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Iran chases U.S. drone over Persian Gulf

Iran Materials 15 March 2013 09:25 (UTC +04:00)
An Iranian jet fighter pursued an American surveillance drone over the Persian Gulf this week but ended the chase after a radio warning from an American escort plane, Pentagon officials said.
Iran chases U.S. drone over Persian Gulf

An Iranian jet fighter pursued an American surveillance drone over the Persian Gulf this week but ended the chase after a radio warning from an American escort plane, Pentagon officials said Thursday, NY Times reported.

The chase, which occurred Tuesday, followed a more serious encounter in November, when Iranian warplanes fired on, but missed, a Predator drone carrying out a similar classified surveillance mission.

Pentagon officials said that in both instances the drones were in international airspace.

The Pentagon press secretary, George Little, said that in the episode on Tuesday, an Iranian F-4 jet fighter approached within 16 miles of the Predator, which was being escorted by a pair of American military aircraft. United States officials did not say what type of American planes were involved.

"The Iranian aircraft departed after a verbal warning," Mr. Little said.

An initial Pentagon statement said one of the American escort planes had fired a flare to warn the Iranian jet away but later retracted that report.

Mr. Little said that after the encounter in November, the United States sent a message to Iran that the American military would "continue to conduct surveillance flights over international waters consistent with longstanding practice and our commitment to the security of the region."

"We also communicated that we reserve the right to protect our military assets as well as our forces and will continue to do so going forward," George Little said.

Iran deployed two Russian-made Su-25 jets known as Frogfoots in the November episode, which was the first known instance of Iranian warplanes firing on an American surveillance drone.

The Predator model involved in both encounters resembles an upside-down flying spoon and is not easily confused with a piloted jet fighter.

In 2011, an RQ-170 surveillance drone operated by the C.I.A. rather than the military crashed in Iran during a mission that was believed to have been intended to map suspected nuclear sites.

That episode came to light only after Iran announced that it had electronically attacked the drone and guided it to a landing. American officials said the drone had crashed after a technical malfunction.

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