Recently, with the advent of electronic warfare, signal interception technology has attracted much attention from various countries. The head of US Special Operations Command stated that unspecified opponents in Syria are almost certainly Russian or Russian support forces, and they have launched electronic warfare attacks on AC-130 US Air Force fighters. These reports highlight the growing threat of signal jams and other non-powered attacks to US military activity in the region and throughout the region.
The US strategy says in one sentence: "Put them back on the cable." By disrupting radio-controlled bombs, drone jammers will force insurgent bombers to use more jammer command cables. In theory, these triggers would be easier to detect and bring detonators closer to the bomb, and the US military could capture or kill them on the bomb.
Britain is ready for a robot-to-robot battle. A new type of anti-uav weapon system developed by its relevant department called "Anti-UAV Defense System" is a combination of radar, camera and jamming system, all integrated into the device.