Aerial Journalism · Iraq · Ukraine · Syria

Drone &
Aerial Reel Conflict Zone
Footage & Advisory

Mosul · 2016
Iraq · Kurdistan
Ukraine
Damascus · 2024
Aerial Coverage —

Drone work is part of how I cover stories — not a separate specialism. From shooting the first journalist aerial footage inside Mosul during the ISIS liberation operation in late 2016, to working with drone operators in Ukraine and most recently in Damascus shortly after the fall of the Assad regime, aerial imagery has been a consistent thread through my conflict reporting.

Archive

Aerial Footage

Iraq · Historic First · Late 2016
First Journalist Aerial Footage Inside Mosul
The first journalist drone footage taken inside Mosul since the launch of the operation to liberate the city from ISIS — shot in the eastern Al-Bakr neighbourhood during the early stages of the offensive. Getting a drone airborne inside an active urban combat zone required careful coordination with Iraqi and Peshmerga commanders and a precise understanding of the operational picture. The footage, distributed via Getty Images, provided international audiences with an aerial perspective on the destruction inside the city that ground-level reporting could not.
View on Getty Images
Iraq · Northern Iraq
Ancient Mittani Palace, Mosul Dam
Aerial footage of a Mittani-era palace uncovered at Mosul Dam — a rare opportunity to document a significant archaeological site from the air during a period when access to northern Iraq was severely restricted.
Watch on YouTube
Iraq · Dohuk · Kurdistan
Khanke Yazidi Refugee Camp
A bird’s-eye view of Khanke refugee camp near Dohuk, housing Yazidis displaced by the ISIS offensive. The aerial perspective conveys the scale of displacement in a way ground photography cannot.
Watch on YouTube View on Getty Images
Iraq · Dohuk · Kurdistan
Yazidi Temple, Outside Dohuk
Aerial flyover of a Yazidi temple outside Khanke — documenting a religious site of a community that had just experienced genocidal violence, at a moment of acute international attention on the Yazidi crisis.
View on Getty Images
Drone Advisory

Using drones in conflict zones is not straightforward.

Having operated and coordinated drone work across Iraq, Ukraine and Syria — including inside an active urban battlespace during the Mosul offensive — I have a detailed, practical understanding of what it takes to fly legally, safely and without jeopardising access or security in hostile environments.

Most of the risk in conflict-zone drone work is not technical. It is relational and operational — understanding which military or security actors control a given airspace, what their sensitivities are, how to obtain clearance through the right channels, and how to avoid situations where a drone is confiscated, a team is detained, or worse, where the drone is mistaken for a threat.

I offer advisory support to journalists, documentary teams and media organisations planning to deploy drones in Iraq or Ukraine — covering authorisation processes, military coordination, equipment transport and customs, and situational risk assessment.

Key Considerations

What teams often underestimate.

Airspace authorisation: In Iraq, airspace control is fragmented across the Iraqi Air Force, Kurdish authorities, coalition forces and various PMF structures depending on the location. Obtaining clearance is not a single process — it requires knowing which actor controls the relevant zone and having the contacts to approach them correctly.

Equipment transport and customs: Bringing a drone into Iraq or Ukraine without proper documentation and prior coordination creates serious risk — of confiscation at the border, of raising security flags, or of operating without awareness of the relevant military commands. I can help teams navigate import procedures and the necessary pre-arrival notifications.

Operational risk in Ukraine: The war in Ukraine has produced the world’s most contested drone environment. Flying near frontline positions without explicit military clearance carries extreme risk — both from Ukrainian electronic warfare systems targeting unidentified UAVs, and from the visibility it creates for the team on the ground. Awareness of the rules of engagement for drone operations is not optional.

Damascus and post-conflict Syria: Following the fall of the Assad regime, the authority structures governing airspace in Syria remain highly fluid. I have recent experience on the ground in Damascus and can advise teams on the current operating environment.

Advisory Context
Iraq
4 yrs resident · Mosul offensive · airspace clearance
Ukraine
9 months · frontline coordination · UAV environment
Syria
Damascus · post-Assad · fluid authority structures
Kurdistan
Peshmerga relations · Dohuk · Erbil
Availability
Open to drone advisory
& field coordination briefs

Pre-deployment briefings available for teams planning to operate drones in Iraq, Ukraine or Syria. For urgent enquiries, WhatsApp or Telegram is the fastest route.

Get in Touch
Email
WhatsApp / Telegram
Signal
Available on request