A grainy, fast-moving video circulating online offers a stark glimpse into the future of warfare: a small First-Person View (FPV) drone gliding unchallenged over the US Victory Airbase outside Baghdad before crashing into a building.The footage is less about the damage it caused—and more about what it reveals. FPV drones, once hobbyist racing devices, are now among the most disruptive and precise weapons on the modern battlefield.
What are FPV drones?
FPV drones are small, remotely piloted quadcopters that transmit live video back to an operator, allowing them to “see” exactly what the drone sees in real time. This turns them into low-cost, high-precision guided weapons.According to Forbes, unlike traditional rockets or mortars—which are unguided and largely inaccurate—FPVs can search, identify, and strike targets with surgical precision. They can fly for several kilometres, manoeuvre through tight spaces, and hit specific weak points such as fuel tanks, aircraft fuselages or ammunition dumps.In the Baghdad attack, the drone appears to conduct a sweep before striking—something conventional weapons simply cannot do.

Why airbases are especially vulnerable
Airbases are dense with high-value targets: parked aircraft, fuel depots, munitions stockpiles, and maintenance hangars. Historically, attacks on such facilities relied on indirect fire like rockets—cheap, but largely ineffective due to their inaccuracy.FPV drones change that equation entirely.Their ability to loiter, scout and then strike makes them uniquely suited to exploiting the inherent vulnerabilities of airbases. The Baghdad footage shows a drone flying unopposed for nearly two minutes—suggesting a glaring gap in low-altitude defences.Even a small warhead can have outsized impact if precisely placed. A hit on a fuel truck or an armed aircraft could trigger catastrophic secondary explosions.
Lessons from Ukraine’s drone war
The growing threat is not theoretical. During the Operation Spiderweb, Ukrainian forces demonstrated just how devastating FPVs can be.Drones were covertly transported near Russian airbases and launched in swarms. Operators—some connected via cellular networks, others assisted by AI—guided them onto parked aircraft. Dozens of planes were reportedly damaged or destroyed, with drones targeting fuel tanks and munitions for maximum effect.Crucially, each drone carried only a small payload. Precision—not explosive power—did the damage.
The fiber-optic evolution
What makes the Baghdad strike more concerning is the apparent use of fiber-optic guidance.Unlike radio-controlled drones, fiber-linked FPVs are physically tethered to the operator through a thin cable. This makes them immune to electronic jamming—one of the primary defences against drones—and allows them to fly extremely low without losing signal.Such drones can hug the ground, evade radar, and remain virtually invisible to traditional detection systems. Their range, once limited, has expanded rapidly to tens of kilometres.Their appearance in Iraq suggests a troubling diffusion of advanced battlefield technology, potentially with external backing.
Why they are so hard to stop
Defending against FPVs is proving far more difficult than countering larger drones.Conventional air defence systems are designed for bigger, faster threats. Small quadcopters flying low and slow often evade radar or are mistaken for birds or background noise. Acoustic detection is unreliable in noisy environments like airbases, and fiber-optic drones emit no radio signals to intercept.Even when detected, the response window is extremely short.Emerging countermeasures—from AI-enabled tracking systems to interceptor drones and directed-energy weapons—are still evolving. But none offer a foolproof shield, especially against coordinated swarm attacks.
A warning shot
The Baghdad strike caused limited visible damage. But that may be beside the point.The real message lies in the ease with which the drone penetrated a high-security military installation. The next attack may not be so restrained—or so lucky.With tensions rising across the region, and critical sites like Iran’s Kharg Island well within FPV range, the proliferation of these low-cost precision weapons is rapidly reshaping the threat landscape.






