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European Tech Sovereignty
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Russia's drone delivery deadline lapses

2 min read
17:09UTC

Western intelligence said Russian drones would reach Iran by the end of March. It is 29 March, and no source has confirmed or denied delivery. The Prince Sultan strike used 29 drones of unknown origin.

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Key takeaway

The Russian drone delivery window closes this week with no public confirmation of completion.

Western intelligence placed completion of Russian drone deliveries to Iran at "end of March." EU High Representative Kaja Kallas confirmed the timeline at the G7 on 26 March , stating that Russia was providing electronic warfare guidance and drone employment training alongside the hardware 1. First deliveries began in early March. The Kremlin denies all.

Today is 29 March. No source has confirmed or denied delivery completion. The Prince Sultan Air Base strike on 27 to 28 March used 29 drones; whether any were Russian-supplied is unknown. If confirmed, Russian drones striking a base hosting 2,000 to 3,000 US personnel would cross the threshold from intelligence sharing to direct material participation in attacks on American forces.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Western intelligence agencies believe Russia has been delivering combat drones to Iran. The delivery was expected to complete by 'end of March.' It is now 29 March. If Russia has completed the delivery, and if Iranian forces used Russian drones in the attack on Prince Sultan Air Base (which killed and wounded US military personnel), then Russia has effectively provided the weapons used to attack American forces. No government has confirmed or denied this. The US has been notably silent on EU High Representative Kallas's accusation that Russia is 'helping Iran kill Americans.' That silence may be deliberate: acknowledging it would force a response.

First Reported In

Update #51 · Iran hits aluminium plants; Hormuz emptying

EU News· 29 Mar 2026
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