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Business Insider: Russia manufactures own version of Iran's Shahed drone

Business Insider: Russia manufactures own version of Iran's Shahed drone
Photo: mil.in.ua

Russia has started to build a version of Iranian attack drones and has used them against Ukraine, Business Insider has reported.

An independent UK-based research group, Conflict Armament Research, inspected the wreckage of two drones found in Kyiv in July that appeared to be Iranian Shahed-136s but which had electronic modules that matched those from Russian surveillance drones, The New York Times reported.

The single-use drones, called Geran-2, appear to be Russian-made versions of the Iranian drones, the researchers said.

Russian forces began using Iranian-made drones to strike cities across Ukraine last year.

The small, propeller-driven weapons can be packed with explosives that detonate upon impact.

The Geran-2 drones are built with different materials to the Shahed, and they also appear to have been adapted to better suit Russian needs, per the report.

The Russian drones are made with fiberglass over layers of woven carbon fiber, which is different from the honeycomb type of material used in the Iranian drones, The Times noted.

The two drones that Conflict Armament Research inspected also contained electronic modules called Kometa in their guidance sections — these have previously been found in Russian drones.

Ukrainian news outlets also published photos of the drones that they say appear to have been made in Russia.

Samuel Bendett, an expert on Russian military drones at the Center for Naval Analyses, told The Times that analysts have been waiting to see if Russia could make its own versions of the Iranian drones.

"We've now seen in Russian media that these are, in fact, domestic assembly, and there are changes introduced in the design based on their own needs," he said.

"This is indicative of Russians trying to come up with a drone that's just as capable as the original Shahed that could then be scaled up in significant quantities," he added.

"The ultimate goal for them is to maintain the capacity while making them more effective and actually driving down the costs," he said.

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