A Saronic Corsair USV (unmanned surface vessel), a 24-foot autonomous drone boat operated by the US Navy's Bahrain-based Task Force 59, located and recovered both AH-64 Apache crew from the Strait of Hormuz within about two hours 1. Task Force 59 is the Fifth Fleet's experimental unit for integrating unmanned and AI-driven systems into Gulf operations. The recovery resolves the open question from the helicopter's loss near the strait , the same downing CENTCOM later cited as its casus belli.
Specialist outlets The War Zone and DroneXL reported it as the first unmanned-vessel personnel recovery in real-world combat 2. That historical-first framing rests on their reporting, not on a CENTCOM statement, so the milestone claim travels with their byline rather than the Navy's. The recovery itself is confirmed; the place it holds in the record is the contested part.
The geography supplies the irony. Task Force 59 runs out of Bahrain, the same base Iran struck hours later when the IRGC hit the US Fifth Fleet headquarters. A unit that had just demonstrated a US unmanned-systems capability found its own home port on Iran's target list the same day. Whether Tehran's planners aimed at the asset or simply at the address, the optics of an unmanned-systems unit struck on the day it proved itself will travel further than the two-hour rescue time.
