Our good friend Mohajer-4 A041-65 does not appear to have seen much action outside of the occasional expo appearance over the last eight years. 2013 vs 2021. Few scratches but still good enough for dog and pony shows.
Same cannot be said for A041-65's buddy, A041-66. A041-66 had a very Forrest Gump like existence.
See, A041-66 was seen at that same 2013 delivery ceremony for the Yasir drone. Only unlike his number neighbor, 66 was in a bucket of parts and not fully assembled like 65.
And there 66 lay, in the spare parts bucket of the Vali-e-Asr Drone Unit of the Artesh Ground Forces until the ISIS invasion of Iraq.
The next time we saw 66 was slapped onto another, more prestigious Mohajer-4. December 2014, ISIS has captured Mosul and is bearing down on central Iraq. We're getting some of our first glimpses of Iranian drones in the wild when ISIS shoots down A041-112.
A041-112 was a display model once too. It had done the runway shows. Paris, Milan, Sacred Defense Week, the cover of Fars. But duty calls and 112 was pressed into service.
112 apparently had a problem though: it was missing a tail rudder on its twin tail boom. 66 stepped up. And apparently someone forgot to repaint it before slapping it onto 112.
Neither were in ISIS custody for very long. Entire drone was recovered not long after.
It's fun to be able to trace parts and their journey through battles but the reason I find this one interesting is that bucket of parts belonged to the Artesh, not the IRGC.
Suggests to me that the Artesh, which has a portfolio for defending Iran's borders that pointedly included a few miles outside them, was conducting at least some of the drone operations within Iraq during the ISIS war.
This would be consistent with some of what we saw on the ground. Scattered reports that M-60 tanks from Artesh Ground Forces 81st Armored Division moved into Jalawla early on in the conflict—exact same place where A041-112/66 went down in those pics. medium.com/war-is-boring/…
I really should write that damn piece.
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My last story for Rolling Stone is up today. It's a profile of Michael van Landingham, the CIA analyst who drafted the 2017 intelligence community assessment that concluded Russia meddled in order to help Trump. rollingstone.com/politics/polit…
Some excerpts: Russian intelligence tried to spear phish the personal email of one of the analysts who later worked on the 2017 assessment using the same email lure Podesta got (the one published in the WikiLeaks dump in October 2016).
MAGA pundits have spun a myth that then CIA director John Brennan hand-picked friendly analysts for the assessment so it would reflect his own views. Nope. Van Landingham's only convo with Brennan consisted of two words when he bumped into him in an elevator one night.
"Iranian security officials helped plan Hamas’s Saturday surprise attack on Israel and gave the green light for the assault at a meeting in Beirut last Monday, according to senior members of Hamas and Hezbollah, another Iran-backed militant group."
"U.S. officials say they haven’t seen evidence of Tehran’s involvement."
Former Soldier Indicted for Attempting to Pass National Defense Information to People’s Republic of China justice.gov/opa/pr/former-…
"Schmidt traveled to Hong Kong and allegedly continued his efforts to provide Chinese intelligence with classified information he obtained from his military service."
"He allegedly retained a device that allows for access to secure military computer networks and offered the device to Chinese authorities to assist them in efforts to gain access to such networks."
Seeing this get passed around a bunch today. If you think the SADM story it wild, it is. Spent a year reporting out its history for a 2014 Foreign Policy magazine piece
Meta found a Chinese troll network hiring anti-Soros protesters, setting up a fake company in London, and shitposting anti-immigrant takes in an apparent (lame) attempt to stir up division in the west. So naturally I applied. They're hiring, folks. rollingstone.com/politics/polit…
I also sent them an old website of mine with clips of my work. The fun thing about websites, especially old ones that no one clicks on anymore, is that it's really obvious who's clicking on them and where they're located if you line up the "last seen" time with your traffic logs
I am as shocked as you are that the operators of the "New Europe Observation" Telegram account are not, in fact, located in Europe.
This is a question I get a lot in different versions and it's worth explaining. Iranian crates do have a vaguely American air to them. They're in English. Formatted with the same date style. Why?
A lot of it has to do with the fact that, pre-revolution, Iran's biggest arms supplier was the US and Iran just hasn't bothered to change some things.
For example, if you look at the part numbers on the Toophan, Iran's upcycled version of the TOW ATGMs we exported to Iran in the 70s, they still use the same 1970s TOW part numbers on some components.