TEHRAN (Realist English). Iran has officially unveiled its latest long-range kamikaze drone, the Arash-2, which senior military officials say is designed for high-precision strikes and capable of reaching Israeli targets such as Tel Aviv and Haifa in the event of armed conflict. The announcement was made by Brigadier General Kiumars Heidari, commander of the Iranian Army Ground Force, in a statement carried by Press TV on Monday.
Heidari described the Arash-2 as a radar-evading, high-destructive unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) that stands “at the cutting edge of technology” within Iran’s growing drone arsenal. The system, he added, has been fully designed and mass-produced by domestic defense industry experts.
“The Arash-2 enjoys pinpoint accuracy and is one of the most advanced long-range drones in our arsenal,” he said. He also emphasized its multi-phase capability: the drone can collect reconnaissance data before executing a strike on predesignated targets.
The Arash-2 is believed to be a more advanced version of the Arash-1, first showcased during nationwide drone drills in January 2019. The original model featured a delta-wing configuration optimized for speed and range and was launched from mobile platforms along Iran’s southern coast.
Back in 2022, Heidari publicly stated that the Arash-2 was specifically engineered to target Israel’s coastal cities in case of military confrontation. That declaration drew international attention amid heightened tensions between Tehran and Tel Aviv, particularly over Iran’s nuclear and missile programs.
The drone announcement comes as part of a broader Iranian strategy to achieve military self-sufficiency in the face of long-standing US and Western sanctions. Tehran has prioritized indigenous development of UAVs, ballistic missiles, and electronic warfare systems — capabilities Iranian leaders insist are non-negotiable and intended solely for defense.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has repeatedly defended the country’s right to enhance its military capabilities, calling on defense officials to continue strengthening Iran’s deterrence posture. “We will never tie our national security to foreign approval,” he has said in past remarks.
The unveiling of the Arash-2 highlights Iran’s steady expansion of drone warfare capabilities, particularly in precision strike and long-range platforms. While Tehran frames its drone program as defensive, the explicit reference to Israeli targets reinforces concerns over escalating regional confrontation. For both Israel and the broader West Asia region, Iran’s rapidly evolving UAV arsenal represents a new dimension in asymmetric deterrence — one that may further complicate efforts at de-escalation or diplomacy.