Iran

140 million euros in cash and samples of Western weapons – Russia’s payment for Iranian kamikaze drones

Russia provides Iran with $140 million in cash and confiscated Western weaponry in exchange for the drones

Russia provided Iran with $140 million in cash, as well as captured British and American weapons, in return for supplied kamikaze drones, according to Sky News, citing an anonymous source in intelligence services.

According to the source, on August 20, Russian military planes landed in Tehran, carrying cash, NLAW and Javelin anti-tank missiles, and Stinger portable air defense systems acquired by Russian forces in Ukraine. According to a Sky News source, the weaponry might let Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps evaluate and even reverse-engineer Western technologies.

If advanced Western weapons end up in the hands of the Russian and Iranian military-industrial complexes, it might lead to the appearance of future copied weaponry in the Ukraine war. Countries in the Middle East, particularly Israel, where Iran has traditionally had significant influence, may be under threat. Furthermore, if these weapons are utilized by extremist Islamists who may be controlled by Iran, EU nations may be attacked. Russia can exploit Western complexes or parts for provocations on its own.

 According to Sky News, in exchange, Iran gave over more than 160 UAVs to Russia, including 100 Shahed-136 kamikaze drones. According to the same source, Russia and Iran recently negotiated another $200 million contract for the sale of drones.

Previously, Iranian Foreign Minister Hussein-Amir Abdullahian revealed for the first time that Tehran had given over drones to Russia, but maintained that this occurred before the launch of a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
But we can now clearly state that the Iranian minister is twisting the facts.

The US denied Iran’s assertion, emphasizing that Iran sent drones to Russia in the summer of 2022 and that it also dispatched military experts to seize Ukrainian territory to instruct Russian forces on how to use Iranian-made weapons.

Kyrylo Budanov, the chief of Ukraine’s Military Intelligence, stated that Russia might begin launching Iranian short-range ballistic missiles against Ukraine as early as November. The Fateh-110 and Zolfaghar SRBM missiles, in particular. Iran has previously handed to Russia the Mohajer, Arash-1 and Arash-2, Shahed-131, and Shahed-136 drones.

Past team authors

Recent Posts

How Propaganda and Cash Bonuses Feed Russia’s War Machine Despite High Losses

Russia’s war in Ukraine increasingly runs on a blunt exchange: money up front, myth on…

10 hours ago

“You Don’t Need to Pay Influencers in Serbia”: Fact-Checker Ivan Subotić on How Russian Propaganda Thrives for Free

Ivan Subotić is the editor-in-chief at the Serbian portal FakeNews Tracker and collaborates with the…

14 hours ago

Two Norwegian Sites, One Kremlin Script: Derimot.no and Steigan.no Under the Microscope

Pro-Russian propaganda in Norway rarely looks like a bot swarm or a shadowy “state channel”.…

5 days ago

Pro-Kremlin outlets weaponize Russia’s Oreshnik strike on Ukraine to intimidate Europe, justify aggression

A coordinated propaganda campaign across Central and Western Europe portrays Russia's Oreshnik missile strike on…

6 days ago

How a Russian Fake Nearly Reignited Ukrainian–Hungarian Tensions, and Why Pro-Orbán Media Took the Bait

In recent years, Viktor Orbán has earned a reputation as the most openly anti-Ukrainian leader…

7 days ago

Russian “Z-Nuns” in Sweden: How Churches Became a Channel for Espionage and War Financing

What began as a seemingly harmless act of charity in Swedish churches has turned into…

1 week ago