Iran showcases downed US drones amid simmering Gulf tensions (PHOTOS)

21 Sep, 2019 21:23 / Updated 5 years ago

A collection of foreign –primarily US– drones has been put on display in Tehran. The exhibition comes amid extreme tensions in the region and mounting allegations of Iranian involvement in the drone attack on Saudi oil facilities.

The exhibition was inaugurated by high-ranking military and government officials on Saturday. Those included Major General Hossein Salami, the chief of the elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which the US has recently designated as a terrorist group.

Salami warned that any nation that attacks Iran will promptly become the “main battlefield” for such a conflict, adding that Tehran is ready to fight “until the full destruction of any aggressor.” The large exhibition of foreign unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) was apparently meant to further reinforce his threats.

READ MORE: Whoever attacks Iran will become ‘main battlefield’ – IRGC commander

The debris of a heavy US surveillance drone, an RQ-4 Global Hawk downed in June, was arguably the centerpiece of the display. The Iranians have actually identified the machine as an advanced variant of the UAV MQ-4C Triton, although the US insists it was merely a prototype version of an RQ-4A drone, constructed during development of the Triton.

Aside from the wreck of the drone, Iran displayed the anti-aircraft system that brought it down, as well as the type of missiles used during the interception. The machine, a Khordad-3 missile launcher, is sporting a kill mark for the downed American UAV.

Another major exhibit is the US RQ-170 Sentinel that Iran managed to capture intact back in 2011. The machine is said to have been intercepted and safely landed by an Iranian electronic warfare unit.

Another downed UAV appears to be a variant of an MQ-1 Predator, which also seems to be intact. The capture of a drone of that type was reported back in 2016, yet the exact circumstances of how the machine fell into Iranian hands remain unclear.

A handful of smaller UAVs was shown to the public as well. The machines appear to be an Israeli Hermes drone, a US RQ-7 Shadow, ScanEagle as well as several other light surveillance vehicles.

The display came just a few days after Saudi Arabia, Iran’s regional arch-enemy, showcased a large cache of charred military hardware it claimed to be the debris of Iranian-made drones and cruise missiles. Riyadh said the weaponry was “undeniable” proof of Iranian involvement in the recent strike on Saudi oil-refining facilities. Tehran has rejected all the allegations, maintaining it was not involved into the major attack, which has been claimed by Yemeni Houthi rebels.

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