Ramin Mehmanparast,
Iran: US Calls to Return Downed RQ-170 Sentinel Drone Are Rejected
December 13, 2011
Iran says the United
States should accept its consequences after a U.S. surveillance aircraft
went down in Iranian territory earlier this month.
This
photo released on Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011, by the Iranian Revolutionary
Guards and taken at an undisclosed location claims to show the US RQ-170
Sentinel drone which Tehran says its forces downed earlier this week. In
the banner in background depicting Iranian flag tover which the text
reads: "God is Great", "Down with America", "Down with Israel", "Down
with England"
The Obama administration has made a formal request for Iran to return
the aircraft, but Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast
said Tuesday that the U.S. should apologize instead.
Iran has complained to the United Nations about the drone incident, and
repeated Tuesday its stance that the U.S. violated international law.
U.S. President Barack Obama, in a session with reporters Monday, refused
to comment on what he termed "intelligence matters that are classified."
But news reports say the aircraft with advanced stealth technology
either strayed into Iranian airspace from Afghanistan or was spying on
Iran's nuclear program.
Obama said the United States has asked for the drone back and will "see
how the Iranians respond." But Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said
that given Iran's past behavior, "we do not expect them to comply."
Both
the Iranian complaint and the U.S. request were handled by Switzerland,
because the two countries do not have diplomatic relations.
Iranian officials say the drone was brought down by a cyber-attack just
inside Iran's eastern border, and that military experts are in the final
stages of extracting data from the aircraft. Western defense experts
have dismissed claims that Iran will be able to copy and mass produce
the drone, and suggest that the plane probably malfunctioned.
U.S. officials have described the incident as a major setback to the
stealth drone program that comes at a time of heightened political
tension over Iran's controversial nuclear program.
The RQ-170 Sentinel drone is designed to evade enemy radar during
surveillance flights. U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told reporters
while traveling abroad that it is difficult to tell what the Iranians
might be able to "derive from what they've been able to get" from the
aircraft.