-
Duplantis clears 6.31m to set 15th pole vault world record
-
Dating app Tinder dabbles with AI matchmaking
-
Sabalenka out-guns Mboko to reach Indian Wells semi-finals
-
Watkins ends drought as Villa snatch Europa last 16 advantage over Lille
-
'Say a prayer and send it': Paralympic alpine skiers tackle fear
-
Israel renews Beirut strikes after threatening to expand Lebanon operations
-
Assailant dead after ramming vehicle into Michigan synagogue
-
The Chinese cable that could trip up Chile's new leader
-
Assailant dead after ramming car into Michigan synagogue
-
World in 'new dark age' of abuse: UN rights expert
-
Morikawa pulls out of Players Championship with back trouble
-
Scavenging ravens memorize vast tracts of wolf hunting grounds: study
-
In Iran, shut shops, joblessness and a dash for cash
-
Triple Crown is 'special to us', says Ireland coach Farrell
-
Polish bishops announce 'independent' probe of child sexual abuse
-
Top US, China economy officials to meet for talks in Paris
-
Noma's star chef quits after claims that he hit and bullied staff
-
Oil tops $100 as Iran vows to keep Hormuz closed
-
Israel strikes Beirut after threatening to expand Lebanon operations
-
Out with a bang: Morrissey cancels Spain concert over noise
-
New Iranian leader vows revenge, keeps oil shipping route shut
-
Vingegaard soloes to victory in Paris-Nice fifth stage
-
Poland reels from row over EU loans to fend off Russia
-
Spurs extend season ticket deadline as relegation fears grow
-
Laundry fire on giant US aircraft carrier injures two: US military
-
Mauritanian anti-slavery stalwart Boubacar Ould Messaoud dead
-
Behind Cambodian border casino, Thai military shows off a scam hub
-
Chile's Smiljan Radic Clarke wins Pritzker architecture prize
-
Scotland boss Townsend says Six Nations title 'out of our hands'
-
Sheehan and van der Flier recalled for Triple Crown decider with Scots
-
Chelsea's Neto faces UEFA punishment for pushing ball boy
-
Engraved tombs help keep memories alive in Pakistan
-
IPL-linked Sunrisers sign Pakistan's Ahmed for Hundred
-
New Iranian supreme leader calls for defiance, keeps key waterway shut
-
Lufthansa flights axed as pilots walk out
-
Turkey talking to US, Iran in bid to end war: minister
-
Oil tops $100 as fresh Iran attacks offset stockpiles release
-
Fears grow for French loans at Louvre Abu Dhabi as war rages
-
US military 'not ready' to escort tankers through Hormuz Strait: energy secretary
-
'One war too many': Lebanese angry with Hezbollah for attacking Israel
-
Scotland make three changes for crucial Six Nations clash against Ireland
-
Russia jails 15 for life over IS-claimed 2024 concert hall attack
-
WWII leader Churchill to be removed from UK banknotes
-
EU vows to 'respond firmly' to any trade pact breach by US
-
The rain in Spain was worst in nearly 50 years
-
'Punished' for university: debt-laden UK graduates urge reform
-
Strike on Beirut seafront kills 8 as Israel threatens to 'take territory'
-
Mideast war to brake German recovery: institute
-
BMW sees tariffs easing and China stabilising in 2026
-
More than goals: Valverde draws Real Madrid map to glory
Ukraine's tech evangelist defence chief preaching the 'future of war'
Ukraine's newly installed defence minister Mykhailo Fedorov waltzed on stage like a stand-up comedian to take the mic in front of journalists in Kyiv as a sleek slideshow zoomed across a map of the country.
The Ted-talk style briefing -- a departure from the ministry's previously stiff approach -- encapsulates the energy Fedorov is trying to inject into Ukraine's war machine, four years into the Russian invasion.
Appointed in January, the 35-year-old with short salt-and-pepper hair is Ukraine's youngest ever defence minister.
On a mission to modernise the army, he took over an apparatus facing stretched air defences, financial uncertainty, stalled peace talks, recruitment problems and widespread bureaucracy and war fatigue.
"We will turn the war into a data platform," said Fedorov, wearing his trademark sweatshirt and jeans in a speech punctuated with jokes.
"We will take all the data and see what works. Everything that works well will proceed," he said -- a personal mantra that would not appear out of place in Silicon Valley.
- 'Moment of truth' -
Fedorov has spent much of the war promoting advanced technology, like drones, as a way to offset Ukraine's shortages in manpower, money and ammunition.
He began his career in digital marketing and his first roles in government were spearheading online services for citizens, including the country's now now‑ubiquitous state services appDiia.
Russia's 2022 invasion -- which saw his home town in the southern Zaporizhzhia region occupied -- has only cemented his faith in technology.
"It was a moment of truth. When someone attacks your country, you do everything asymmetrical that is in your power," said his then-advisor Anton Melnyk, summarising Fedorov's philosophy.
His ministry for digital transformation took to social media to call out Western companies still working in Russia, shaming them into breaking ties.
He also reached out to US tech titan Elon Musk to secure Starlink satellite connectivity for Ukrainian troops.
His early bet on drones seems obvious now in a war that has come to be dominated by them.
But to many he was a rare and vital early advocate.
In 2023, activist Sergiy Sternenko, known for his fundraising efforts for the army,posted an emotional video to his two million followers, pleading with the government to quickly invest in drones.
"Mykhailo was really the first to call me literally an hour or two after that," Sternenko, now an advisor to Fedorov, told AFP.
Within two days he had been invited to Fedorov's office to discuss the issue.
"He was the driver of innovation, including of drones in the Ukrainian army, even when the Ukrainian armed forces leadership itself did not really want it," he said.
One of Fedorov's trademark initiatives was a controversial killing-for-points scheme, a data-driven system designed to reward the most effective army units.
Soldiers earned points for confirmed kills or destruction of Russian equipment -- verified by uploaded videos -- that can be used to purchase equipment, with league tables ranking the best performing units.
- Outsmart the system -
At the defence ministry, he is set on developing that approach.
One of his first initiatives is an audit of battlefield losses -- ranking commanders based on casualty levels, in an attempt to address high levels of desertion among rank-and-file troops and the unpopularity of mobilisation.
Ukraine "cannot fight the future of war with an old system", Fedorov said in a statement after his appointment.
He has fans among Ukraine's Western partners, having courted NATO and EU representatives at the Ukraine Defence Contact Group.
"The minister came across as competent, realistic, highly knowledgeable, and forward-looking,"a diplomat at NATO told AFP.
"I strongly believe he can bring something new," said another diplomat at NATO.
"He has the potential to bring faster warfare of the future," they added.
But having never served, it is unclear if he can convince the rest of Ukraine's traditional military leadership, which some say is still stuck in Soviet-style bureaucracy.
"We can try," said Sternenko, his advisor.
"Much depends on the military command but Mykhailo has a vision of how to outsmart the system."
Opposition lawmaker Solomia Bobrovska, who sits on the parliament's defence committee, and has been briefed by Fedorov, told AFP: "It's very ambitious and very promising."
"It's early... The presentation is one thing, the other will be reality. I'm really interested in how society and the army will react."
A.Seabra--PC