Egypt reportedly signs deal for Chinese WJ-700 drones

Key Points
  • Egypt has reportedly signed a contract worth about $400 million to acquire 10 Chinese-made WJ-700 unmanned combat aerial vehicles, with the agreement dated June 2025.
  • The jet-powered WJ-700 is designed to operate at altitudes up to 15,000 meters with an endurance of up to 20 hours and a weapons payload of 800 kilograms.

Egypt has reportedly signed a contract worth about $400 million to acquire 10 Chinese-made WJ-700 unmanned combat aerial vehicles.

According to information circulating in Chinese and Arabic defense reporting, the agreement was signed in June 2025. If the deal is fully implemented, Egypt would become the second operator of the WJ-700 following Algeria, marking another step in the expansion of Chinese combat drone exports in the Middle East and North Africa.

The WJ-700, also referred to in Arabic-language sources as “Al-Saqr,” is described as a departure from earlier generations of Chinese Wing Loong unmanned aircraft. The platform is positioned as a higher-end system with greater speed, altitude, and strike options compared to previous designs.

- ADVERTISEMENT - CONTINUE READING BELOW -

The WJ-700 uses jet propulsion, powered by a turbojet engine that allows it to reach attack speeds of up to 700 kilometers per hour. This places it well above the cruise speed of most medium-altitude, long-endurance drones currently in service worldwide.

The drone is also designed to operate at high altitude, with a reported service ceiling of up to 15,000 meters, or roughly 50,000 feet. Operating at this altitude would place the aircraft outside the engagement envelope of many short- and medium-range air defense systems, a factor often cited as important for survivability in contested airspace.

Endurance and payload capacity are central to the WJ-700’s design. According to the information released, the drone can remain airborne for up to 20 hours while carrying a weapons load of up to 800 kilograms. This combination is intended to allow for long-range strike missions as well as extended patrol or loitering operations.

The reported weapons options include CM-102 missiles designed for suppression of enemy air defenses and C-705KD anti-ship missiles. These munitions suggest a mission set that goes beyond reconnaissance, enabling the drone to conduct strikes against both land-based air defense assets and maritime targets.

The reported WJ-700 deal would add a jet-powered, higher-altitude platform to its inventory, potentially complementing existing medium-altitude drones already in service.

Readers who wish to follow our weekly coverage can subscribe to the Weekly Defense Roundup.

If you wish to report a grammatical or factual error in this article, please let us know by using the online form.

Executive Editor

Support The Defence Blog

Independent reporting takes resources. Join us on Patreon.

Become a patron

More Like This

Seoul protests China-Russia aircraft entering its air defense zone

South Korean Air Force fighters scrambled on June 27, 2026, after nearly 10 Chinese and Russian military aircraft successively entered and exited the Korea...

China accuses Japan of simulating attacks on carrier Liaoning

Japanese warships and aircraft conducted simulated attacks against China's aircraft carrier Liaoning during its 40-day deployment to the South China Sea and Western Pacific...

China-linked spy site in Cuba is now fully operational

A sprawling Cuban intelligence facility just 145 kilometers (90 miles) from the Florida coast has completed construction of a powerful new antenna array capable...

China claims its J-10 swept one of Europe’s best jets 9-0

Pakistan's Chinese-made J-10CE fighter jets went undefeated against Qatar's Eurofighter Typhoons in nine simulated air combat engagements during a joint exercise in 2024, with...

Chinese firm sells radar stealth coating for drones

Making a drone invisible to radar used to require years of classified engineering work, precision manufacturing, and a defense budget measured in billions. A...