This development falls within the broader context of Defense & Security activity in Middle East. Current reporting indicates: The report said that many of the drones were downed by Iran in flight, but that others had been destroyed on the ground when Iran targeted US military bases in the Gulf.
Bloomberg reported that the US may have lost up to 30 MQ-9 Reaper drones in the war, a higher number than the 24 that a report released this month by the Congressional Research Service noted. The $1bn price tag adds to the cost of the war on Iran, which a senior official at the Pentagon told Reuters in May reached up to $29bn.
Iran has reportedly destroyed approximately 30 MQ-9 Reaper drones, which constitutes about 20 percent of the US's pre-war fleet, valued at nearly $1 billion. This significant loss comes amid the ongoing conflict that began in late February 2026, following the US and Israel's coordinated military strikes against Iran.
The drones were primarily lost due to Iranian air defenses, with some destroyed on the ground during missile strikes targeting US military bases in the Gulf. The US military's current fleet of MQ-9 Reapers has dwindled to around 135 aircraft, falling short of the Air Force's minimum operational requirement of 189.
The Pentagon has also reported that the overall financial burden of the conflict for the US has escalated to approximately $29 billion. While the US military is gradually phasing out the MQ-9 Reaper, General Atomics continues to produce the drone for foreign clients.
Both the US and Iran remain engaged in this conflict, with each side attributing losses to the other's military actions.
Left- and right-leaning outlets are covering this story differently — in which facts to emphasize, which context to include, and how to frame causes and consequences.