berkeman said:
I wonder how much this press release is part of the chess game.
Perhaps more like "Who wants to be a millionaire". It's hype, and there are dollars...er...sterling at stake.
There are two asymmetries driving this. The tactical one is that drones are cheap and warships are expensive. Even their ammunition is expensive. It is still effective to use a done as a weapon if it has a very low success rate, providing you can produce enough of them.
This happened previously with the invention of the torpedo. Eventually, countermeasures were developed - the naval "destroyer" is called that because it evolved from the "torpedo boat destroyer", and the situation stabilized with fewer, more capable torpedoes released from fewer, mroe capable platforms.
The same will happen with drones, and you're already seeing increased attention to electronic countermeasures.
Personally, I think the real potential for lasers is in defensive technologies, perhaps as a successor to the Phalanx CIWS and similar. We shall see.
The other asymmetry is that the West has chosen to consider "low-intensity conflict" more as a law enforcement problem than warfare. And that is substantially more expensive. "We'll catch those responsible and bring their leaders to justice" is a very expensive proposition. Opponents of the West can lose every battle tactically, so long as they make it sufficiently expensive that the West decides "it's just not worth it".
To continue along the path they have chosen, the West needs to make things cheaper for themselves, more expensive for their adversaries, or both. This development should be viewed in that light.