They looked like canned food, Iranian villagers said. Small cylindrical objects scattered across the streets and fields of Kafari, a village on the southern outskirts of Shiraz. Within hours, Bellingcat had identified them: BLU-91/B scatterable anti-tank landmines, part of the U.S.-developed Gator system. Dropped from the air, just two kilometres from the entrance to Shiraz South Missile Base.
The images, first published by Iran's Tasnim news agency and later circulated by Canadian activist Dimitri Lascaris, set off a global debate. Was the United States now seeding Iranian cities with landmines to stop missile launches? And if so — is it working?
A Mine That Thinks for Itself
The BLU-91/B is not a crude device. It's a "smart" anti-tank mine — air-delivered by aircraft at altitude, stabilised during descent by a small parachute, and capable of self-destructing after a preset timer: 4 hours, 48 hours, or 15 days. The idea is to create temporary denial zones rather than permanent minefields, allowing U.S. forces to turn an area into a death trap for vehicles and then clear it on their own schedule.
In this case, the target appears to have been Shiraz South Missile Base — one of Iran's underground facilities used to store and launch ballistic missiles. Surrounding the access roads with anti-tank mines would make it extremely difficult to move mobile launchers in or out, even without a direct strike on the hardened bunkers below.
Dr. N.R. Jenzen-Jones of Armament Research Services confirmed the identification, noting the presence of distinctive square "aeroballistic adaptors" visible in the photos — components that stabilise the mines during air delivery. Bellingcat was direct: "The US is the only participant in the war known to possess these mines."
Mines in a Village
The problem is that Kafari is a residential village. At least two people were reportedly killed. The mines did not land only near the missile base's entrance road — they scattered into streets and fields where civilians live. This is the inherent risk of scatterable munitions: they do not distinguish between a military convoy and a farmer on a tractor.
U.S. Central Command declined to confirm or deny whether Gator mines are being used during Operation Epic Fury. The silence speaks for itself.
A New Kind of Air War
What makes this tactic remarkable is its unconventional logic. The standard playbook against missile launchers is to bomb them — strike the vehicle, the facility, or the launch crew. But hardened underground bases are extremely difficult to destroy even with penetrating munitions. Mines accomplish something different: they don't destroy the missiles, they deny the roads. A launcher that can't move can't hide. And a launcher that can't hide is a lot easier to kill from the air.
It is a reminder that air power is not only about bombs falling from altitude. Sometimes, the most effective weapon is a small cylinder quietly settling into the dust of an Iranian street — patient, waiting, and lethal.
Sources: The War Zone; Bellingcat; Armament Research Services; Tasnim News Agency
Related Questions
What are BLU-91/B Gator mines?
The BLU-91/B is an air-delivered "smart" anti-tank landmine, part of the US Gator system. Dropped from aircraft and slowed by a small parachute, it can self-destruct after a preset timer of 4 hours, 48 hours or 15 days, creating temporary denial zones rather than permanent minefields. Analysts identified them scattered near a missile base outside Shiraz, Iran.
How is the US trying to stop Iran's missile launches?
Beyond bombing launch sites, evidence emerged in 2026 that the US scattered air-delivered Gator anti-tank mines near Iranian missile bases to deny access to launch areas—an unconventional alternative to striking each launcher. US Central Command declined to confirm the tactic during Operation Epic Fury, which also included strikes on Iran's surveillance and command assets.
What is a scatterable mine?
A scatterable mine is delivered in bulk—dropped from aircraft or fired by artillery—to quickly seed an area, rather than being individually emplaced. Systems like the US Gator self-destruct after a set time to limit long-term hazards. Their drawback is indiscriminacy: they cannot distinguish a military vehicle from a civilian, posing serious risks in populated areas.
Why are scatterable mines controversial near civilians?
Scatterable mines cannot tell a military convoy from a farmer, so dropping them near or in populated areas endangers civilians. In the Iranian village of Kafari, mines reportedly scattered into streets and fields, with at least two people killed. This indiscriminate risk is the core legal and humanitarian objection to using such munitions in inhabited zones.
What was Operation Epic Fury?
Operation Epic Fury was the codename for the US-led 2026 air campaign against Iran, which targeted missile sites, leadership and later infrastructure. It was costly and intense; one accounting tallied 39 aircraft lost during the campaign. The reported use of scatterable mines against missile bases reflected the unconventional tactics employed during the operation.





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