US doubts Iran claims it shot down drones in Gulf

WASHINGTON, Jan 3 (Reuters) – The Pentagon has found no evidence to back Iran’s claims it shot down drone surveillance aircraft in the Gulf, officials said on Monday, acknowledging some of the spy planes had crashed due to mechanical failure.

Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency quoted a senior Revolutionary Guards commander on Sunday as saying Iran had shot down two unmanned Western reconnaissance drone aircraft in the Gulf. [ID:nHAF252370]

Commander Amir Ali Hajizadeh, head of the elite forces’ aerospace unit, did not say when the alleged incidents took place or produce proof they had happened.

Pentagon spokesman Colonel Dave Lapan said there were “no recent reports that would corroborate what the Revolutionary Guard said about unmanned aerial vehicles.”

Another U.S. military official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that the last incident he was aware of involved a drone aircraft crashing in the Gulf in early 2009. Like others before it, the crash was due to mechanical failure and the aircraft landed in international waters, the official said.

“We have had cases in which UAVs have gone down in the Gulf … but I don’t have any indication (of a case) where a UAV has been taken down by hostile fire in the Gulf,” the official said.

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