Iran downed 30 U.S. Reaper drones, official says

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1–2 minutes

Summary

A U.S. official said Iran has downed about 30 MQ-9 Reaper drones since the war began.

Why this matters

The losses show the vulnerability of a key U.S. drone platform in a conflict where air dominance has been contested. They also add context to the broader military costs as U.S. strikes on Iran continued.

Iran has downed about 30 U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drones since the war began, a U.S. official said Wednesday.

The MQ-9 Reaper entered Air Force service in 2007 and became a central aircraft in U.S. counterterrorism operations in the Middle East and other conflict zones during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. It was designed to operate where the United States had air dominance, an advantage that has been challenged by Iran.

The Air Force announced its final five-year Reaper purchasing contract in 2020. General Atomics shut down the production line last year after building 575 aircraft. The last batch, four drones, cost about $16 million each, according to General Atomics spokesman C. Mark Brinkley.

In May, Air Force Gen. Kenneth Wilsbach told lawmakers at a budget hearing that the Reaper had become a “most valuable player” in the war with Iran.

“We’ve made many, many strikes,” he said of the Air Force’s use of the drone. “No other platform is even close.”

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