Iran’s Own Drone Design Is Now Bombing Iran

by | Apr 10, 2026 | Military Aviation, News | 0 comments

Somewhere in the CENTCOM operating area, a low-cost drone lifts off a catapult rail and heads toward an Iranian target. It looks almost identical to the Shahed-136 — the kamikaze drone Iran has been mass-producing and exporting for years. But this one carries American markings. It was built in Arizona. And it costs $35,000. The Low-Cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System — LUCAS — is America’s reverse-engineered copy of Iran’s most prolific weapon. In February 2026, it saw its first confirmed combat use against Iranian forces. By April, a former Pentagon official was calling it “indispensable.” The irony writes itself: the United States is now bombing Iran with a clone of Iran’s own drone. This is what modern warfare looks like. Steal the design. Improve it. Send it back.

Quick Facts

  • Official name: Low-Cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System (LUCAS)
  • Based on: Iran’s HESA Shahed-136 kamikaze drone
  • Manufacturer: SpektreWorks (Arizona, USA)
  • Unit cost: ~$35,000
  • Size: 3 meters long, 2.5 meters wide
  • Weight: 81.5 kg (vs. Shahed-136’s 200 kg)
  • Range: 444 nautical miles / ~6 hours endurance
  • Ceiling: 15,000 feet
  • First combat use: February 2026, against Iran
  • Operator: Task Force Scorpion Strike (CENTCOM)

From Captured Wreck to Combat Weapon

The story begins a few years before 2025, when U.S. forces captured an intact Shahed-136 — the exact circumstances remain classified. The drone was shipped to SpektreWorks, an Arizona-based firm specializing in unmanned systems, which disassembled it, studied every component, and built something better. The result was the FLM-136, later designated LUCAS. It kept the Shahed’s basic delta-wing layout and propeller-driven simplicity, but the American version is dramatically lighter — 81.5 kilograms versus the Shahed’s 200. It is faster to produce, easier to launch from multiple platforms including catapults, rocket-assisted takeoff rails, and vehicle-mounted systems, and it can be deployed by small teams in austere conditions. By December 2025, CENTCOM had deployed an entire squadron of LUCAS drones to the Middle East under Task Force Scorpion Strike. Within weeks, they were in combat.
LUCAS drones at a base in the CENTCOM operating area
LUCAS drones positioned at a base in the CENTCOM operating area. U.S. Department of Defense photo / DVIDS

The $35,000 Revolution

The economics tell the real story. A single Tomahawk cruise missile costs roughly $2 million. A Joint Direct Attack Munition dropped from a manned aircraft runs about $25,000 — but the aircraft delivering it costs tens of millions per hour to operate and puts a pilot at risk. LUCAS costs $35,000, total. Launch it, fly it into the target, and walk away. No pilot, no recovery, no maintenance cycle. At that price, the calculus of attrition warfare changes completely. You can afford to lose them. You can afford to launch dozens at once. And you can do it from positions close to the front line without risking a single aircrew. Task Force Scorpion Strike has been launching LUCAS drones from ground positions against Iranian military targets during the ongoing conflict. In a further milestone, Task Force 59 successfully launched a LUCAS from a naval vessel — the first time the system was employed at sea — extending its reach across the Persian Gulf.

Poetic Justice or Pandora’s Box?

There is an undeniable satisfaction in the narrative. Iran built the Shahed-136 as a cheap, mass-producible weapon of terror — used by Russia against Ukrainian cities, by the Houthis against shipping in the Red Sea, and by Iranian proxies across the Middle East. Now the design has come home, literally, in the form of American-built copies striking Iranian military infrastructure. But defense analysts warn that the LUCAS program also validates a dangerous precedent. If the United States can reverse-engineer an adversary’s drone in months, so can anyone else. The barrier to entry for precision-strike capability has collapsed. A $35,000 drone that can fly 444 nautical miles and hit a target is within reach of nearly any state — or non-state actor — on Earth. The age of cheap, expendable, autonomous strike weapons is here. LUCAS is not the end of that story. It is the beginning. Sources: The War Zone, Military Times, The Conversation, Euronews, DVIDS

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