Shahed vs Clone: The Combat Debut of the LUCAS
The February 28 strikes on Iran marked the first combat use of the U.S.-made LUCAS, a low-cost, one-way attack drone modeled on Iran’s Shahed-136, writes Patrick Tucker of Defense One. U.S. Central Command paired the system with Tomahawk cruise missiles for the attack. Tehran immediately answered with a Shahed barrage against the U.S. Fifth Fleet headquarters in Bahrain.
Takeaways
Tucker’s reporting underscores how industrial capacity and the ability to field large numbers of expendable systems is now shaping American strategy on the battlefield. Conventional missiles are still effective but are limited and expensive. This is particularly true after the Trump administration already depleted its stocks of Tomahawks in earlier strikes across the Middle East and Africa.
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