How Iran’s Shahed Drones Are Wreaking Havoc in the Middle East | WSJ News

WSJ News
How Iran’s Shahed Drones Are Wreaking Havoc in the Middle East | WSJ News
Відкрити в Clue

About this video

Iran’s Shahed drones are small and inexpensive, but they’re still creating big problems for the U.S. and its allies in the Middle East. WSJ’s Shelby Holliday explains. #Iran #Drones #WSJ

Transcript preview

First 35 sentences of ~300+ word transcript. Read the rest with tap-to-translate in the Clue app.

This is an Iranian Shahed. And these drones have been slipping past the US and allied air defenses across the Middle East. The US says Iran's drone attacks are down 90% from the start of the war, but the drones that Iran

is managing to get off have shown to be hard to stop. They've been filmed crashing into buildings, dive-bombing airports, and setting off explosions at oil There are a few reasons why these cheap Shaheds are posing such a challenge.

First, they're hard to detect. The drones feature a delta-wing configuration, and they're made up of composite materials, which gives them a low radar signature. Second, the drones fly slowly and at low altitudes, sometimes literally under the radars that are pointed up to detect

missiles. Third, they're relatively small, just 11 ft long. That means they can be deployed from trucks in large numbers, a move that can overwhelm air defenses. And finally, the drones are so cheap that Iran has

thousands of them, potentially more than the US has interceptors. To make matters even more complicated for the US, the journal has reported that Iran is getting help from Russia, which has used and improved the Shahed during its war in Ukraine.

The White House says "Nothing provided to Iran from other countries is impacting the US military success, and that Iran's ability to mount attacks has been But the Shahed attacks keep on coming, and they are a key reason why commercial ships won't cross the Strait of Hormuz, and why

US allies are weary of trying to reopen the waterway before the shooting

Transcript continues in the Clue app — tap any word to translate while watching.

Watch this video in English to learn English

Watching real YouTube videos in English with subtitles is one of the highest-density ways to absorb the language. How Iran’s Shahed Drones Are Wreaking Havoc in the Middle East | WSJ News from WSJ News gives you native pace, natural intonation, and vocabulary you'll actually meet in real conversations.

In the Clue app, every subtitle is tap-to-translate. No app-switching, no pausing the video, no dictionary. Just watch.