A "suicide drone" capable of delivering explosives to blow up targets at sea and on land has been developed by Iran's elite Revolutionary Guards – and if the photo is for real, it's a brute.
The new drone is primarily for maritime surveillance and "has not been designed to be armed with missiles," reported the Tasnim news agency, which is close to the Guards, per Agence France-Presse.
"(But) it can carry heavy payloads of explosives for combat missions to launch suicide attacks," said the Tasnim report. "Flying at a high cruising speed near the surface of the water, the aircraft can collide with the target and destroy it, either a vessel or an onshore command centre."
Tasnim said the drone was designed to fly as low as two feet above the water at a speed of around 160 mph but could reach an altitude of 3,000 feet.
As with previous drone announcements by Iran, the news agency released photographs of the aircraft on the ground, but no footage of it flying. In the past, some photos have been doctored.
"It has an advanced military camera with the capability of being used at night and during the day, as well as the possibility of being used in damp sea conditions," Tasnim said.
Earlier this month, the Revolutionary Guards claimed to have produced a new attack drone, the Saegheh (Thunderbolt), by reverse-engineering a U.S. Central Intelligence Agency RQ-170 Sentinel drone that was captured in December 2011.
Iran claimed one of its cyber warfare units took control of the U.S. drone and landed it safely, while the U.S. says a technical problem caused it to crash.
The Guards released pictures of the Thunderbolt, but no footage of it in flight.