Iran has rejected a US call for the return of an unmanned surveillance aircraft captured by Iran’s military earlier this month.
The unmanned aircraft was now “property” of Iran and it was up to Iran to decide what to do with it, Defence Minister Ahmad Vahidi said.
Mr Vahidi said the US should apologise for invading Iranian air space. “The American espionage drone is now Iran’s property, and our country will decide what steps to take regarding it,” Mr Vahidi was quoted as saying by the Isna news agency, following a call for the aircraft’s return by US President Barack Obama on Monday.
“Instead of apologising to the Iranian nation, [the US] is brazenly asking for the drone back,” he added, according to another semi-official news agency, Mehr.
On Monday, Iranian state TV reported that military experts were in the final stages of recovering data from the drone. A member of the Iranian parliament’s national security committee, Parviz Sorouri, said the information they extracted would be used to “file a lawsuit against the United States over the invasion”.
The US Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, has admitted it is likely that the drone will not be returned. She said on Monday that despite numerous “provocations” from Iran, the US would pursue a “diplomatic approach”.
Tehran says it had crossed the Afghan border and travelled 250km (155 miles) inside Iranian airspace before being brought down in a cyber attack.
A former US official has said the Pentagon was using the drone to keep watch on Iran’s controversial nuclear programme. Western powers believe Iran is trying to develop nuclear weapons, which it denies.
Source: BBC