Mar
5
Everything you need to know about Iranian Qiam-1 ballistic missile launched in UAE Technical Review
The Qiam-1 is an Iranian short-range ballistic missile developed as part of the country’s indigenous missile modernization program.
The system was designed and manufactured by the Shahid Hemmat Industrial Group, a key division of Iran’s Aerospace Industries Organization.
- Publicly unveiled in 2010, the missile represents an evolution of earlier Scud-derived missiles used by Iran.
- It is operated by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Aerospace Force (IRGC-AF) as part of Iran’s regional strike and deterrence capabilities.
- The Qiam-1 is intended to engage strategic and operational targets across the Middle East.
The Qiam-1 is an Iranian short-range ballistic missile derived from the Scud family, with an estimated range of up to 800 km and capable of carrying a warhead of around 750 kg.
The missile features a finless design and inertial guidance system intended to improve aerodynamic efficiency and complicate interception by missile defense systems.
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The United Arab Emirates (UAE) Armed Forces intercepted and destroyed a coordinated wave of Iranian missiles and drones aimed at the country, preventing the projectiles from reaching critical infrastructure, according to the UAE Ministry of Defense. During a March 3, 2026, press briefing, Brigadier General Staff Pilot Abdulnasser Al Humaidi confirmed that Emirati air defense units neutralized multiple aerial threats, including at least one Iranian Qiam-class short-range ballistic missile, demonstrating the operational readiness and effectiveness of the UAE’s layered air and missile defense architecture.
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Brigadier General Staff Pilot Abdulnasser Al Humaidi, spokesperson for the UAE Ministry of Defense, speaks during a press briefing on March 3, 2026, confirming that UAE air defense forces intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial threats, including a Qiam-class short-range ballistic missile. (Picture video footage: Emirates News)
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Brigadier General Staff Pilot Abdulnasser Al Humaidi, spokesperson for the UAE Ministry of Defense, speaks during a press briefing on March 3, 2026, confirming that UAE air defense forces intercepted and destroyed multiple Iranian aerial threats, including a Qiam-class short-range ballistic missile. (Picture video footage: Emirates News)
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The U.S. Army has fired an air-launched effect from an AH-64E Apache, expanding the attack helicopter’s ability to sense, cue, and strike from standoff range in contested airspace while reducing the need for the manned platform to push deep into air-defense engagement zones.
- The milestone was achieved during the Cross Domain Fires 26 Concept Focused Warfighting Experiment at Yuma Proving Ground, Arizona, as Army Futures Command and DEVCOM organizations highlighted in official posts tied to the CFWE26 effort.
- In capability terms, it signals a practical step toward Apache-enabled manned-unmanned teaming, where deployable effects can extend reconnaissance, targeting, and survivability for the wider force.

U.S. Army AH-64E Apache crews employed an air-launched effect during CFWE26 at Yuma Proving Ground, showing how deployable uncrewed payloads can extend standoff sensing and strike options while reducing helicopter exposure in contested airspace (Picture source: U.S. DoW).
The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has reportedly introduced a new loitering munition, the Hadid-110 suicide drone, also known as Dalahu, in recent operational strikes amid escalating hostilities with Israel and the United States.
The drone’s appearance suggests Iran is fielding a faster class of one-way attack UAV intended to supplement or replace the slower Shahed family widely used in previous conflicts.
The system surfaced after coordinated strikes on 28 February 2026 targeted Iranian facilities and military officials, marking a possible shift in Tehran’s drone employment strategy.
If confirmed, the Hadid-110 could represent an effort to challenge increasingly layered air defense networks deployed across the Middle East. Read more.
The Hadid-110 propulsion system enables a cruise speed of approximately 510 kilometers per hour, nearly three times the speed of the Shahed-136 (Picture source: Screenshot of an IRGC video)
The North American Aerospace Defense Command announced on March 5, 2026, that it detected and tracked two Russian Tu-142 maritime patrol aircraft operating within the Alaskan and Canadian Air Defense Identification Zones.
According to NORAD, the aircraft remained in international airspace and did not enter the sovereign airspace of the United States or Canada.
A combined response force including
- U.S. Air Force F-35 Lightning II and F-22 Raptor fighters,
- four KC-135 Stratotanker aerial refueling aircraft,
- an E-3 Sentry airborne early warning aircraft,
- two Royal Canadian Air Force CF-18 Hornet fighters, and
- a CC-150 Polaris tanker
The interception reflects routine NORAD operations to track foreign military aviation approaching North American airspace. Read more.
A NORAD F-16 Fighting Falcon intercepts a Russian Tu-142 Bear F/J in the Alaska Air Defense Identification Zone during Operation Noble Eagle in September 2024. (Picture source: US DoD)
On 4 March 2026, a United States Navy fast attack submarine sank an Iranian combatant vessel in the Indian Ocean with a single Mk 48 heavyweight torpedo, Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said during a press briefing on Wednesday. Presented as the first successful sinking of an enemy warship by a U.S. submarine since 1945, the strike marks a significant operational milestone in modern undersea warfare. The engagement, described by Caine as achieving “immediate effect” and sending the ship to the bottom, underscores the combination of stealth, reach and precision that underpins U.S. submarine operations today. Beyond the tactical result, the episode highlights the central role of the Mk 48 torpedo in U.S. naval doctrine.
A U.S. Navy fast attack submarine sank an Iranian combatant vessel in the Indian Ocean with a single Mk 48 heavyweight torpedo, marking the first confirmed wartime sinking of an enemy warship by a U.S. submarine since World War II
(Picture Source: U.S. Navy / U.S. Department of War / Lockheed Martin)

Canadian authorities are considering the option of dividing the procurement between Germany’s ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems and South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean, acquiring six submarines from each supplier. (Picture source: TKMS and Hanwha Ocean)
Canada is considering splitting its planned purchase of 12 diesel-electric submarines equally between Germany’s TKMS Type 212CD and South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean KSS-III Batch-II proposals. The option would allocate six submarines from each supplier under the Canadian Patrol Submarine Project to replace the Victoria-class fleet. A final decision could be announced as early as April 2026 as Ottawa finishes evaluating operational, industrial, and cost implications.

Canadian authorities are considering the option of dividing the procurement between Germany’s ThyssenKrupp Marine Systems and South Korea’s Hanwha Ocean, acquiring six submarines from each supplier. (Picture source: TKMS and Hanwha Ocean)
U.S. Air Force Global Strike Command fired an unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile from Vandenberg Space Force Base, validating the force’s ability to deploy multiple reentry vehicles and reinforcing the readiness of the land-based leg of America’s nuclear triad.
- The launch, designated Glory Trip 255, paired a legacy ICBM air vehicle with two test re-entry vehicles and sent them thousands of miles downrange to the Kwajalein Atoll target area in the Marshall Islands, where instrumentation supports precision scoring and system diagnostics.
Air Force officials emphasized the event was scheduled years in advance and “not in response to world events,” yet its timing lands amid the most acute escalation risk in years as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran enters its first week and European nuclear signaling intensifies.
Unarmed Minuteman III ICBM launched from Vandenberg to validate long-range reliability and multi–reentry vehicle deployment, demonstrating rapid-response, silo-based nuclear strike capability with intercontinental reach and high-precision payload delivery against hardened targets (Picture source: U.S. DoW).


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