Smart Drones Offering for Duplicate Advanced Drones through its ‘Red Squadron’ Services Witnesses Surge in Demand

Tel Aviv. Israeli company Smart Drones is offering “Red Squadron” services to air defence forces with exact duplicates of the most advanced Russian and Iranian armed drones.

Some European countries are interested in the services of an Israeli company Smart Drones offering “Red Squadron” services depicting the most advanced armed drones made by Russia and Iran and used heavily In Ukraine, Lebanon and Syria.

ads

Smart Drones has unveiled an exact copy of the Russian Lancet kamikaze drone, responsible for dozens of confirmed hits on Ukrainian equipment, one of the most effective weapons against the higher-value targets, often located dozens of kilometres. behind the zero line.

The Israeli company is manufacturing unmanned aerial systems used by the Israeli air force and Israeli defence companies as a Red Squadron, depicting UAVs used by the enemy. The last addition is a precise copy of the Iranian Shahed 136 armed UAV used in Ukraine and by the Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Smart Drones Services is a technology services company, certified by the Israeli civil aviation authority, leading BVLOS (Beyond Visual Line of Sight) development process for challenging detection, interception, missile defence engagement.

According to Dudi Ohayon, COO of Smart Drones, the company provides unique tailor-made UAV end to end solutions, such as loitering munition, and kamikaze drones.

big bang

“The heavy use of the Russian Lancet in Ukraine brought some European countries to ask for our services to prepare their air defence systems to the potential threat,” he said.

Ohayon said that the company built exact copies of Iranian made armed drones used in Ukraine and by the Hezbollah in Lebanon to attack Israeli targets. One of these is the delta wing RS2 which is a very exact copy of the Iranian Shahed 136, used by the Russians in Ukraine and the Hezbollah in Lebanon.

huges

The COO of the Israeli company said that the dramatic increase in the use of drones around the world has created a very high demand to develop defensive systems and to test them in real combat scenarios.

“We supply the ultimate targets that are crucial for the success of the aerial defence systems,” Dudi Ohayon added.

-The writer is an Israel-based freelance journalist. The views expressed are of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views of Raksha Anirveda

More like this

France Readies AI-Powered Sovereign Combat Data-Management System

Paris: France’s armed forces are working on a data-management...

European Union Pumps Over $1 Billion into Defence R&D, Selects 57 Collaborative R&D Projects

Graz (Austria): The European Commission this week unveiled the...

Chinese Commercial Satellite’s Images Helped Iran Hit Israeli and American Targets with Accuracy

Tel Aviv: The TEE-01B commercial Chinese earth observation satellite’s...

AFRIDEX 2026 to Connect Global Defence Industry with African Buyers Across the Continent

Lagos / New Delhi: Taking place from October 26-29,...

Boosting Production Capacity: Swedish, Polish Firms Invest in TNT Plants

Warsaw: Swedish company Swebal is building the first trinitrotoluene...

Astra Mk-2 Missile Clear Preliminary Trials, Advances Towards Integrated User Trials

New Delhi: India’s Astra Mk-2, a 240 km-class beyond-visual-range...

Diplomatic Push: New Delhi Engages Colombo and Washington 

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Sri Lankan...
Indian Navy Special Edition 2025spot_img