Ah yes, drones, I almost forgot about them.
I didn't even plan on researching AI any time soon this campaign. Generally I find dogs (and rats, but I haven't found any yet) to be more useful than scout drones. Guess I'll have to rethink that.
Actually I remember bringing one of those to the Lo Wo hideout mission in my last campaign. Poor thing got massacred from a blind spot. Couldn't even see the baddie. That made me not want to use basic drones any more. But now thinking about it again, I realise I did it all wrong. I should have brought more than one and covered all angles of approach. Next time I'm doing that mission, I'm gonna set up a perimeter of at least 4 scout drones and put a couple of flamethrower armed agents behind them
Also smoke, good idea. Right now I'm only using it when faced with lots of ranged enemies and I don't have any decent cover. I haven't even considered using smoke cover against melee/close range enemies. Coupled with thermal vision from drones or rats, that should really be helpful.
About motion scanners, I don't really like fiddling around with those. Indoors they are quite good but outdoors, where assassins are usually found, the short scanning range is just too bothersome for me to use. I guess coupled with smoke they're better... we'll see.
Anyway, thanks for the replies. I think I am much better prepared for Black Lotus outpost and base missions now.
My new overall strategy:
Spend the first couple of turns taking out as many enemies as possible in the usual way, so they don't bother me during my ninja-hunt later on (in my experience, ninjas tend to attack me only during the second half of a mission). Only spread out my troops enough to avoid grenades. Then lay down smoke wherever I intend to go. Apply fire liberally wherever I don't intend to go but leave a path for enemies to come to me. Guard against ninja attacks with drone reaction fire on enemy turn. Use scanners on my own turn or again, use drones for scouting.
Sounds like quite a hassle. I'll probably end up cutting some corners and paying the price