Iran's drones, missiles in terrorists' hands
Iranian drones and missiles have become a terrifying concern in the Middle East due to their presence in different countries.
The same
drones and missiles are also in the hands of terrorist elements in many places.
Sectarian
militias across the region depend on these arms to advance their cause, which
jeopardizes the security of regional states.
Limited
war
Syria, Iraq
and Lebanon are becoming confrontation arenas between Iran and its proxy militias,
on one hand, and Israel and the US, on the other.
Iraqi forces
have found recently an anti-aircraft missile in the southern Iraqi desert.
Photos of
the missiles were posted to social media websites, as if the people who put
them in the desert wanted to deliver a message about the presence of these
missiles in the hands of the pro-Iran militias.
The same
photos also stand as an ultimatum to regional states.
Drones have
become an important card in modern warfare because they are cheap and difficult
to track.
The Iranians
used drones in attacking a refinery of the Saudi petroleum company, Aramco, in
2019.
Iran makes
also great efforts to develop drones. However, the leaders of Iran's Revolutionary
Guard Corpse and Iran's media have provided contradictory accounts about the
progress made in this regard.
Former
commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Guard Corpse, Hossein Salami, said in
2011 that his country was the second country in the world to acquire drone
technology.
Deputy
Defense Minister for Research and Industrial Affairs, Mohammad Eslami, said in
2013 that Iran was among the top five countries in the field of drone
technology.
In 2014, a
state-run newspaper published a report about Iran's ranking in drone
manufacturing.
It said Iran
was the world's third largest producer of drones equipped with missiles.