Iran Unveils World’s First Air Defense Boat Capable Of Firing Missile FromIts Vertical Launch System

Iran’s second navy, under the IRGC, has developed the world’s first very small air-defense boat amid rising concerns about Tehran’s burgeoning military power that is seen as a threat by countries in the Persian Gulf and Israel.
The development of a small defense boat is unique in its own right.
This is the first-of-its-kind vessel Iran has likely produced for domestic use by the Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy, according to a report by Naval Analyst and OSINT expert HI Sutton.
Subsequently, a video surfaced on social media in which a Nawab surface-to-air missile is released from the Vertical Launch System of the boat. According to military observers, this air defense boat was modified and converted from the British Bladerunner. This is due to the hull’s shape, which resembles the Bladerunner.
The vessel is reportedly named the ‘Zulfiqar-class,’ which is confusing as a host of other equipment in the Iranian military go by that name. Sutton believes that this small air defense boat has short-range surface-to-air missiles (likely the Nawab) as its primary armament.
Last year, the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) Navy received three indigenously-developed vessels equipped with sophisticated air defense systems.
At the time, Commander of the IRGC Navy, Rear Admiral Ali Reza Tangsir, claimed that the nation’s new speed boats use cutting-edge technology produced by domestic firms to dodge hostile radar.
Unlike other vessels equipped with cutting-edge missile defense systems to identify hostile targets, the Iranian Zulfiqar air-defense boat is more like “a sea-mobile air defense system like the Tor air defense system,” according to Sutton. Further, military observers have noted that the boat has a multi-functional AESA radar.
According to reports, the vertical launch system (VLS) is behind the cabin, and a sizable radome is over it. Whether this boat will be extensively used remains unknown because only one has reportedly been constructed.
Although some small boats usually carry MANPADS, this is the first small boat with a complete surface-to-air missile system.
It is pertinent to note that smaller boats are particularly susceptible to air assault. However, this is one of the many domestically-produced innovative military equipment that has drawn global attention.
This boat might be able to defend against short-range air attacks from a swarm of other vessels. This would become significant given that the global navies, including the United States, are also advancing work on unmanned surface vessels.
In September last year, the Iranian navy seized two US Navy Saildrone Explorer unmanned surface vessels (USVs) in the Red Sea. It released them later when the US dispatched two destroyers, the USS Nitze and USS Delbert D Black, and two helicopters to secure their release.
However, the incident gave the impression that the confrontation between the IRGC-N and rival navies could become more frequent with an enhanced Iranian naval presence in the region.
Against that backdrop, developing a sea-mobile air defense small boat could be an Iranian attempt at bolstering its defenses at sea.
This is even more significant since Tehran is reeling under international sanctions aimed at curtailing its military development and nuclear program. However, despite the international sanction regime getting tighter, the West Asian country has taken gigantic leaps in military development.
Nawab surface-to-air missile.
Iranian reports state that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps is strengthening its navy on a war footing. On the morning of March 9, pictures of newly outfitted speedboats and a new support ship were broadcast by Iranian media. Iran essentially has two navies: the state navy and the IRGC navy.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps navy announced it had added a new ocean-going warship and tens of missile-launching speed boats to its fleet. Iran International reported that the vessels were part of a significant upgrade, bolstering the country’s navy fleet.
The IRGC held an unveiling ceremony in the port city of Bandar Abbas. Among the new additions to the fleet are 99 Ashura and Tariq speed boats, modified from rocket launchers to missile launchers, and the Iranian-built Shahid Mahdavi destroyer, formerly a commercial ship.
The “Shahid Mahdavi ocean liner,” which would enable the IRGC to conduct long-distance missions, was claimed to be under construction in Iran last year, according to sources. Although it looks like an ocean liner, this vessel-which Iran International claims was once known as Sarvin-was initially a cargo ship and is now intended to serve as a floating base.

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