Iran has accused the US of taking out one of its own drones by mistake after Donald Trump said the Navy had destroyed an unmanned craft over the Strait of Hormuz.
Tehran's deputy foreign minister Abbas Araghchi flatly denied reports that any of its drones had been destroyed, either 'in the Strait of Hormuz nor anywhere else'.
'I am worried that USS Boxer has shot down their own UAS (Unmanned Aerial Systems) by mistake!' he tweeted on Friday.
It comes after the president announced that an Iranian drone making 'provocative and hostile' maneuvres had been destroyed on Thursday, in what the Defense Department later said was an electronic warfare attack.
Iran's deputy defence minister Seyed Araghchi (right) denied that the US had brought down one of its drones Friday, after President Trump (left) said one was destroyed Thursday
Araghchi then goaded the US, suggesting that it may have shot down one of its own UAS - which stands for unmanned aerial systems - by mistake
Trump had said that the USS Boxer, a helicopter assault ship, had taken out the 'provocative and hostile' drone while sailing through the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday
A drone-killer buggy parked on the deck of the Boxer (pictured right) is believed to have knocked the craft out of the skies by cutting the signal to its control tower
The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway that connects the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman, and then to the open ocean; about one-fifth of the oil on the world's markets is shipped through it
He said the drone was downed as the Boxer passed through the Strait of Hormuz, a strategic bottleneck through which a fifth of the world's oil passes each day, and which sits partially in Iranian waters.
The president called the incident 'the latest of many provocative and hostile actions by Iran against vessels operating in international waters.'
Iranian armed forces spokesman Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi also denied the claims Friday, saying: 'Despite Trump's baseless and delusional claims, all of (Iran's) drones... have safely returned to their bases.
'There have been no reports of a confrontation with the American USS Boxer.'
Iran's military recently shot down a U.S. drone that it said was flying in Iranian airspace, firing a strike with a surface-to-air missile.
President Trump called off a planned airstrike at the last moment, saying later that retaliating would have killed approximately 150 people on the ground.
Trump made his announcement Thursday at the beginning of a White House ceremony to mark the return of an American flag that flew from the stern of an American ship in the D-Day invasion.
An hour earlier he had told reporters at the end of a pohto-op with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte that 'a big event just happened in Iran. A big event.'
The drone was downed in international waters, according to a Pentagon official.
The increased use of drones by Iran and its allies for surveillance and attacks across the Middle East is raising alarms in Washington, according to a Reuters report this week.
The U.S. believes Iran-linked militias in Iraq have recently increased their surveillance of American troops and bases in the country by using off-the-shelf, commercially available drones.
The disclosure comes at a time of heightened tensions with Iran and underscores the many ways in which Tehran and the forces it backs are increasingly relying on unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in places like Yemen, Syria, the Strait of Hormuz and Iraq.
Beyond surveillance, Iranian drones can drop munitions and even carry out 'a kamikaze flight where they load it up with explosives and fly it into something', according to a U.S. official who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity.
Iran now flies two or three drones over Gulf waters every day, the U.S. official estimated, making it a core part of Tehran's effort to monitor the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump announced the military action at the beginning of a ceremony to mark the return of a Dutch-owned 48-star American flag that flew on a Navy ship on D-Day
The United States and Saudi Arabia have accused Iran of carrying out attacks against six oil tankers near the Strait in the past two months, a claim Tehran has denied.
'We have seen an uptick in drone activity in Iraq near our bases and facilities,' the official said. 'Certainly the drones that we have seen are more of the commercial off-the-shelf variant. So they're obviously a deniable type UAV-activity in Iraq.'
In recent weeks, mortars and rockets have been fired at bases in Iraq where U.S. forces are located but no American troops have been injured.
Iraqi militia groups linked to Iran began using drones in 2014 and 2015 in battles to retake territory from ISIS.
These groups received training on the use of drones from members of Iran's Revolutionary Guards and Lebanon's Iranian-backed Hezbollah, according to Iraqi security officials with knowledge of militia activities.
'Key militia groups have the ability to launch aerial attacks using drones. Will they target American interests? That hasn't happened yet,' said one Iraqi security official.
'They used Katyusha and mortars in very restricted attacks against American interests in Iraq to send a message rather than trying to inflict damage. Using explosive-laden drones is very possible once we have a worsening situation between Tehran and Washington.'
In March, Iran boasted about a complex military exercise involving 50 drones. In a slickly edited video aired on state TV, waves of drones streak across a clear blue sky, bombing buildings on an island in the Gulf.
The show of force was intended to highlight Iran's locally developed UAV program, which it has been building up for several years.
U.S. forces shot down Iranian-made drones in 2017 in Syria, after deeming them a threat to both U.S.-backed forces and their advisers.
https://textbacklinkexchanges.com/iran-claims-the-us-has-shot-down-one-of-its-own-drones-by-mistake/
News Photo Iran claims the US has shot down one of its OWN drones by mistake
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