Fighting shows the Gulf defences were unprepared for Iranian drones, analysts say

By stepping up long-range drone strikes against Gulf countries, Iran is exploiting the inadequacy of their defences against the low-cost threat in a bid to pressure the United States to end the war, analysts said. Since the operation began on Saturday, “Iran has primarily used ballistic missiles to attack Israel but has relied on drones to attack Gulf countries”, according to the think-tanks Institute for the Study of War and the American Enterprise Institute’s Critical Threats Project. Israel’s Army said on Monday that it was targeted by more than 50 drones “launched from Iran”. The Gulf countries, meanwhile, were on the receiving end of more than 1000 - mainly Shahed-136s. The United Arab Emirates says it has been targeted by more than 800 drones and nearly 200 missiles since the war erupted. A luxury hotel and French base were among the sites targeted. In Saudi Arabia, two drones hit the US Embassy on Tuesday, while the massive Ras Tanura refinery on its Gulf coast went into partial shutdown after a strike. Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman and Jordan were also targeted. ‘War of attrition’ For Steve Feldstein, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, the use of these drones - which cost tens of thousands of dollars - is “a meaningful way for the regime to impose costs against its adversaries”. “As the conflict persists, this aspect could become more relevant,” he added. The Shahed-136, supplied by Iran to Russia and now produced by the thousands under the name Geran-2 for Moscow’s war against Ukraine, is incomparably cheaper than the missiles fired to intercept it, a European industry source specialising in these matters told AFP. The source said it is a “tool for a war of attrition” aimed at exhausting the enemy’s resources. The Gulf countries’ air defence systems are not designed to cope with that. While they do not use the expensive Patriot missiles, as those are reserved for destroying complex targets such as missiles, they still resort to systems like NASAMS and Avenger, whose missiles cost several hundred thousand dollars, the source said. The Emirates also have the “very expensive” Coyote anti-drone system. The source added that while the Shaheds, guided by GPS, can be jammed, the jamming capabilities of countries in the region are “weak” and “would create many difficulties, including for the defence systems”. “In Ukraine, the territory is dotted with acoustic detection systems and anti-drone drones that make it possible to shoot down Shaheds at low cost. There’s nothing at all like that in the Gulf countries,” the source said. “The lessons observed in Ukraine have not been learnt, particularly by the Americans.” In recent weeks, however, Washington has deployed A-10 attack aircraft to the region, whose cannon can be used against drones - just as the Israelis do with their Apache helicopters. Ukraine has said it is ready to help and share its experience in the fight against drones. ‘Ramp up the pressure’ During the 12-day war in June, Tehran confined itself to strikes against Israel. This time, by attacking Gulf neighbours, “Iran’s calculation is to ramp up the pressure as quickly as possible so that these countries then put pressure on the US” to end its strikes, said Camille Lons, Gulf specialist at the European Council on Foreign Relations. “Unlike Israel, these countries have very little resilience in the face of military pressure” and their societies are less prepared to cope with it, she added. She said that Iran struck quickly out of fear that its offensive capabilities would be rapidly undermined by heavy blows from the US and Israel. The Iranians had also learned the lesson last year “that by trying to limit escalation, they ended up appearing weak in the eyes of the United States”, Lons added. Seth Jones, an expert at the US-based think-tank CSIS, said that “if part of the Iranian strategy was to put pressure on Gulf states, so that they would push the US to try to curb this war ....