Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are not new to Southeast Asia. Thailand acquired an unmanned reconnaissance capability already in 2001, when the Royal Thai Army purchased four IAI Searcher Mk. II reconnaissance UAVs from Israel. Several more drone acquisitions would follow (mainly from Israel) in the following decades, ultimately resulting in the expansive unmanned arsenal in service with the Royal Thai Army, Air Force and Navy today. This meanwhile also includes an increasing number of locally-designed UAVs or types produced under license from China.
The goal of this list is to comprehensively catalogue Nigeria's current
inventory of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs).
In an effort to streamline the list and avoid unnecessary confusion,
this list only includes military-grade UAVs or military drones
associated with Nigeria's defence
industry. UAVs that underwent testing by the Nigerian military but were
ultimately not acquired (such as the RQ-11 Raven and Schiebel Camcopter
S-100) are not included in the list.
Ethiopia recently caught headlines for its acquisition of Mohajer-6 unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) from Iran. Historically a close ally of Israel and the United Arab Emirates, the choice for an Iranian system is remarkable to say the least, and might have been motivated more by sheer desperation for an UCAV capability to change its fortunes in the ongoing Tigray War rather than a true preference for the Iranian Mohajer-6 over contemporary UCAVs from China or Turkey.