I don’t imagine an operational structure where field commands or an entire theater of operations would have to be stripped off any say and authority at any given campaign.I disagree with this notion. Taking the command of robotic warfare away from the relevant units into a central command would rather reduce integration than increase it. At the end of the day, unmanned systems are tools that every unit has to learn how to use best in their own context. The military context is what should determine the reason for existence of a command. The UGV that is looking for traps in a cave in North Iraq has little to do with the USV doing MCMW in the Aegean. A central unmanned systems command is like a central firearms command or an internal combustion engines command.
Modern warfare where such new warfare is conducted, however, clearly takes lot of careful planning to allocate assets efficiently, especially when you’re the attacking side.
In the link Mr. Kasapli gives a figure of 10.000 units of various sizes, roles involved at the Ukraine war on a daily basis where Ukraine forming a such command structure.
I think first and third areas are more military industrial complex concerting effort and sounds less objectionable IMO