Sunday, June 28, 2026

I kilogram is about 2.2 plus pounds

 So, these small "hand grenade sized drones" are a few kilograms so likely under 10 pounds flying around as a quadracopter attached to an explosive device with a fiber optics spool to prevent electronic signatures so they are very hard to detect until someone dies from one anywhere on earth.

This is a may 2nd 2026 article about Hezbollah Fiber optic Drones that have up to today killed at least 12 Israeli Soldiers in Lebanon

 It's important to remember that around 30,000 to 35,000 Russian soldiers are killed every month with these types of "hand grenade Drones" in Ukraine which leave walking around soldiers even taking a pee dead before they see it coming usually. Technology other than netting can't stop these drones so far. So, many more likely will die in the future if they are in the open on all developed nations battlegrounds on earth now without a lot of netting deployed to stop these drones which cannot be electronically jammed if they have fiber optic cables that are miles long running out behind them from a spool.

begin quote from: striking
World Middle East

Hezbollah deploys a potent new weapon designed to evade Israeli detection

Relatives and friends grieve during the funeral of Israeli soldier Sgt. Idan Fooks, who was killed in combat in southern Lebanon, in Petah Tikva on April 27, 2026.

The explosive-laden quadcopter skimmed above the rooftops of southern Lebanon, navigating with precision between bombed-out buildings and along dirt roads. The drone gave its operator a clear first-person picture of its target: an Israeli tank with soldiers standing nearby.

At the top of the picture, in white letters, were two words.

“BOMB READY”

The quadcopter is a fiber-optic drone, experts say, a weapon Hezbollah has increasingly used with deadly accuracy. The drones are difficult to stop and even harder to detect, giving their operators a high-resolution view of the target without emitting any signal that could be jammed.

The drones are “immune to communication jamming, and in the absence of an electronic signature, it is also impossible to discover the location from which they were launched,” wrote Yehoshua Kalisky, a senior researcher at Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies.

In a sleekly produced Hezbollah video from Sunday, the quadcopter drone, weighing no more than a few kilograms, hits its target as the Israeli soldiers appear to be completely unaware of its approach. According to the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), the attack killed 19-year-old Sgt. Idan Fooks and injured several others. Hezbollah then launched more drones at a rescue helicopter that arrived at the scene to evacuate the wounded troops.

Fiber-optic drones are effective in their simplicity: Instead of a wireless signal that controls the drone remotely, the fiber-optic cable hardwires the drone directly to its operator.

Because fiber optic cables are so thin and light – virtually invisible to the naked eye – the cable can stretch for up to 9.3 miles (15 kilometers) or more, an Israeli military source told CNN, allowing the operator to remain a safe distance away while the drone feeds him a crystal-clear, first-person image of the target.

The IDF has relied on its technological advantage to counter drone warfare, jamming the signals and frequencies used by drone operators to control the devices in order to stop them before they reach Israeli soldiers. But without a signal, the IDF is unable to electronically interfere with the control of fiber-optic drones and also faces a greater challenge in detecting the incoming projectile in the first place.

“Beyond physical barriers like nets, there is little that can be done,” the Israeli military source said. “It’s a low-tech system adapted for asymmetric warfare.”

Fiber-optic drones first appeared in large numbers on the battlefield in Ukraine, where Russian forces used them with great effect, extending their range even further. Russia was also able to connect the drone’s fiber-optic cable to a base unit, which was then linked to a drone operator. That added connection distanced the operator from the drone itself, protecting the human and making him even harder to target. Russia’s ability to produce the drones, or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), en masse meant Moscow could cut Ukrainian supply lines with drone attacks well behind the front lines.

Hezbollah’s targets are different. Israel is operating in southern Lebanon so close to its own bases that there are no substantial supply lines to target. Instead, Hezbollah’s drone operators have hunted Israeli troops in southern Lebanon and northern Israel, well within the range of the weapons.

“This is a capable system that, in the right hands with an experienced operator against a force that’s not expecting such a drone to attack, it can be quite effective,” said Samuel Bendett, an adjunct senior fellow with the Center for New American Security. “Even against a force that knows about this and is taking precautions, it can still be deadly.”

Israel believes Hezbollah imports the civilian drones from China or Iran, the source said, then marries each one to a grenade or similar explosive device. The result is a nearly invisible, highly precise weapon that allows Hezbollah to carry out targeted – if small-scale – attacks against Israeli forces. China has previously denied supplying weapons to any parties in the conflict and has stressed that it fulfils its international obligations.

While limited in how much damage they can do, the low-cost devices are a potent weapon for Hezbollah.

“Hezbollah already has a fairly sophisticated drone arsenal,” Bendett told CNN. “It has a lot of experienced people with a lot of different experience in UAVs.”

First responders gather near a crater left by an Iranian missile on March 24, 2026 in Tel Aviv, Israel.

For years, Hezbollah worked with Iran’s financial and technological backing to build a massive rocket and missile arsenal. Before the Gaza war, Israeli officials assessed that Hezbollah had approximately 150,000 rockets, including long-range and precision munitions. But throughout the war, as a result of Israel targeting the arsenal and Hezbollah firing the rockets, Israeli officials have estimated that Hezbollah retains just 10% of its rockets.

Unable to match the Israeli military’s power or technology, the Iran-backed militia has instead employed asymmetric warfare, much as Iran has done against the United States and Israel.

The IDF has countered by using nets and other physical barriers – as seen in Ukraine – to prevent incoming drones from reaching troops, but an Israeli military official acknowledged it’s an imperfect solution to a low-tech problem.

“It’s not foolproof – not as much as we would like,” said the official. The IDF is working with its intelligence directorate to find better ways to counter fiber-optic drones, the official said, but the danger remains.

“It’s a threat that we are still adapting to,” the official said. The problem is magnified when Hezbollah launches multiple drones at once, potentially overwhelming a system that’s not fully up to the task of identifying the incoming drones.

“Hezbollah is learning fast. They are trying to coordinate attacks, so it’s a threat.”

CNN’s Sarah Tamimi contributed to this report.

partial quote from previous article on Hezbollah Drones

I was reading how the Israeli Army was completely unprepared for small "what I call" hand grenade drones run by fiber optic lines 10 miles or more long that have killed already at least 12 Israeli Soldiers. It's also one reason why American Soldiers wouldn't be walking around in Iran because they would be sitting ducks too if they walked around anywhere in Iran now.  

The time for walking around armies is over at least in developed nations wars. Soldiers can no longer survive walking around on a battlefield (any soldiers) without getting a lethal drone up their ass from behind.

So, world developed nations battlefields likely won't have unprotected soldiers walking around anywhere now anymore Unless they are inside Army Tanks or armored personnel carriers with bullet proof windows. Even stepping outside to take a pee 24 hours a day soldiers will be blown up by Drones on battlefields all over the world now! 

Begin quote:

Footage recorded by the explosive-laden devices shows them, one after another, finding and striking their targets: the weak spot on an Israeli Merkava tank. An Iron Dome air defense battery. A group of unsuspecting Israeli soldiers.

Fiber-optic, first-person view (FPV) drones have become a key weapon in the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah’s war against Israel in recent months – bypassing Israel’s sophisticated defense systems by duplicating an asymmetric warfare tactic that first emerged in the Russia-Ukraine war.

At least 12 Israeli soldiers have been killed by Hezbollah’s drones since the conflict reignited in March – one third of Israeli fatalities in Lebanon – and the military is scrambling to find ways to counter the threat.

Israel’s military and tech industry race to counter Hezbollah’s latest threat: Fiber optic Hezbollah Drones have already killed at least 12 Israeli soldiers in Lebanon: Full Article

14 hours agoFiber-optic drones have become a key weapon for Lebanese militant group Hezbollah in recent months. Israel's military and tech firms are ...
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11 hours agoAt least 12 Israeli soldiers have been killed by Hezbollah's drones since the conflict reignited in March – one third of Israeli fatalities in ...
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World Middle East

Israel’s military and tech industry race to counter Hezbollah’s latest threat

<p>As negotiations to end the war in Lebanon continue, one threat has emerged on the battlefield: Hezbollah's growing use of small first-person-view drones. They’ve proven effective, killing more than a dozen Israeli troops — a cheap but lethal tactic that Ukraine knows all too well from its war with Russia, and one it urged Israel to take seriously. CNN's Jeremy Diamond examines what Israel is now doing to respond.</p>
Israel scrambles to counter Hezbollah drone threat
2:35
Tel Aviv — 

The small drones cruise – undetected – over the skies of southern Lebanon and northern Israel, searching for targets.

Footage recorded by the explosive-laden devices shows them, one after another, finding and striking their targets: the weak spot on an Israeli Merkava tank. An Iron Dome air defense battery. A group of unsuspecting Israeli soldiers.

Fiber-optic, first-person view (FPV) drones have become a key weapon in the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah’s war against Israel in recent months – bypassing Israel’s sophisticated defense systems by duplicating an asymmetric warfare tactic that first emerged in the Russia-Ukraine war.

At least 12 Israeli soldiers have been killed by Hezbollah’s drones since the conflict reignited in March – one third of Israeli fatalities in Lebanon – and the military is scrambling to find ways to counter the threat.

Unlike the drones Hezbollah has previously deployed against Israel, the fiber-optic FPV drones – often no larger than a dinner plate – are extremely difficult to detect. The key to their lethality is a spool carrying miles of thin, fiber-optic cable that tethers the drones to their pilot, which means they do not emit any radio signals. That makes them both extremely difficult to detect and impossible to jam using electronic warfare methods.

“The drone threat is a challenge, but we will overcome it,” the Israeli military’s chief of staff Eyal Zamir said last month, adding that “operational and technological solutions” are being developed and implemented.

Drones used by Hezbollah are effective in their simplicity. Instead of a wireless signal that controls the drone remotely, the fiber-optic cable hardwires the drone directly to its operator.

Race for countermeasures

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) began by deploying hundreds of thousands of square meters of mesh netting – which can catch the drones before they reach their target – to protect troops in southern Lebanon and bases in northern Israel. It has also provided soldiers with shotguns and fragmenting rounds that can be used to take down approaching drones at close range.

But in order for those weapons to be effective against drones, soldiers first have to know they’re coming.

The IDF has yet to disclose how – or whether – it has improved its ability to identify and track these drones, but it has launched an appeal to private tech and defense companies to develop and deploy effective countermeasures.

The Israeli military began by deploying hundreds of thousands of square meters of mesh netting – which can catch drones before they reach their target – to protect troops in southern Lebanon and bases in northern Israel.

Last month, many of those companies gathered alongside military officials to address what was clearly an urgent problem requiring novel solutions. The firms included those developing non-radio frequency sensors to identify fiber-optic drones and others working on ways to intercept and neutralize the drones before they can hit their target.

Among them was Shai Kurianski, the chief technology officer and co-founder of Airwayz, which says it has developed software that can manage low-altitude airspace and identify potential threats. It’s a technology that was most recently put to use by the Miami Police Department to help protect a FIFA World Cup stadium from drone threats.

Because Hezbollah’s fiber-optic drones are so hard to detect, experts say multiple types of sensors are often needed simultaneously to accurately identify incoming threats – among them, optical, acoustic, radar and laser-based systems.

Airwayz says its system fuses data from multiple sensors to rapidly identify friendly and hostile drones alike.

“Most of the warnings that the soldiers have – it’s when they hear the drone coming and they have about three, four seconds,” Kurianski said. “If you will give them 20 seconds of warning or 30 seconds of warning, the results will be completely different.”

‘It’s our children out there’

Like others in Israel’s high-tech industry, Kurianski is motivated by a sense of urgency, as Israeli soldiers appear to be largely defenseless against this new Hezbollah threat.

“It’s our children out there in Lebanon that are getting those FPV explosives and we will not wait with that,” Kurianski said.

But alongside that sense of urgency, many Israelis also feel a frustration that the Israeli military was insufficiently prepared for a threat that many saw coming.

Fiber-optic drones first emerged on the battlefield in Ukraine two years ago. Ukrainian officials have said they warned their Israeli counterparts about the danger and offered to help Israel prepare countermeasures for the day these cheap drones – which cost only $300 to $400 each – fell into the hands of Israel’s enemies.

“We don’t see much interest or appetite from the Israeli leadership in this area,” Ukraine’s ambassador to Israel, Yevgen Korniychuk, told Israel’s Ynet news site in May. “I don’t want to speculate about the reasons for that. I often hear frustration about the fact that Israel is missing an opportunity to save more lives of its soldiers.”

It is a deadly reality that has become undeniable as Hezbollah has posted dozens of videos showing its drones infiltrating Israeli bases and forward operating positions, and targeting Israeli troops in the field.

Current and former Israeli military officials have also acknowledged that Israel was underprepared for the drone threat.

Brig. Gen. Yaron Rosen (Res.), the former chief of the IDF’s Cyber Staff, said the military was “completely overwhelmed” by the multitude of threats and arenas it has been engaged in.

“Everyone was talking about it like, ‘Guys it’s coming,’ but no one really knew and other things were occupying our minds, especially Iran,” said Rosen, who is also the executive chairman of Airwayz.

He said the IDF is now “doing everything it can” to close the gap and hopes to see a “sharp decline” in the effectiveness of Hezbollah’s drones “in the next few months.”