To be fair to the Russians, they probably have plenty of Krasnopols in the field, it’s the laser designators that’s probably the bottleneck.
The Soviets developed Krasnopol to help their armoured spearheads punch through NATO lines, so they were expecting their armour and motorised infantry to paint choice targets for Krasnopols.
They never really developed or invested much in the way to paint targets behind the frontlines since back in the day the vast soviet tank armies were expected to just blitz right through NATO lines without getting bogged down. Besides, NATO was expected to win the air war, so why spend more on ‘soft’ aero assets that are likely to be shot down as soon as they appear on the battlefield?
It just so happens that in Ukraine, Russian tanks have little to no problem killing Ukrainian armour with their main guns, so very little need to wait for Krasnopols.
Nonetheless, I can't help but be impressed by the effectiveness of the drone lased Krasnopol system.
Recent conflicts have been quite thought provoking on the relevance of unmanned surveillance platforms (primarily UAVs). While the likes of MALE might require more air dominance to survive, a small tactical drone like Orlan-10 or even smaller is broadening the possibilities in which laser designated platforms like Krasnopol can perform in.
Whether the sporadic of employment of Krasnopol in Ukraine is due to low numbers, distribution or lack of designators ... it'd be interesting to see how awider adoption can flourish