Iran's state TV
said Tuesday that the country's Revolutionary Guard has captured a U.S.
drone after it entered Iranian airspace over the Persian Gulf.
In 2011, Iran claimed it brought down a CIA spy drone after it entered Iranian airspace from its eastern borders with Afghanistan and Pakistan. The RQ-170 Sentinel drone, which is equipped with stealth technology, was captured almost intact. Tehran later said it recovered data from the top-secret drone.
The report quoted the Guard's navy chief, Gen. Ali Fadavi, as saying that the Iranian forces caught the "intruding" drone, which had apparently taken off from a U.S. aircraft carrier.
Fadavi said the unmanned ScanEagle aircraft was now in Iran's possession.
"The U.S. drone, which was
conducting a reconnaissance flight and gathering data over the Persian
Gulf in the past few days, was captured by the Guard's navy air defense
unit as soon as it entered Iranian airspace," Fadavi said. "Such drones
usually take off from large warships."
He didn't provide any further
details nor said when the incident happened. The U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet,
based in Bahrain, said it was "looking into" the Iranian claims but had
no immediate comment beyond that.
But Al-Alam, the Iranian state
TV's Arabic-language channel, showed two Guard commanders examining what
appeared to be an intact ScanEagle drone. It was not immediately clear
if that was the same drone Iran claimed to have captured.
In the footage, the two men then
point to a huge map of the Persian Gulf in the background, showing the
drone's alleged path of entry into Iranian airspace.
"We shall trample on the U.S," was printed over the map, next to the Guard's coat-of-arms.
If true, the seizure of the drone would be the third reported incident involving Iran and U.S. drones in the past two years.
Last month, Iran claimed that a
U.S. drone had violated its airspace. Pentagon said the unmanned
aircraft came under fire — at least twice but was not hit — and that the
Predator was over international waters.
The Nov. 1 shooting in the Gulf
was unprecedented, and further escalated tensions between the United
States and Iran, which is under international sanctions over its suspect
nuclear program. Tehran denies it's pursuing a nuclear weapon and
insists its program is for peaceful purposes only.
In 2011, Iran claimed it brought down a CIA spy drone after it entered Iranian airspace from its eastern borders with Afghanistan and Pakistan. The RQ-170 Sentinel drone, which is equipped with stealth technology, was captured almost intact. Tehran later said it recovered data from the top-secret drone.
In the case of the Sentinel,
after initially saying only that a drone had been lost near the
Afghan-Iran border, American officials eventually confirmed it had been
monitoring Iran's military and nuclear facilities. Washington asked for
it back but Iran refused, and instead released photos of Iranian
officials studying the aircraft.
The U.S and its allies believe
Iran is pursuing a nuclear weapon. Iran denies the charge, saying its
nuclear activities are for peaceful purposes only, such as power
generation and cancer treatment.
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