Iran has claimed to have gathered information about Iran's airspace near the Strait of Hormuz about the US RQ-4 Global Hawk, a US drone's unmanned reconnaissance aircraft (drones) shot down by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards.

The Revolutionary Guards specifically denounced the drones and refuted the US allegations that they were attacked in the international airspace by emphasizing that the shooting point was Iranian airspace.

The revolutionary garrison said in a press release, "The drone took off from the US military bases south of Persian Gulf at 0:14 (local time in Iran) on the 20th, and turned off all communication and identification devices and secretly passed through the Hormuz Strait Headed for Harrard. "

Chabahar, near the Pakistani border, is a port city where the United States exempts sanctions from goods only for Afghanistan, and Iran is suspected of trading with foreign countries to avoid US sanctions.

The revolutionary garrison said, "The drones have returned to the west of Chabhar and started to gather information about Iran in the vicinity of the Strait of Hormuz," said the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps. I was shot down. "

The collapse point is located near the Khumo Barak region in Hormuz, Hurma, near the Strait of Hormuz, and the debris fell to the Iranian territorial waters of Ras Al Sir.

In the meantime, Iran said it had launched its own anti-aircraft missile, "Seboom-ehordard" (meaning March 3).

The United States insisted that the drone was shot at an international airspace 34 kilometers away from the Iranian coast without violating the Iranian airspace.

"We will show this new invasion to the United Nations to show the United States lies about pollution," Foreign Minister Mohammad Zabadh said on Twitter.