At a closed Pentagon briefing this week, U.S. military officials quietly acknowledged something the battlefield has already made painfully clear: American and Israeli air-defence systems still have no truly efficient countermeasure against Iran’s Shahed-136 drones.
These $20,000 disposable kamikaze drones are forcing some of the world’s most advanced defence systems to respond with interceptors that cost hundreds of thousands — sometimes millions — of dollars per shot.
A single Patriot interceptor can cost roughly $3 million. Even smaller air-defence missiles such as those used by Israel can cost around $400,000 each.
The result is a deeply lopsided cost exchange — one that defence contractors may love, but military planners increasingly fear.
In simple terms, the world’s most expensive military machine is now playing an endless game of whack-a-mole against extremely cheap drones.
And the math doesn’t look good.
The strategic problem is not just the price difference. It’s scale.
Iran has demonstrated the ability to manufacture Shahed-type drones in massive numbers — potentially hundreds of thousands — using relatively simple components. They require no pilot, no runway, and minimal logistics. Launching them is easy. Stopping them is not.
This creates a dangerous imbalance: expensive interceptor inventories are being depleted far faster than they can realistically be replaced.
And that’s only the beginning of the concern inside the Pentagon.
Because the Shahed drones represent the lowest tier of Iran’s strike capabilities.
Beyond them lie faster and far more complex systems — including hypersonic weapons like the Fattah-2 — designed to travel at extreme speeds and perform evasive maneuvers.
Current missile defence systems were never designed to reliably intercept weapons traveling at Mach 10–15 while maneuvering during the terminal phase of flight.
Patriot batteries were built for ballistic missiles and aircraft.
THAAD systems are optimized for high-altitude ballistic threats.
Neither system was built to easily stop maneuvering hypersonic glide vehicles.
And U.S. defense planners know it.
They knew it long before the first bombs fell on February 28.
Which leaves an uncomfortable question hanging in the air:
If modern air defence struggles to stop a $20,000 drone — what happens when the faster weapons arrive?
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