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Breaking news Iran down an other Drone

speculation that the drone was actually caught some time before the claim came out based on wear and tear (not from me).Seeing as Iran has done so successfully before I will withhold judgement.

The Scaneagle is made from 'off the shelf' components, so its not as valuable a capture as the previous one.

any proof of yr stunt!!!

speculation that the drone was actually caught some time before the claim came out based on wear and tear (not from me).Seeing as Iran has done so successfully before I will withhold judgement.

The Scaneagle is made from 'off the shelf' components, so its not as valuable a capture as the previous one.

any proof of yr stunt!!!
 
Iranian TV shows off 'captured US ScanEagle drone'

Iranian state television has shown images of what it says is an unmanned US drone captured in its airspace.

The Revolutionary Guards said they had brought down a ScanEagle - one of the smaller, less sophisticated drones employed by the Americans.

Rear Admiral Ali Fadavi told the Fars news agency that the drone had conducted several reconnaissance flights over the Gulf in recent days.

But the US Navy said none of its drones was missing in the Middle East.

Other nations in the region, including the United Arab Emirates, also operate ScanEagles - low-cost, long-endurance aircraft with a 10ft (3m) wingspan, Associated Press says.

Rear Adm Fadavi said that "such drones are usually launched from large warships".

The best-known drones might be those like the American Predator and Reaper, which carry weapons and are used by the CIA as well as the US military and British RAF to launch strikes. But the Predator began as a surveillance - not an armed - vehicle and it is in this field that drones are still primarily used.

It has the ability to loiter over a target for much longer than manned aircraft and to beam back imagery and other forms of information to analysts thousands of miles away.

The US may have pioneered the use of unmanned drones but the number of countries using them for surveillance has expanded rapidly in recent years. Because they are intelligence-gathering tools, often operating over hostile territory, they will not carry identifying markings.

Iran and its nuclear programme (as well as its military facilities) will certainly be a top target for US surveillance, but for other neighbouring nations as well. This may make it harder to be absolutely sure who the drone really belongs to.

Fars said the drone was captured "in the last few days" without giving further details.

A spokesman for US Naval Forces Central Command in Bahrain said: "The US Navy has fully accounted for all unmanned air vehicles operating in the Middle East region.

"Our operations in the Gulf are confined to internationally recognised water and air space.

"We have no record that we have lost any ScanEagles recently."

Last month, the US said Iranian warplanes had shot at a US surveillance drone flying in international airspace. Iran said the aircraft had entered its airspace.

November also saw Iran's ambassador to the United Nations, Mohammad Khazaee, write to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to complain about what he said were repeated US violations of Iranian airspace near the Bushehr power station, describing them as "illegal and provocative acts".

A year ago, Iranian TV broadcast pictures of an American RQ-170 Sentinel surveillance drone that Iran said had been brought down using electronic warfare. The US said it had malfunctioned.

Iran rejected a US call for the return of the drone. It subsequently claimed to have developed its own unmanned drone.

Washington and Tehran are engaged in a dispute over Tehran's nuclear programme.

The Revolutionary Guards are an elite unit of the Iranian military which operate their own naval forces.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-20591336
 
So where is the mighty amrikan retaliation which the indians think amrika will leash on anyone downing their hardware- specialy when we talk about shooting an amrikan drone down?-

Bla bla bla indians-
 
The US has some means of denying this as the ScanEagle is reportedly available for purchase commercially as well. Used in fishing. US will say its a commercially bought UAV being showed off as a downed drone.

Of course the NAVY must have modified it and if Iranians can show these modifications, that would end that debate.
 
So where is the mighty amrikan retaliation which the indians think amrika will leash on anyone downing their hardware- specialy when we talk about shooting an amrikan drone down?-

Bla bla bla indians-

Why would we do so if it was indeed in Iranian airspace? Its a drone, there is no pilot, its basically expendable. This holds especially true for the scaneagle, it is low cost.

Going to war because a low-cost drone was brought down is not in the cards... if it was a manned jet, the calculus would be different, but we might not go to war even then depending on the circumstances.
 

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