
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
How did US export-controlled AI chips end up inside Russia's autonomous combat drones?
Timeline for Nvidia Jetson Orin
Mentioned in: CSIS: Russia's AI drones run mostly on US chips
Drones: Industry & Defence- 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
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.