YIHA-III
| YIHA-III | |
|---|---|
YIHA-III at the Kuçovë Air Base in Albania. | |
| General information | |
| Type | UAV |
| Role | Loitering munition |
| National origin | Turkey Pakistan |
| Manufacturer | Baykar NASTP |
| Status | In service |
| Primary users | Turkey Pakistan |
| Number built | Unknown |
| History | |
| In service | Since 2023 |
The YIHA-III, also known as Sivrisinek (Turkish: Mosquito), is a Turkish-Pakistani low-cost, high-precision unmanned aerial vehicle and loitering munition developed jointly by Baykar and NASTP.[1][2][3]
History
[edit]The existence of the YIHA-III was first unveiled in 2023 during a visit by the Commander of the Turkish Air Force at the NASTP Alpha facility in Rawalpindi. However, scarce public information was available on it.[4] The drone eventually came into public view in early 2024 after reports emerged of "mystery drones" which were sighted striking Russian military infrastructure in Belgorod during the war in Ukraine.[5] It was officially revealed by Baykar at the SAHA 2026 defence exhibition.
Design
[edit]The YIHA features an UMTAS ATGM warhead fitted to a tubular body with a fixed tricycle style landing gear which enables it to launch from a runway as well as a catapult system. After launch, the drone can loiter in the air, detecting a target, and then attack it from the air with a vertical dive. The drone can also be used in swarm mode.[6] It uses a small piston engine driving a pusher propeller, fixed wheeled undercarriage, and a gimbaled electro-optical (EO) camera on its nose that enables the operator to find targets during flight.[7] It is designed to operate at extended range, flying at altitudes of up to 4,000 ft with a service ceiling of 10,000 ft.
The drone is produced in two variants: the UM variant is a simplified, lower-cost variant with communications ranging out to 10 km+, a flight time of 9+ hours and a maximum operational range of 1,000 km, according to Baykar. The UMX is an enhanced variant with AI-enabled guidance and improved data connectivity with command and control (C2) elements. The UMX is designed to relay communications via other Baykar UAVs including the TB2, TB3 and Akıncı. This includes the transmission of video links and digital data, providing a secondary intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) capability during flight. The UMX variant can maintain communications and engage ‘fire-and-forget' mode at ranges of over 80 km, however its maximum operational range is shorter than the UM variant at 900 km. The UMX has an AI-assisted EO camera, which provides an additional terminal guidance capability on top of the global navigation satellite services (GNSS) guidance employed by the UM variant. Both variants have top cruising speeds of 102 km/h, with a maximum speed of 130 km/h likely achieved during the terminal flight phase.[8]
Combat use
[edit]Russo-Ukraine war
[edit]In February 2024, reports emerged of a "mystery drone" used by Ukrainian forces to strike targets inside the Russian city of Belgorod, which is approximately 40 km from the Ukrainian border. Further analysis of pictures of the drone's debris later revealed it was a YIHA-III.[2][1]
Syrian civil war
[edit]The Turkish military has utilized the YIHA drone against High-value targets during operations in Northern Syria.[1]
Pakistan
[edit]The YIHA drones in service with the Pakistan Air Force have been deployed in anti-terrorist operations in Balochistan and Khyber Paktunkhwa. In 2024, the Pakistan Armed Forces carried out Operation Marg Bar Sarmachar in which they targeted terrorist hideouts located in Iran's Sistan and Baluchestan Province.[1]
In May 2025, many YIHA drones were deployed in combat missions against various Indian military targets both in Indian Administered Kashmir and mainland India as part of Operation Bunyan-un-Marsoos.[9]
In February and March 2026, YIHA-III loitering munitions were deployed against military bases of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan during Operation Ghazab-lil-Haq.[10]
Democratic Republic of the Congo
[edit]Between January 21 and February 1, 2026, Bangoka International Airport, located outside Kisangani, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, was targeted by multiple loitering munitions launched by the March 23 Movement. Debris recovered from the scene were consistent with YIHA drones.[11] It is believed that the drones were supplied by the Rwandan Defence Forces. The Armed Forces of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (Forces armées de la République démocratique du Congo: FARDC) subsequently shot down two more loitering munitions near the village of Mikenge, Nord Kivu province, on 10 March 2026 which suggested widespread usage with M23.[12]
Operators
[edit]
Pakistan: Locally manufactures the drone. Operationalized with the airforce in early 2024 at PAF Base Murid.[13][14][15]
Albania: In October 2024, Albania's PM Edi Rama said Turkey would donate kamikaze drones, emphasizing Albania would not use them to attack. In March 2025, the Albanian Air Force began operating the Byker YIHA-III, first deployed at Kuçovë.[16][17]
Turkey
Ukraine: Unknown units acquired in early 2024.[2]
Sudan: Unknown units were provided by Turkey.[18]
Alleged users
[edit]Specifications
[edit]General characteristics
- Powerplant: 1 × DLE-170 Internal Combustion Engine
Performance
Armament
- 1 × 35 kg OMTAS high-explosive warhead
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Albanian Air Force Deploys Combat-Proven YIHA-III Kamikaze Drones". Global Defense Insight. 2025-03-19.
- ^ a b c Sapwood, Olivia (2024-02-11). "Unidentified drone discovered in the Belgorod region". Militarnyi.
- ^ "Swarm & Strike: How Pakistan's Drone Superiority 'Tested' Indian Defenses & Questioned India's Very Capable AD Systems: OPED". Eurasian Times. 2025-05-11.
- ^ "The Mysterious UAVs at PAF's Photo". TurDef. 2024-01-02.
- ^ Русанов, Андрей (2024-02-12). "Таинственный беспилотник NASTP YX нашли на Белгородщине: эксперт раскрыл, откуда он взялся" (in Ukrainian).
- ^ Malyasov, Dylan (2025-05-10). "India recovers Turkish-linked kamikaze drone wreckage".
- ^ Binnie, Jeremy (27 April 2026). "Baykar displays previously little-known one-way attack UAV". Janes. Archived from the original on 20 May 2026. Retrieved 20 May 2026.
- ^ Sauer, Tristan (7 May 2026). "SAHA 2026: Baykar unveils Sivrisinek one-way attack UAV". Janes. Archived from the original on 20 May 2026. Retrieved 20 May 2026.
- ^ "Pakistan-Turkey Jointly Developed YIHA-III Kamikaze Drones Showcase Strengthening Defence Ties". Times of Islamabad. 2025-08-14.
- ^ Anderson (@AndErson224088) (March 2, 2026). "Report on the use of YIHA-III drones in Operation Ghazab-lil-Haq". X (formerly Twitter). Retrieved March 2, 2026.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Terrogence Global Team (February 18, 2026). "TGA0870 – M23 Rebels Target Kisangani Airport Using YIHA-III Loitering Munitions". Terrogence.com. Retrieved May 1, 2026.
- ^ Janes (March 13, 2026). "DRC armed forces' downing of M23's YIHA-III loitering munition indicates their future use is very likely". Janes.com. Retrieved May 1, 2026.
- ^ "Pakistan Air Force Officially Commissions New Combat Drones". Global Defense Insight. 2024-01-02.
- ^ "Induction and Operationalization Ceremony Held at Operational Air Base of Pakistan Air Force". We News English. 2024-01-02.
- ^ "Armed forces fully prepared to thwart any aggression: COAS". E Tribune. 2024-01-02.
- ^ [1]
- ^ [2]
- ^ Vcard. "The Sudan War Enters a New Phase: Implications for Global Security". Steptoe. Retrieved 2025-12-02.
- ^ Sapwood, Olivia (2025-03-24). "Albania Receives Unknown Strike Drones Previously Used in Ukraine". Militarnyi.