Footage of Iranian drone base surfaces

Published
THIS handout picture provided by the Iranian military shows an underground drone base, somewhere in the Zagros mountains. According to state TV, the site houses a hundred drones. The unmanned aerial vehicles are all equipped with missiles and other advanced weaponry, including a knock-off of the US-made Hellfire missile usually mounted on Apache gunships. —AFP
THIS handout picture provided by the Iranian military shows an underground drone base, somewhere in the Zagros mountains. According to state TV, the site houses a hundred drones. The unmanned aerial vehicles are all equipped with missiles and other advanced weaponry, including a knock-off of the US-made Hellfire missile usually mounted on Apache gunships. —AFP

REUTERS: The Iranian army has given some details of an underground base for its military drones, state media reported on Saturday.

State TV said 100 drones were being kept in the heart of the Zagros mountains, including Ababil-5, which it said were fitted with Qaem-9 missiles, an Iranian-made version of air-to-surface US Hellfire.

“No doubt the drones of Islamic Republic of Iran’s armed forces are the region’s most powerful,” army commander Major General Abdolrahim Mousavi said.

“Our capability to upgr­ade drones is unstoppable,” he added.

The Iranian state TV correspondent said he had made the 45-minute helicopter flight on Thursday from Kermanshah in western Iran to a secret underground drone site. He was allowed to take blindfolds off only upon arrival at the base, he said.

TV footage showed rows of drones fitted with missiles in a tunnel, which it was said to be several hundred metres underground.

The TV report came a day after Iranian Revolutionary Guards seized two Greek tankers in the Gulf, in an apparent retaliation for the confiscation of Iranian oil by the United States from a tanker held off the Greek coast.

Due to European Union sanctions, Greek authorities last month impounded the Iranian-flagged Pegas, with 19 Russian crew members on board. The United States later confiscated the Iranian oil cargo held onboard and plans to send it to the US on another vessel.

The Pegas was later relea­sed, but the seizure inflamed tensions at a delicate time, with Iran and world powers seeking to revive a nuclear deal that Trump abandoned, re-imposing sanctions on Tehran.

Published in Dawn, May 29th, 2022

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