Iran has offered pieces of a Global Hawk spy plane, along with 10 US, Israeli and British drones, which it shot down earlier.

The planes were displayed on the sidelines of the "Holy Defense Week" events in the Iranian capital Tehran on the anniversary of the Iran-Iraq war. .

At the same exhibition, the Iranian-built air defense system, Khordad 3, was targeted at the US Hawk spy plane.

Ali Asghar Jaafari, director of the Museum of the Sacred Defense and Revolution of Iran, said the exhibition included the display of drones belonging to Israel, the United States and other countries, which were seized intact, and others controlled some parts.

Addressing the ceremony, IRGC Commander-in-Chief Hussein Salami noted that his country had used only a fraction of its strength, saying that much of its strength remained hidden.

Salami added that "the progress made by Iran in the field of technology reduced the distance between them and the enemy," noting that all technological gains were obtained as a result of the threats of the enemy, "If the enemy did not threaten to remain behind."

Salami explained that the exhibition bears symbolic value in terms of showing the military strength of Iran, stressing that the drones, which are the index of American power, were shot down by weapons produced in the framework of Iran's technological development.

Salami said that the political will of Iran agreed to shoot down these planes, adding that who is attacking the Iranian border hits.

Salami concluded by noting that his country has the will to say what has been achieved in the military field and takes responsibility for this, pointing out that his country has completed all the necessary preparations for war, and that it is fully prepared to face all possible scenarios.