Iran: 700 drone attacks against Daesh in Syria

Most of the attacks were carried out by the locally-produced Saegheh drone, which was reverse-engineered from a US RQ-170 Sentinel captured by Iran in 2011. (AP)

TEHRAN: Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have carried out 700 drone strikes against forces of the Daesh group in Syria, its aerospace chief told conservative news agency Fars on Tuesday.
“Our bomber drones have carried out 700 military operations using smart bombs against Daesh,” said Brig. Gen. Amirali Hajjizadeh.
“They were used in eliminating tanks, personnel carriers, cars used for suicide attacks and 23- millimeter cannons — these were targets prized by Daesh and we significantly turned the tide of battle,” he added.
The guards most recently used military drones against Daesh targets in Syria on October 1, in retaliation for a deadly attack in September on a military parade in Iran’s southwest claimed by the militant group.
Seven military drones as well as six ballistic missiles struck the “Daesh headquarters” in the eastern Syrian town of Hajjin, about 24 kilometers north of Albu Kamal bordering Iraq, state TV reported.
Iranian media said published images indicated the drones were locally-produced “Saegheh” craft, reverse-engineered from a US RQ-170 Sentinel captured by Iran in 2011.
Iran’s armed forces chief of staff, Major General Mohammad Bagheri, said at the time that the strikes were the first time the drones had “crossed multiple countries and reached their targets.”
It was also the first time Iran had officially announced it was using combat drones outside of its borders, the conservative Tasnim news agency said.
Iran is a key backer of Syria’s President Bashar Assad and a large contingent of Revolutionary Guards operate in the country as “military advisers.”