What Iranian Kamikaze drones mean for Ukraine

Iranian officials have denied supplying the drones but ‘no one believes them’

Protesters hold up their phones during a protest in Warsaw
Demonstrators gather in front of the Iranian embassy in Warsaw, Poland, on 17 October to protest the supply of drones to Russia
(Image credit: STR/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Kamikaze drones were “flying low and slow” over central Kyiv on Monday morning, said John Paul Rathbone and Christopher Miller in the FT. They were Iranian Shahed-136s, dubbed “mopeds” by the Ukrainians because of the buzzing noise made by their cheap two-stroke engines. One crashed into a street; another exploded into a residential building. Among the civilian dead that day were a young couple, the woman six months pregnant.

The drones are effectively “cheap cruise missiles”, which can be pre-set to hit specific targets up to 1,500 miles away, and their relatively low price – $20,000 apiece – means they can be unleashed “in swarms”.

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