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Iran's Press TV on Thursday broadcast an extended video tour of the U.S. spy drone that went down in the country--and it indeed appeared to look mostly intact.
Iran's Press TV on Thursday broadcast an extended video tour of the U.S. spy drone that went down in the country--and it indeed appeared to look mostly intact.
American officials have  acknowledged that an unmanned U.S. reconnaissance  plane was lost on a mission late  last week, but have insisted that  there is no evidence the drone was downed by hostile acts by Iran. Rather, they said, the  drone likely went down because of a malfunction, and they implied the  advanced stealth reconnaissance plane would likely have fallen from such  a high altitude--the RQ-170 Sentinel can fly as high as 50,000  feet--that it wouldn't be in good shape.
But Iranian military  officials have claimed since Sunday that they brought down an American  spy drone that was little damaged. And now they have provided the first  visual images of what looks to be a drone that at least outwardly  appears to be in decent condition, in what is surely another humiliating  poke in the eye for U.S. national security agencies.
The Pentagon declined to  comment on the released images Thursday, a Defense Department spokesman  told Yahoo News. But military analysts said it appeared to them to be  the American drone in question.
"I have been doing this for  thirty years, and it sure looks like [a stealthy U.S. drone] to me,"  Loren Thompson, a military analyst with the Lexington Institute and  consultant to the RQ-170's manufacturer, Lockheed Martin, told Yahoo  News in a telephone interview Thursday. "I think we are going to face  the high likelihood that Iran has an intact version of one of our most  important intelligence gathering tools."
Still, Thompson went on, the  intelligence "windfall" to Iran from obtaining the advanced U.S.  stealthy drone may be mitigated.
"I don't think the Iranians  get as much out of it as they might hope," he said. "It probably came  into their hands as a result of a technical malfunction. What that means  is they still don't have a real defense against the U.S. flying other  vehicles that have similar capabilities, without much fear of  interception."
Analysts also noted that the  video of the drone released by Iran did not show the drone's underside.  "Pretty intact," the Center for Strategic and International Studies'  James Lewis said by email. "Interesting that they covered the  underside."
The New York Times reported Thursday  that--unsurprisingly--the RQ-170 was lost while making the latest foray  over Iran during an extended CIA surveillance effort of Iran's nuclear  and ballistic weapons program.
"The overflights by the  bat-winged RQ-170 Sentinel, built by Lockheed Martin and first glimpsed  on an airfield in Kandahar, Afghanistan, in 2009, are part of an  increasingly aggressive intelligence collection program aimed at Iran,  current and former officials say," the Times' Scott Shane and David  Sanger wrote. "The urgency of the effort has been underscored by a  recent public debate in Israel about whether time is running out for a  military strike to slow Iran's progress toward a nuclear weapon."
Iran in turn has complained  that the drone overflights represent an act of aggression and violation  of its sovereignty, and summoned the Swiss envoy--who represents  U.S. interests in Iran--on Thursday to lodge a protest.
However, while the images of  the U.S. drone surely allowed Iran to score another public relations  blow against Washington, Iran may find it tough to generate much in the  way of international sympathy for being the target of U.S. surveillance.
Last week, Iranian  hardliners ransacked the British embassy in Tehran, prompting the United  Kingdom to recall its diplomatic staff from Tehran and order Iran's  embassy in London closed. Last month, the UN atomic watchdog agency  issued a report raising concerns about research Iran is suspected by  some nations to have conducted before 2003 on military aspects of its  nuclear program. Iran has insisted its nuclear program is for peaceful  energy purposes. In October, the United States accused elements of  Iran's Qods force of plotting to assassinate the Saudi envoy to the  United States. The United Nations General Assembly voted last month in  favor of a resolution condemning the Iranian plot.
Amid its growing  international isolation, Iran, unsurprisingly, seemed intent to play up  the drone incident for all it could.
"China, Russia want to  inspect downed U.S. drone," proclaimed a  headline from Iran's Mehr news  agency Thursday.
The RQ-170 Sentinel,  however, reportedly did not use the latest U.S. surveillance technology  on board, in part because as a single-engine aircraft, it was thought  more likely to occasionally go down.
"The basic principles of  stealthy aircraft are fairly well known," Thompson said. "In terms of  [the drone's] on-board electronics and information systems, it is fairly  routine in combat to require authentication codes to make them hard to  unlock."
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