscow on 14 May 1994, Abkhazia and Georgia remain separated.
The delimitation, which has evolved into a contested border, framed differently by the different sides, runs along a security zone, where activities such as hazelnut picking, fishing, and beekeeping unfold, yet all the houses I could see have been vacated by their owner, resulting in a securitised emptiness.
In the Georgian–Abkhazian context, the security zone refers to a set of spatial, legal, and military arrangements established after the 1992–1993 war to separate forces, prevent renewed hostilities by ensuring a restricted weapons zone, and manage movement along the ceasefire line as foreseen by the 1994 Moscow Agreement on a Ceasefire and Separation of Forces.
It is an example of how “temporary” security arrangements become durable regimes, with a buffer space that has been empty of its inhabitants and is punctuated by several checkpoints, patrol routes, and observational points. These arrangements affect villages, agricultural land, and everyday mobility. Yet the zone works asymmetrically, fostering uncertainty on the Georgian-controlled side and providing a form of reassurance on territorial control on the Abkhazian side.
Pigs wandering in the security zone (August 2025)
Interestingly, animals are mostly free to wander in the Samegrelo region. It is mostly easier for them to navigate across the territorial divide than it is for human beings. During a previous epidemic of pig fever, vets from both Georgia and Abkhazia collaborated to contain the spread of the disease, with the support of an international non-governmental organisation.
Cows wandering in the security zone (August 2022).
The Enguri/Ingur Dam (part within the security zone – August 2022) – Built between 1961 and 1987, it remains today a main site of post-war interdependence between Georgia and Abkhazia, as the dam was designed as a single, integrated Soviet system. As noted by the EU monitoring mission, the Enguri Reservoir lies behind the dam on the upstream side in the Samegrelo region of Georgia. The powerhouse and generators of the Enguri Hydropower Plant are located downstream in the Gal/i district on the Abkhazian side, fed by water carried through a long underground tunnel from the reservoir behind the dam.
The Enguri/Ingur Dam illustrates a form of Georgian–Abkhaz interdependence, and as such is identified as both a facilitator of cooperation and a site with latent potential for weaponisation. Regulated by a 1997 agreement allocating 40 percent of electricity to Abkhazia and 60 percent to Georgian government-controlled territory, corresponding to the controlled-territory shares, the dam sustains a form of technical, everyday peace without resolving the underlying conflict.
Although parts of the facility are heavily securitised and monitored by forces on all sides, the Georgian-controlled side has also been developed as a tourist site, as featured in the pictures above.
Although Abkhazia and Transnistria are frequently described by international observers as “frozen conflicts,” my research over the past six years points instead to the ongoing social, political, and spatial dynamics that shape everyday life in both contexts. The absence of renewed large-scale hostilities does not imply stasis.
In the Georgian–Abkhaz borderland, daily life unfolds within an increasingly securitised environment, including surveillance practices, restrictive regulation and increasingly restricted crossings, shaping what can be understood, following Anzaldúa, as a borderland marked by overlapping physical and metaphorical boundaries, where cultural, social, and emotional tensions unfold.
Movement across the dividing line remains possible but conditional and unpredictable, impacting family life, economic livelihoods, and access to social services. Transnistria, by contrast, has experienced a different trajectory. While access to the region was once tightly restricted, mobility has gradually become more routinised, facilitating trade, commuting, and access for international actors.
Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine reverberates across both territories, generating renewed speculation about potential “second fronts” and reshaping perceptions of vulnerability and alignment on all sides. If Transnistria’s proximity to Ukraine situates it within immediate wartime anxieties, Abkhazia’s demarcation with Russia, often described locally as the “only window to the outside world”, ” places it within a (geo)political dependency, which is contested within Abkhazia itself.
In both cases, what is often labelled as frozen conflict is better understood as a condition of managed uncertainty and lived negotiation rather than immobility or static, monolithic alignment.
Пока Кремль грезит о захвате территорий, в самой России закрываются рестораны, а люди в панике штурмуют банкоматы, спасая остатки накоплений. Исполнительный директор Экономического дискуссионного клуба Олег Пендзин в эфире FREEДОМ заявляет: экономическая ситуация в РФ уже катастрофическая и будет только ухудшаться.
America’s best bet for a secure AI base is Israel’s Negev. The U.S. is looking at sites in the Jewish state, which is a superpower in all areas of the technology, writes @Doranimated and @zriboua on.wsj.com/4twG4FE
— Wall Street Journal Opinion (@WSJopinion) May 14, 2026