Russia says kamikaze drone tests in northern Syria complete amid reports of civilian deaths

Russia says kamikaze drone tests in northern Syria complete amid reports of civilian deaths
Russia says it has completed testing for a new drone after striking 'terrorist' targets in northern Syria's Idlib, amid reports of unidentified drone attacks in the same area causing civilian casualties.
2 min read
17 December, 2021
A KYB-UAV attack drone produced by ZALA Aero [Getty]

Russia has officially completed testing for an unmanned kamikaze drone which it says was successfully used to strike ‘terrorist’ targets in on Thursday, according to reports by Russian state-owned news agencies Novosti and Russia Today.

Meanwhile, the Syrian Civil Defence, otherwise known as The White Helmets, has saidkamikaze drone attacks in Idlibhave killed at least three civilians and injured six since the beginning of this year.

The KYB-UAV drone was designed and developed by Russian manufacturer ZALA Aero, a subsidiary of the Kalashnikov Group. A video on the company website shows the drone self-destructing when it strikes its target, hence the moniker ‘’ drone.

On Thursday, an anonymous source in the Russian Ministry of Defence was quoted in Novosti as saying that the KYB-UAV drone had successfully passed official military tests, adding that Russian Armed Forces would receive its first batch of the drones by 2022.

Russia Today said its own Russian sources had claimed “the drone was used by the Russian army to strike terrorist sites in northern Syria”.

However, Mohammed Rahhal, a media officer for the Syrian Civil Defence, told's Arabic-language sister siteAl-Araby Al-Jadeed that “the responded to three drone attacks since the beginning of this year” that had killed at least three people and injured six.

MENA
Live Story

Rahhal said “a woman and two other civilians were injured on 31October in an unidentified suicide drone attack while in the village of Nahlia, Idlib”. It is not yet clear whether Russia was behind the attack, although civilian death monitoring group have listed the suspected attacker as the Russian Armed Forces.

Responding to these reports, Colonel Mustafa Bakour, the official spokesman for the faction in Idlib, told Al-Araby Al-Jadeedthat the Russian had tested kamikaze drones in Hama, Syria as early as 2016, which he claimed targeted hospitals and rebel mountain bases.

“Russian military industries have benefitted from this testing and developed other forms of unmanned, self-guided drone. more than 300 types of weapons in Syria” he added.

The KYB drone was first exhibited at international defence exhibition 2019in Abu Dhabi, UAE. The Kalashnikov group said at the time they had received interest from buyers in the Middle East.