The Prague Post - Why Iranian drones are hard to stop

EUR -
AED 4.204304
AFN 72.689855
ALL 94.16846
AMD 421.368896
ANG 2.049665
AOA 1050.932648
ARS 1668.297766
AUD 1.632406
AWG 2.063514
AZN 1.9534
BAM 1.955145
BBD 2.306627
BDT 140.692878
BGN 1.935731
BHD 0.431855
BIF 3415.156163
BMD 1.144807
BND 1.481104
BOB 7.91335
BRL 5.891976
BSD 1.145216
BTN 108.362706
BWP 15.542794
BYN 3.204327
BYR 22438.208777
BZD 2.303329
CAD 1.619947
CDF 2610.15881
CHF 0.924437
CLF 0.026317
CLP 1035.752058
CNY 7.749882
CNH 7.756614
COP 3917.413603
CRC 519.525995
CUC 1.144807
CUP 30.337374
CVE 110.228081
CZK 24.204473
DJF 203.941694
DKK 7.474625
DOP 66.947577
DZD 152.776735
EGP 56.975075
ERN 17.172099
ETB 184.638959
FJD 2.573239
FKP 0.865124
GBP 0.863156
GEL 3.033258
GGP 0.865124
GHS 12.855694
GIP 0.865124
GMD 84.135795
GNF 10034.639101
GTQ 8.733075
GYD 239.579758
HKD 8.975404
HNL 30.637739
HRK 7.536604
HTG 149.599895
HUF 352.422404
IDR 20406.119875
ILS 3.401621
IMP 0.865124
INR 108.227713
IQD 1500.297506
IRR 1574109.03434
ISK 144.005294
JEP 0.865124
JMD 180.959391
JOD 0.811689
JPY 184.543976
KES 148.172003
KGS 100.113789
KHR 4598.459839
KMF 491.693168
KPW 1030.326314
KRW 1759.092615
KWD 0.353265
KYD 0.95438
KZT 558.193045
LAK 25292.528781
LBP 102557.450463
LKR 382.941741
LRD 208.440187
LSL 18.817098
LTL 3.380316
LVL 0.692482
LYD 7.342541
MAD 10.676324
MDL 20.139255
MGA 4830.382162
MKD 61.648854
MMK 2403.999893
MNT 4097.52793
MOP 9.247703
MRU 45.792663
MUR 54.733337
MVR 17.687075
MWK 1985.834885
MXN 19.821065
MYR 4.750605
MZN 73.164535
NAD 18.817098
NGN 1565.053077
NIO 42.145884
NOK 11.07799
NPR 173.37993
NZD 1.996371
OMR 0.440203
PAB 1.145216
PEN 3.875202
PGK 5.102291
PHP 69.895015
PKR 318.523717
PLN 4.275279
PYG 6981.661634
QAR 4.175002
RON 5.238518
RSD 117.352956
RUB 84.541347
RWF 1677.33821
SAR 4.297365
SBD 9.228771
SCR 15.65455
SDG 687.453458
SEK 10.991002
SGD 1.479674
SHP 0.854714
SLE 28.33415
SLL 24006.02557
SOS 654.480795
SRD 42.850679
STD 23695.184649
STN 24.491797
SVC 10.020644
SYP 126.537872
SZL 18.812699
THB 37.67158
TJS 10.622242
TMT 4.006823
TND 3.386266
TOP 2.75642
TRY 53.190289
TTD 7.766399
TWD 36.200496
TZS 3008.817265
UAH 51.506949
UGX 4180.599793
USD 1.144807
UYU 45.794662
UZS 13725.402955
VES 694.477055
VND 30131.30893
VUV 135.490495
WST 3.150274
XAF 655.737374
XAG 0.017333
XAU 0.000273
XCD 3.093897
XCG 2.064009
XDR 0.814748
XOF 655.737374
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.152139
ZAR 18.756682
ZMK 10304.633604
ZMW 20.299201
ZWL 368.627249
  • RELX

    -0.3500

    30.83

    -1.14%

  • CMSD

    -0.2400

    22.05

    -1.09%

  • BCE

    -0.3650

    22.915

    -1.59%

  • RIO

    -0.6800

    99.4

    -0.68%

  • NGG

    1.7300

    81.17

    +2.13%

  • RBGPF

    0.3600

    61.5

    +0.59%

  • CMSC

    -0.1800

    22.19

    -0.81%

  • AZN

    2.3500

    177.28

    +1.33%

  • BCC

    -1.0650

    73.595

    -1.45%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    18.45

    +1.03%

  • GSK

    0.3200

    50.99

    +0.63%

  • VOD

    -0.1500

    14.15

    -1.06%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    58.89

    -0.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.59

    -0.64%

  • BP

    0.5700

    39.67

    +1.44%

Why Iranian drones are hard to stop
Why Iranian drones are hard to stop / Photo: Sergei SUPINSKY - AFP/File

Why Iranian drones are hard to stop

Cheap and deadly, Iranian-designed Shahed drones have inflicted major damage in the Middle East war, and have anti-jamming and other capabilities that make them difficult to stop.

Text size:

- Offline navigation -

Designed to explode on impact, Shahed drones connect to GPS to register their location shortly before or after takeoff, then typically turn off their receivers, said Thomas Withington, a researcher at Britain's Royal United Services Institute (RUSI).

The drones then travel long distances towards their target using gyroscopes that measure their speed, direction and position -- known as an "inertial navigation system".

"GPS is going to get jammed by whatever is protecting the target," Withington told AFP.

"If you look at a map of GPS jamming at the moment in the Middle East, you see that there's a lot of jamming... By not using the GPS, you avoid that."

The drones can then return to GPS just before impact for a more precise strike, or remain offline.

"It's not always necessarily very accurate, but it's as accurate as it needs to be," said Withington.

- Anti-jamming mechanisms -

Russia has been making Shahed-style drones to use in its war in Ukraine.

The US-based Institute for Science and International Security found in 2023 that those drones used "state-of-art antenna interference suppression" to remove enemy jamming signals while preserving the desired GPS signal.

Anti-jamming mechanisms were found in the wreckage of an Iranian-made drone that struck Cyprus in the opening days of the Middle East war, a European industry source told AFP.

"They have put (the Shahed) together using off-the-shelf parts, but it has... many of the capabilities that US military GPS equipment has," Todd Humphreys, a professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, told AFP.

Defending against them now requires sophisticated electronic warfare equipment.

"The Shaheds have been upgraded," said Ukrainian air force spokesman Yuriy Ignat.

- Stealth materials -

The Shahed is built from "lightweight radar-absorbing materials", such as plastic and fibreglass, a 2023 RUSI paper said.

Their small size and low altitude allow them to slip through aerial defence systems.

- Other positioning systems? -

Some experts think Iran is using multiple positioning systems, making it easier for its drones to dodge jamming.

Serhii Beskrestnov, a technology adviser to the Ukrainian defence ministry, said Iran is using the BeiDou system, a Chinese rival to the US-developed GPS.

And the Russia-made version of Shaheds uses both BeiDou and the Russian equivalent, GLONASS, he said.

Others suspect Iran may be using LORAN, a radio navigation system developed during World War II.

LORAN, which does not require satellites, largely fell out of use when GPS emerged.

But Iran said in 2016 it was reviving the technology, which requires a network of large ground-based transmitters, though experts have not confirmed it is active today.

- Counter-strategies -

Militaries have mainly defended against Shaheds by shooting them down with cannon fire, missiles and interceptor drones, with the United States and Israel also developing lasers.

But jamming can work, as Ukraine has shown, as can "spoofing", which involves hacking into the drone's navigation system to change its destination.

Ukraine used electronic warfare to neutralise 4,652 attack drones from mid-May to mid-July 2025 -- not far off the number it shot down in the same period, 6,041, according to AFP analysis of Ukrainian military data.

Its experts insist that electronic and conventional defences are often used in tandem against the drones.

C.Zeman--TPP