快猫短视频

Swarms of cheap drones are attacking missile defences in Yemen

Home-made drones are attacking the world鈥檚 most sophisticated defence systems. It鈥檚 not clear if the attacks have worked yet, but it鈥檚 a trend likely to continue
Qasef-1 drone
A partially dismantled Qasef-1 drone
Conflict Armament Research

Swarms of cheap drones are taking on one of the world鈥檚 most sophisticated air defence systems. It鈥檚 not clear whether these attacks in Yemen have been successful, but home-made drone swarms targeting highly advanced military technology is a trend that is likely to grow.

The defences in question are US-made PAC-3 Patriot systems. They can bring down ballistic missiles, jets and helicopters by firing 300-kilogram missiles at speeds of up to five times the speed of sound. The systems are used by South Korea, Israel, and various Arab nations, but they may be susceptible to drone swarm attacks.

A PAC-3 battery has only six or eight launchers, and the supply of $3m missiles is limited, so a large enough swarm of drones could overwhelm it. In Yemen鈥檚 civil war, Houthi forces backed by Iran claim to have knocked out Patriot missile sites operated by a Saudi-backed coalition, having first destroyed their radar using drones.

Pentagon spokesperson Rebecca Rebarich told 快猫短视频 that they don鈥檛 have any information on this in particular. 鈥淗owever, we have observed Iranian-manufactured and supplied unmanned aerial systems being used by the Houthis against Yemeni government and coalition targets in the past,鈥 says Rebarich.

On 9 February the Houthi forces said they had in Ta鈥檌z province, first hitting it with drones and then destroying it with a ballistic missile. Then on 23 February, the Houthis claimed to have belonging to the United Arab Emirates, this one located east of the city of Marib, with a 鈥渟warm of drones鈥 followed by missiles.

Coalition forces have not confirmed that these specific attacks took place, but have said they intercepted missiles on both of those dates. They also say that the Patriot system has successfully intercepted in the Yemen conflict.

The drones used are believed to be Qasef-1s and according to Conflict Armament Research, a UK-based group that tracks the movement of weapons in conflict zones, these are . These have a wingspan of about 3 metres, and perform kamikaze-style attacks while carrying 15 kilograms of explosives.

Satellite imagery after the first attack showed one radar out of action, but this might have been due to maintenance, says Jeremy Binnie, Middle East editor at Jane鈥檚 Defence Weekly. 鈥淚t is possible that Qasef-1s were used to target Patriot radars, but those things are fairly inaccurate, and it is unclear how effective any such attack was at this stage,鈥 he says.

鈥淚f indeed Iranian Qasef-1 drones were utilised, it would demonstrate the successful mass use of cheap low-technology airframes 鈥 utilising gasoline engines and wood propellers to take out expensive high-technology air defence systems,鈥 says Robert Bunker at the US Army War College鈥檚 in Pennsylvania.

It isn鈥檛 just in Yemen that swarms of cheap drones might be being used. In January a swarm of home-made drones attacked a Russian airbase in Syria, reportedly causing Russia to deploy miniature Nail missiles to counter future attacks.

Topics: drones / War / Weapons