Based on publicly available flight tracking information, a US Navy MQ-4C Triton drone reportedly signaled an airborne emergency over the Persian Gulf, preceding a rapid loss of elevation.
Bearing serial number 169804, the air vehicle’s movements were observed on monitoring services like Flightradar24, broadcasting a 7700 transponder code – the universally recognized signal for a general distress. Records show that in mere minutes, the uncrewed craft plummeted from approximately 52,000 feet to nearly 12,750 feet while flying north of Bahrain.
Flight path analysis implies the uncrewed vehicle followed a standard high-elevation monitoring pattern prior to the abrupt drop. Its recorded route subsequently ceased above the Gulf waters, but it’s ambiguous if this represents the drone’s demise or merely an interruption in data transmission.
Jon, a senior editor at UK Defence Journal who observes military aircraft movements utilizing publicly accessible monitoring instruments, initially brought this occurrence to attention. As of this report, the US military has not issued any formal verification.
The MQ-4C Triton is an uncrewed aerial vehicle designed for prolonged high-elevation maritime observation, originating from the RQ-4 Global Hawk series. Engineered to deliver continuous intelligence gathering, monitoring, and reconnaissance capabilities across expansive oceanic regions, it frequently works in conjunction with P-8A Poseidon aerial platforms.
This model has seen widespread deployment throughout the operational zone of US Central Command, encompassing the Arabian Gulf area. Per accessible reports, certain Triton units formerly stationed in the UAE underwent redeployment to Naval Air Station Sigonella in Italy some time ago.
UK Defence Journal has reached out to American military personnel to solicit their response.
The cause of the distress is still unknown, nor is it certain if the uncrewed craft was salvaged.

