logo
What are Harop drones that Pakistan claims India used in attacks near Karachi, Lahore?

What are Harop drones that Pakistan claims India used in attacks near Karachi, Lahore?

First Post08-05-2025

India's alleged use of Israeli-made Harop drones in Pakistan has put a spotlight on this loitering munition's deadly precision and long endurance. From past use in Azerbaijan to current claims in Operation Sindoor, the Harop's role is reshaping drone warfare read more
A Boeing C-17 Globemaster III military transport aircraft of the United States Air Force (USAF) flies past a Harop unmanned combat air vehicle (UCAV) during an aerial display at the Singapore Airshow in Singapore, February 17, 2012. File Image/Reuters
Tensions between India and Pakistan are heating up as India, in response to Pakistan's bid to 'engage a number of military targets in Northern and Western India,' reportedly used drones to strike targets in urban town in Pakistan.
Pakistan has claimed that India employed Israeli-made Harop drones — also known as loitering munitions or suicide drones. These claims have directed attention to the Harop drone, its operational history, and its battlefield capabilities.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
In the early hours of May 7, 2025, India launched coordinated air strikes targeting nine terror-related locations across Pakistan and Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir (PoJK), under the codename Operation Sindoor.
The Pakistani military claimed that there were Harop drones, shot down in multiple areas on Thursday, including within the limits of Lahore and Karachi.
'Debris is being collected from all impact sites, including within Karachi and Lahore city limits,' a spokesperson for the Pakistan military said. 'We are neutralising them one by one,' the spokesperson claimed.
All we know about the Harop
The Harop drone, developed by the MBT Missiles Division of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI), belongs to a class of weapons known as loitering munitions.
These drones are designed to hover in a designated area for extended periods, identify hostile targets, and destroy them by crashing into them with a built-in explosive payload.
Unlike conventional UAVs, which return after surveillance missions, loitering munitions serve a dual purpose: reconnaissance and attack.
HAROP has a 9-hour endurance to seek targets in a designated area. Image/IAI
The Harop is equipped with an electro-optical (EO) or infrared (IR) seeker to detect, track, and engage static or mobile threats, including radar systems, missile launchers, and command posts.
Capable of autonomous operation with human oversight, the Harop offers a man-in-the-loop control mode, allowing the operator to make final decisions before impact. It is also equipped with abort capability, allowing for mission cancellation mid-flight to avoid collateral damage.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Some of the drone's notable features include:
A wingspan of 3 meters and a length of 2.5 meters.
Maximum speed of 417 km/h.
Operational range of 200 km.
Flight endurance exceeding six hours.
Service ceiling of approximately 15,000 feet.
A 16 kg high-explosive warhead.
Circular Error Probable (CEP) of under one meter, making it highly accurate.
This combination of attributes allows the Harop to loiter over hostile areas, strike from any angle—including shallow or steep dives — and perform in GPS-denied environments due to its resistance to GNSS jamming.
Harop is combat-proven
The Harop has demonstrated its combat effectiveness in multiple conflict zones. It first gained major attention during the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, where Azerbaijan employed the drone to great effect against Armenian forces.
The Harop proved especially effective in targeting enemy air defences and armored units, often in challenging conditions such as freezing weather and heavy electronic warfare interference.
An advisor to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, Hikmet Hajiyev, publicly praised the Harop's effectiveness during that conflict.
Also Watch:
The drone has also been credited with destroying a Syrian Air Defence SA-22 Greyhound system on May 10, 2018. More recently, on December 9, 2024, the Harop was reportedly used in an attack on Syrian Armed Forces.
This battlefield history underlines the Harop's role as a critical tool for neutralising high-value, time-sensitive targets without requiring prior ground intelligence. Its autonomous capabilities and ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance) functions allow for real-time adjustments and precision strikes.
India's use of Harop
India has been a known operator of the Harop drone for over a decade. The Indian Air Force first showed interest in the platform in the mid-2000s and began formal procurement in 2009.
That year, it announced the purchase of Harop systems worth around $100 million. The drones were first publicly unveiled ahead of the Aero India 2009 air show.
By 2019, India had significantly expanded its inventory of these drones. The Indian Air Force decided to add 54 more Harops to its existing fleet of over 100, re-designating them as P-4.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
HAROP is supervised by remote human-in-the-loop mission control and may be aborted if required. Image/IAI
In 2021, India acquired additional Harop systems, specifically to strengthen surveillance and offensive capabilities along the borders with Pakistan and China.
The Indian military is believed to operate the Harop from both ground-based and naval canister-launch platforms, enabling flexibility in deployment across diverse terrains.
Although India has not officially confirmed the use of Harop drones in the current operation, the country's long-standing procurement and operational integration of the system suggest it forms a core part of its offensive drone arsenal.
Other variants
Apart from India and Israel, several countries have incorporated the Harop into their defence strategies. Azerbaijan is one of the most visible users of the drone, credited with extensive operational success.
The Netherlands recently announced acquisition plans for its Navy, specifically for amphibious and multi-support ships operated by the Koninklijke Marine. Morocco is also reported to be among the drone's international customers.
IAI has also developed a more compact version of the drone, known as the Mini Harop. Designed for tactical operations, it offers a shorter endurance of around one hour and is typically launched from light tactical vehicles.
The Mini Harop is particularly effective against fast-moving, fleeting targets in battlefield scenarios where rapid deployment and high accuracy are essential.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Also Watch:
These drones offer a low-risk, high-impact alternative to manned aerial missions, especially in scenarios requiring stealth, endurance and pinpoint accuracy.
With inputs from agencies

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israeli attack causes explosion in gas refinery in S. Iran: media
Israeli attack causes explosion in gas refinery in S. Iran: media

United News of India

time20 minutes ago

  • United News of India

Israeli attack causes explosion in gas refinery in S. Iran: media

Tehran, June 15 (UNI) An Israeli micro aerial vehicle hit an onshore refinery of the phase 14 of Iran's South Pars gas field in Bushehr province on Saturday, causing an explosion at the facility, the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported. Due to the explosion, a part of the Fajr Jam gas refinery has caught fire, Tasnim said, adding no report was released yet of the extent of damage. It added that Iranian passive defense and rescue forces were managing the situation. The attack comes amid heightened tensions following Israel's large-scale strikes on Iranian military and nuclear facilities, which have raised fears of broader regional escalation. Earler on Friday, Israel launched airstrikes on Iran's capital Tehran and other cities across the country with the aim of crippling Iran's nuclear infrastructure, ballistic missile production, and military capabilities. In response, Iran on Friday night and early Saturday morning launched rocket barrages against Israeli targets. According to Israel's state-owned Kan TV News, three Israelis were killed and 172 others injured as a result of the attacks. UNI/XINHUA BM

If attacked, full strength of US forces will come down on you, Trump warns Iran
If attacked, full strength of US forces will come down on you, Trump warns Iran

India Today

time22 minutes ago

  • India Today

If attacked, full strength of US forces will come down on you, Trump warns Iran

US President Donald Trump on Sunday warned Iran against any retaliation on US assets, saying, "If we are attacked in any way, shape or form by Iran, the full strength and might of the US armed forces will come down on you at levels never seen before."Trump's remarks came as Israel targeted Iran's defence ministry headquarters in Tehran and struck a natural gas processing unit linked to South Pars gas field in Iran's Bushehr Province on that the US had no role to play in Israel's overnight attacks on Iran, Trump claimed that he can "easily get a deal done between Iran and Israel and end this conflict." On Sunday, Iran cancelled the sixth round of nuclear talks between Tehran and Washington DC. At least four people were killed and over 100 injured in the Israeli coastal city of Bat Yam after an overnight Iranian missile attack, the city's mayor said on Sunday morning, as rescue operations of Iranian attacks began on Saturday and continued throughout the night and early ambulance service said at least seven people were killed in total across the country overnight, including a 10-year-old boy and a woman in her 20s, and more than 140 were injured in multiple attacks. It was unclear how many buildings were hit from Reuters

Israel Bombed World's Largest Gas Field In Iran. Why It Is A Big Deal
Israel Bombed World's Largest Gas Field In Iran. Why It Is A Big Deal

NDTV

time25 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Israel Bombed World's Largest Gas Field In Iran. Why It Is A Big Deal

New Delhi: Iran was forced to partially halt gas production at the world's largest gas field, South Pars, after an Israeli airstrike caused a fire at one of its key processing units on Saturday. The attack, which hit Phase 14 of the offshore site, led to the suspension of 12 million cubic metres of gas output per day. This was Israel's first direct strike on Iran 's oil and gas infrastructure. FOLLOW LIVE UPDATES About The South Pars Gas Field The South Pars gas field, located offshore in Iran's Bushehr Province and shared with Qatar (which calls its portion the North Field), is the world's largest natural gas reserve. It provides nearly two-thirds (around 66 per cent) of Iran's domestic gas, which is essential for electricity, heating, and petrochemical production. Iran is the world's third-largest gas producer after the United States and Russia, generating around 275 billion cubic metres (bcm) annually, about 6.5 per cent of global output. Due to international sanctions, most of this gas is consumed domestically, though some is exported to countries like Iraq. Qatar, with help from global energy firms like Shell and ExxonMobil, exports 77 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) every year from the same field to Europe and Asia. Why This Strike Is A Big Deal New Front In A Dangerous Conflict Until now, Israeli strikes focused on Iran's military and nuclear assets. But targeting energy infrastructure like South Pars crosses a red line, signalling that economic warfare is now in play. "This is probably the most important attack on oil and gas infrastructure since Abqaiq," said Jorge Leon, an analyst at Rystad Energy, referencing the 2019 attack on Saudi oil facilities that shook global markets, as per Bloomberg. Threat to Global Energy Supplies South Pars is a shared field with Qatar, which is a major global LNG supplier. Escalation in this region raises fears of attacks on other critical chokepoints like Kharg Island (Iran's main oil export terminal) and the Strait of Hormuz, through which 21 per cent of the world's LNG and 14 million barrels of crude oil daily pass. "This is a warning shot that Israel is willing to hit Iranian energy infrastructure if Israeli civilians are targeted," said Richard Bronze, head of geopolitics at Energy Aspects, as per The NYT. Analysts warn that if the conflict continues to escalate, Qatar's energy operations and Israel's own infrastructure could also become targets. Both countries play critical roles in energy exports, and any attack could create ripple effects across Asia, Europe, and global supply chains. Market Reactions Oil prices surged as much as 14 per cent on Friday following the initial Israeli strikes, settling around $73 (Rs 7000) per barrel. Even though South Pars mostly serves domestic needs, its significance lies in the message: energy is now fair game. With OPEC's third-largest producer (Iran) under attack, any future assault on Kharg Island or disruption in the Strait of Hormuz could send oil and gas prices skyrocketing. The fighting will go on despite international calls for de-escalation, Iranian media reported. Iran's President, Masoud Pezeshkian, has vowed a fiercer retaliation, The NYT reports. Iran's Fragile Energy Sector The strike comes as Iran faces one of its worst energy crises in decades. Gas shortages have caused frequent blackouts, costing the economy around $250 million a day, according to the Iran Chamber of Commerce. The government has been forced to cut power to homes and factories, even before the Israeli strikes. Sanctions and outdated infrastructure have left Iran struggling to meet demand. "Attacking Iran's energy infrastructure will be a disaster because repairing them will be costly and take time," said Abdollah Babakhani, an Iran energy expert based in Germany. Global Impact Though South Pars fuels Iran domestically, its location in the Persian Gulf, a key global energy route, makes it critical. The Israeli strike shows energy assets are now on the battlefield, raising risks for oil markets. Any escalation could spike fuel prices and trigger inflation, especially in energy-dependent regions like Europe and Asia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store