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Iran Deploys Yak-130 Trainer Jets Armed With Air-to-Air Missiles for Drone Interception Patrols.
Newly surfaced footage dated March 2, 2026, appears to show Iranian Air Force Yak-130 advanced trainers flying patrols over Tehran armed with short-range air-to-air missiles alongside MiG-29 fighters. The development suggests Tehran is expanding its layered air defense network to counter persistent drone activity, a move closely watched by U.S. and allied intelligence.
On March 2, 2026, newly surfaced images and videos on social media appeared to show Iranian Air Force Yak-130 advanced jet trainers conducting patrols over Tehran alongside MiG-29 fighter interceptors. The Yak-130s were observed carrying short-range air-to-air missiles, suggesting their use in counter-drone combat air patrols intended to safeguard the capital’s airspace amid heightened regional tensions and ongoing unmanned aircraft activity. Based on the available imagery and videos, the Yak-130s have seemingly been adapted for an operational air defense role that extends beyond their traditional training function, an evolution with notable implications for regional threat assessments and for U.S. and allied monitoring of Iran’s integrated air defense capabilities.
New imagery suggests Iran has deployed armed Yak-130 trainer jets alongside MiG-29 fighters for drone interception patrols over Tehran, expanding the aircraft’s operational air defense role (Picture Source: Iranian Air Force / Social media)
The new patrol pattern over Tehran reportedly combines legacy MiG-29B/UB Fulcrum interceptors with recently delivered Yak-130 “Mitten” jets in mixed formations. The Yak-130s have been observed carrying Russian-made R-73E infrared-guided air-to-air missiles, a configuration consistent with imagery released during previous national military exercises. These aircraft have been tracked flying visible patrol orbits over the capital, apparently equipped for counter-drone operations intended to deter or intercept unmanned aerial systems. While there has been no official Iranian confirmation of a dedicated counter-UAS assignment for these missions, the role is inferred from the observed weapons loadouts, patrol flight profiles, and contextual open-source reporting
The Yak-130 is a twin-engine, subsonic advanced jet trainer and lead-in fighter trainer designed to replicate the handling qualities of modern fourth- and fifth-generation combat aircraft. Originally developed jointly by Russia’s Yakovlev and Italy’s Aermacchi, the aircraft features a digital fly-by-wire flight control system, a glass cockpit with multi-function displays and a programmable flight control law architecture that allows it to emulate different fighter types during training. In its light-attack configuration, the Yak-130 offers up to nine external hardpoints with a maximum external stores load of around 3,000 kg, supporting gun pods, rocket pods, precision-guided munitions and short-range air-to-air missiles. Regional reports indicate that Iranian examples may be equipped with the Osa family of fire-control radars or equivalent sensors, capable of tracking multiple air targets and cueing weapons such as the R-73E, giving the aircraft a basic point-defense capability against intruding aircraft and drones.
The R-73E missile itself is a key enabler of the Yak-130’s new role. The R-73E is the export variant of a Soviet-designed within-visual-range air-to-air missile featuring a cryogenically cooled all-aspect infrared seeker, high off-boresight engagement capability and extreme maneuverability via thrust vectoring and aerodynamic control surfaces. In practice, this allows a pilot to cue the missile toward small, agile targets using a helmet-mounted sight and to prosecute engagements at high angles off the aircraft’s nose, an advantage when tracking low-altitude drones that may appear suddenly in the close-in battlespace. The missile’s performance class is broadly comparable to Western weapons such as the AIM-9X Sidewinder, though overall effectiveness will depend heavily on the quality of Iranian integration, pilot training and cueing systems. For drones with limited maneuvering and infrared signatures, the R-73E offers more than adequate kinematic performance, but its employment from a trainer-derived platform underscores that Iran is optimising existing assets rather than fielding a purpose-built counter-UAS interceptor.
The operational maturation of Iran’s Yak-130 fleet can be traced back to its first live missile employment during the Zolfaqar 1403 exercise in February 2025, when video footage and official statements showed a Yak-130 coordinating with two MiG-29s to intercept and destroy a target drone over Iran’s southern coastline. In that event, the MiG-29s executed the initial detection and interception, with the Yak-130 subsequently firing an R-73E to achieve the kill, demonstrating a coordinated tactic in which legacy fighters provide radar coverage and cueing while the trainer-cum-light-fighter executes the terminal engagement. Iranian media characterised the sortie as the Yak-130’s operational debut and emphasised its “advanced missiles” and mission systems, signalling an intent to use the type for more than syllabus training. The recent patrols over Tehran appear to build directly on those procedures, extending them from exercise environments to real-world air defense of the capital’s airspace against unmanned threats.
From an acquisition and force-structure perspective, the presence of Yak-130s over Tehran is the downstream effect of a broader arms relationship between Moscow and Tehran that has deepened since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Open sources indicate that Iran began receiving Yak-130 aircraft from Russia in 2023, with the first batch reported at Shahid Babaei Air Base in Isfahan that September. Several analyses describe the transfer as part of a wider package that likely includes Su-35 fighters, attack helicopters and radars, with the Yak-130 serving as both an advanced trainer for future Flanker pilots and a light combat platform in its own right. Additional reporting suggests that at least some of these deliveries may constitute barter in return for Iranian provision of Shahed-series one-way attack drones and other materiel to Russia’s war effort, underscoring the mutual dependence of the two sanctioned militaries. For U.S. defense planners, this highlights how Russian–Iranian military cooperation can simultaneously enhance Iran’s air training infrastructure and expand its inventory of aircraft suitable for niche roles such as counter-UAS patrols.
Employing Yak-130s as drone hunters over Tehran is a pragmatic adaptation to the realities of contemporary air threats. Drones and loitering munitions generally operate at lower speeds and altitudes than crewed strike aircraft, often flying predictable profiles with limited self-defense capability. In such an environment, high-end air superiority fighters offer more performance than strictly necessary, and their use for routine patrols would consume airframe life and fuel that Tehran likely prefers to preserve for higher-intensity contingencies. With a maximum speed around 650 mph and a combat radius on the order of 345 miles, the Yak-130 can remain on station in relatively tight orbits over the capital while carrying a modest AAM loadout and external fuel tanks, delivering sufficient endurance and maneuverability for visual-range engagements against drones without imposing the maintenance burden associated with Iran’s older U.S.-made fighters.
The mixed Yak-130/MiG-29 patrols suggest an attempt to reinforce the layered air defense network protecting Tehran, which already relies heavily on ground-based systems such as long-range surface-to-air missiles, point-defense batteries and overlapping radar coverage. By adding a lower-cost, trainer-based interceptor with modern short-range missiles into the orbit stack, Iranian commanders can expand their options for engaging small unmanned platforms that might slip through ground-based engagement zones or exploit terrain masking. The reported focus on countering Israeli Hermes-class UAVs and U.S. MQ-9-type remotely piloted aircraft situates these patrols squarely within the current confrontation between Iran on one side and the United States and its regional partners on the other, where unmanned systems are central to ISR, strike and battle-damage assessment. While the Yak-130 does not materially change the balance of power in any potential air-to-air confrontation with U.S. or allied fifth-generation fighters, it can complicate the operational environment for slower unmanned platforms and increase the density of Iran’s short-range engagement envelope around critical nodes in and near the capital.
Iran’s adaptation of the Yak-130 for air defense patrols highlights the accelerating pace at which regional actors are reconfiguring their air forces to confront the growing threat of unmanned and precision-guided systems. The move reflects a broader trend toward improvisation and multi-role employment of existing assets rather than reliance on costly, specialized interceptors. It also demonstrates Iran’s increasing ability, despite sanctions, to integrate Russian-origin equipment into a layered air defense network and to evolve tactics that maximize the utility of limited resources. For the United States and its allies, such developments underscore the urgency of preserving qualitative overmatch in stealth, electronic warfare, networked command and control, and dedicated counter-UAS capabilities. The appearance of armed Yak-130s orbiting over Tehran ultimately signals a shifting air defense landscape: one in which improvisation and adaptation are narrowing the technological gap and redefining what constitutes credible deterrence in contested skies.
Written by Teoman S. Nicanci – Defense Analyst, Army Recognition Group
Teoman S. Nicanci holds degrees in Political Science, Comparative and International Politics, and International Relations and Diplomacy from leading Belgian universities, with research focused on Russian strategic behavior, defense technology, and modern warfare. He is a defense analyst at Army Recognition, specializing in the global defense industry, military armament, and emerging defense technologies.