Iran-supplied drone used by Russia shot down – Ukraine military

Iran has drawn closer to Russia as it faces crushing sanctions over the collapse of the nuclear deal. (File photo: AFP)
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Updated 14 September 2022
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Iran-supplied drone used by Russia shot down – Ukraine military

  • US earlier warned that Tehran planned to send hundreds of the bomb-carrying drones to Russia to aid its war on Ukraine
  • Ukrainian military official published images of the wreckage of the drone

JEDDAH: Ukraine’s military said on Tuesday they had shot down an Iranian-made “suicide” drone during their counteroffensive against Russian forces in the northeastern Kharkiv region.

The easily identifiable delta-winged Shahed-136 drone was brought down near the town of Kupiansk as Russian troops retreated toward the border. It failed to detonate on impact, as it is designed to do.

Iran previously denied a US intelligence report in July that it planned to send hundreds of the bomb-carrying drones to Russia for use in the war on Ukraine. However, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps boasted this week about its role in arming some of the world’s leading powers.

Iran has several versions of the Shahed drone, which has a range of about 2,000 kilometers. It is used by the Iranian-backed Houthi militia in Yemen, has attacked oil infrastructure in Saudi Arabia, killed two sailors aboard an oil tanker off Oman in 2021, and overflew a US aircraft carrier in the Arabian Gulf.

Experts refer to such bomb-carrying drones as “loitering munitions.” They fly to a destination programmed before take-off and detonate either in the air over the target or on impact.

Iran has drawn closer to Russia as it faces crippling US economic sanctions over the collapse in 2018 of the deal to curb Tehran’s nuclear program. Negotiations to revive the agreement are deadlocked.

Ukraine and Iran also have tense relations, after the Revolutionary Guards shot down a Ukrainian passenger jet in 2020, killing all 176 people on board.

On the battlefield on Tuesday, Ukraine drove Russian forces further back in the northeast and vowed to liberate all of its territory.

Since Moscow abandoned its Kharkiv bastion on Saturday in Russia’s worst defeat since the early days of the war, Ukrainian troops have recaptured dozens of towns in a stunning shift in battleground momentum.

Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Malyar said 150,000 people had been liberated from Russian rule in the area. “The aim is to liberate the Kharkiv region and beyond — all the territories occupied by the Russian Federation,” she said.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said the West must speed up deliveries of weapons systems, and urged Ukraine’s allies to “strengthen cooperation to defeat Russian terror.”

Western countries have provided Ukraine with billions of dollars in weapons that Kyiv says have helped limit Moscow’s territorial gains. Russian forces control about a fifth of the country in the south and east, but Ukraine is now on the offensive in both areas.


US plans meeting for Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ in Washington on Feb 19, Axios reports

Updated 07 February 2026
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US plans meeting for Gaza ‘Board of Peace’ in Washington on Feb 19, Axios reports

  • The Axios report cited a US official and diplomats from four countries that are on the board
  • The plans for the meeting, which would also be a fundraising conference for Gaza reconstruction, are in early stages and could still change, Axios reported

WASHINGTON: The White House is planning the first leaders meeting for President Donald Trump’s so-called “Board of Peace” in relation to Gaza on February ​19, Axios reported on Friday, citing a US official and diplomats from four countries that are on the board.
The plans for the meeting, which would also be a fundraising conference for Gaza reconstruction, are in early stages and could still change, Axios reported.
The meeting is planned to be held at the US Institute of Peace in Washington, the report added, noting that Israeli Prime ‌Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ‌is scheduled to meet Trump at the ‌White ⁠House ​on ‌February 18, a day before the planned meeting.
The White House and the US State Department did not respond to requests for comment.
In late January, Trump launched the board that he will chair and which he says will aim to resolve global conflicts, leading to many experts being concerned that such a board could undermine the United Nations.
Governments around ⁠the world have reacted cautiously to Trump’s invitation to join that initiative. While some ‌of Washington’s Middle Eastern allies have joined, many ‍of its traditional Western allies have ‍thus far stayed away.
A UN Security Council resolution, adopted in ‍mid-November, authorized the board and countries working with it to establish an international stabilization force in Gaza, where a fragile ceasefire began in October under a Trump plan on which Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas signed off.
Under ​Trump’s Gaza plan revealed late last year, the board was meant to supervise Gaza’s temporary governance. Trump thereafter said ⁠it would be expanded to tackle global conflicts.
Many rights experts say that Trump overseeing a board to supervise a foreign territory’s affairs resembled a colonial structure and have criticized the board for not including a Palestinian.The fragile ceasefire in Gaza has been repeatedly violated, with over 550 Palestinians and four Israeli soldiers reported killed since the truce began in October. Israel’s assault on Gaza since late 2023 has killed over 71,000 Palestinians, caused a hunger crisis and internally displaced
Gaza’s entire population.
Multiple rights experts, scholars and a UN inquiry say it amounts to genocide. Israel calls its actions self-defense after Hamas-led ‌militants killed 1,200 people and took over 250 hostages in a late 2023 attack.