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Nvidia Jetson Orin
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Nvidia Jetson Orin

Nvidia edge-AI compute module; found inside Russia's V2U autonomous combat drone despite US export controls.

Last refreshed: 18 April 2026

Key Question

How did US export-controlled AI chips end up inside Russia's autonomous combat drones?

Timeline for Nvidia Jetson Orin

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Common Questions
What is an Nvidia Jetson Orin and what is it used for?
The Jetson Orin is an edge-AI compute module capable of up to 275 TOPS, designed for robotics and autonomous systems. It is used in drones, industrial robots, and — as CSIS confirmed in April 2026 — inside Russia's V2U autonomous combat drone.Source: Nvidia
How did Russia get Nvidia chips for its drones despite sanctions?
Intelligence assessments indicate more than million of Nvidia components reached Russia in 2023 through grey-market channels routed via Hong Kong, Singapore, Turkey, and China, bypassing US export controls in place since 2022.Source: CSIS
Is Nvidia responsible for its chips being used in Russian military drones?
Nvidia operates under US export controls and does not sell to Russia. The chips reach Russia through grey-market intermediaries; Nvidia's chips also power US and allied autonomous weapons systems.
What Russian drone uses Nvidia Jetson Orin?
Russia's V2U autonomous loitering munition uses a Jetson Orin module on a Chinese Leetop A603 carrier board, enabling YOLOv5-based target recognition without operator control, per CSIS analysis from April 2026.Source: CSIS / Ukrainian GUR

Background

The Nvidia Jetson Orin is a family of embedded system-on-module (SoM) products built on Nvidia's Orin SoC, delivering up to 275 TOPS of AI inference performance in a compact, power-efficient package. Designed for robotics, autonomous vehicles, and edge AI, it integrates an Ampere-architecture GPU, up to 12 Arm Cortex-A78AE CPU cores, and 204 GB/s memory bandwidth, making it capable of running real-time computer vision models such as YOLOv5 without Cloud connectivity. CSIS confirmed in April 2026 that Russia's V2U autonomous loitering munition runs on a Jetson Orin module mounted on a Chinese Leetop A603 carrier board.

Nvidia has been subject to US export controls restricting chip sales to Russia since 2022. Despite those controls, intelligence assessments indicate more than $17 million worth of Nvidia components reached Russia in 2023 alone through grey-market channels, routed via Hong Kong, Singapore, Turkey, and China. The CSIS finding that 57% of processors and 69% of memory hardware in Russia's AI drone ecosystem are US-sourced illustrates the scale of that evasion.

The Jetson Orin's appearance in a combat drone reframes it as a dual-use technology with direct battlefield consequences. Its role in the V2U is load-bearing for the CSIS argument that Section 232 investigations targeting Chinese drone imports are investigating the wrong supply chain: the critical chokepoint is American compute silicon reaching Russian platforms through grey-market intermediaries, not Chinese drone hardware entering US commercial markets.