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Drone attack in 9 Pakistan cities: Here's all about Israel-made Harop suicide drones that can stay in air for hours

Drone attack in 9 Pakistan cities: Here's all about Israel-made Harop suicide drones that can stay in air for hours

Time of India08-05-2025

The
Pakistan Army
on Thursday claimed explosions in several cities across Pakistan, including Lahore, Karachi, and Sialkot. Pakistan Army spokesperson claimed that the explosions were due to Harop loitering munition drones, amid heightened tensions between India and Pakistan. Army spokesperson said the drones were Harop loitering munitions and described the incidents as "a serious serious provocation." He showed pictures of the wreckage of the drones at a press conference.
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In a statement, India's ministry of Defence in a statement said: "Today morning Indian Armed Forces targeted Air Defence Radars and systems at a number of locations in Pakistan. Indian response has been in the same domain with same intensity as Pakistan. It has been reliably learnt that an Air Defence system at Lahore has been neutralised."
"On the night of 07-08 May 2025, Pakistan attempted to engage a number of military targets in Northern and Western India including Awantipura, Srinagar, Jammu, Pathankot, Amritsar, Kapurthala, Jalandhar, Ludhiana, Adampur, Bhatinda, Chandigarh, Nal, Phalodi, Uttarlai, and Bhuj, using drones and missiles. These were neutralised by the Integrated Counter UAS Grid and Air Defence systems. The debris of these attacks is now being recovered from a number of locations that prove the Pakistani attacks," it said.
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by Taboola
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What are Harop Drones?
Harop is an attack drone developed by the MBT Missiles Division of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI). It is a loitering munition designed to hover over a battlefield and strike on command. The drone is capable of autonomous operation or remote control and can return to base if a target is not engaged.
Harop drones: Developed for high-value military targets
Harop is a loitering munition developed by the MBT Missiles Division of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI). It combines features of a UAV and a missile. It is designed to identify, track and destroy high-value military targets such as tanks, radar stations, air defence systems, command centres, and supply depots.
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Pakistan's HQ-9 air defence missile launchers suffer heavy damage
The drone is equipped with electro-optical sensors. These allow it to monitor targets such as surveillance posts and radar installations before striking. The drone crashes into its target and explodes on impact.
Harop can search for targets over a span of nine hours. It flies within a set area, detects and identifies targets, plots an approach, and executes a strike from different angles. It does not require advance intelligence to carry out the operation. The drone also has resistance to GNSS jamming, which allows it to maintain communications in hostile environments.
Human-operated and cancel-capable system
Harop missions are supervised through human-in-the-loop control. Operators can abort the attack if required. The drone can be launched from land or sea. It uses canisters mounted on military trucks or naval vessels.
Range and operational use
Harop drones are launched from outside the battlefield and can fly up to 200 kilometres. As loitering munitions, they hover above hostile zones, wait for a target, and then dive into it.
The drone has been used in previous conflicts, including by Azerbaijan in the 2016 and 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh wars. It has also been used in Syrian conflicts, including a 2018 strike on a Syrian Air Defence SA-22 Greyhound and another attack in December 2024.
India and Azerbaijan are among the countries that have purchased the Harop system. Reports also indicate Turkiye may have started using it as early as 2005.
India has bought Israeli defense systems worth $2.9 billion
India has imported military hardware worth $2.9 billion from Israel over the last ten years. This includes radars, surveillance and combat drones, and missile systems. The Harop drone is among the systems purchased during this period.

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India's Birth Rate Hits Historic Low – What It Really Means For The Future

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