Iran 'can copy seized US spy drone'
Iran is now capable of manufacturing its own copies of an
advanced CIA spy drone captured last year, Iranian MP Avaz
Heydarpour said, Trend news agency reported referring to AP.
Avaz Heidarpour, a member of the parliament's national security
committee, said experts have reverse-engineered the RQ-170 Sentinel
drone, and Iran now is capable of launching a production line for
the unmanned aircraft.
"Iranian experts examined and analyzed the RQ-170 drone. Its parts
were brought down so that all files and boards of the drone were
copied and used to improve Iran's unmanned aircraft," he told the
parliament's website, icana.ir, on Wednesday.
Heidarpour said production of RQ-170 drone cost the U.S. around $20
billion, but the expensive technology is now in Iran's possession
through reverse engineering.
The Sentinel went down in December. Iran claimed it took control of
it and landed it, but U.S. officials said the drone malfunctioned
and had to land.
They eventually confirmed the plane was 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.
Iranian officials said the data recovered from the drone showed it
did not carry out any missions on Iran's nuclear facilities.
Iranian officials frequently announce technological and military
breakthroughs, most of which are impossible to confirm
independently.
Iranian Deputy Minister of Science, Research and Technology
Mohammad Mahdinejad said last week that Iran is now exporting its
domestically manufactured drones to several countries, including
Syria and Venezuela.
Mahdinejad said Iran is now a global leader in drone technology and
that its export of drones to other countries demonstrated of Iran's
advanced capability in designing and operating unmanned
aircrafts.
Heidarpour's comment came days after Iran's Revolutionary Guard
said it decoded all data from the drone that went down near Iran's
eastern border with Afghanistan.
Tehran had previously said it recovered information from the
top-secret stealth aircraft, but Guard's announcement suggested
that technicians may have broken encryptions.
Last week, the Guard claimed it captured another U.S. drone after
it entered Iranian airspace over the Persian Gulf, showing an image
of what it said was a Boeing-designed ScanEagle drone on state
TV.
The ScanEagle is a small, relatively simple drone. The U.S. has
said none of its drones were missing, but one or more might have
fallen into the sea over the past months.
The Islamic Republic has been trumpeting its possession of the
drones in an attempt to embarrass Washington over its alleged
surveillance of Iran's disputed nuclear program.
Guard commanders said Iran had previously acquired a ScanEagle
drone and produced a copy of it, but they have not provided
evidence to back up their claim.
Last month, Tehran claimed that a U.S. drone violated its airspace.
The Pentagon said an unmanned Predator aircraft came under fire at
least twice while flying over international waters, but it was not
hit.
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