US President Barack Obama on Monday said the US government had requested the return of a
spy drone downed over Iran but declined to discuss if its loss could compromise US national security.
"We have asked for it back. We'll see how the Iranians respond," Obama said during a joint news conference with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Maliki after the two met at the White House.
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Iran says it downed US drone, US skeptical
Iran’s state
television showed pictures
Thursday of the drone while Revolutionary Guards Commander Ali
Hajizadeh said that Iran’s military had tracked the unmanned aircraft,
which had entered Iran’s eastern territory in order to carry out “spying
missions.”
“After it entered the eastern parts of the country, this aircraft fell
into the trap of our armed forces and was downed in Iran with minimum
damage,” he said according to the semi-official FARS news agency.
“With God’s help, we were able to bring down one of America’s most
advanced planes... with minimal damage,” Hajizadeh told state
television, standing in front of the drone.
The Revolutionary Guards commander said that the drone was controlled
from the ground in bases in Afghanistan and the United States.
Also during the meeting with Maliki, Obama acknowledged differences
between Washington and Baghdad on how to deal with Syrian President
Bashar Assad's government's crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrators but
said Maliki was acting in Iraq's best interests.
Maliki raised concerns about the risk of sectarian violence in Syria
spilling into neighboring Iraq and said he wanted the Syrian situation
resolved peacefully.