AP: Iran’s drone first over U. S. carrier since 2014
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The unarmed Iranian drone that flew over a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Persian Gulf last month is similar to those that can carry missiles and was the first to conduct an overflight of an American carrier since 2014, U. S. Navy records obtained Wednesday showed.
The Jan. 12 reconnaissance flight by Iran’s Shahed drone over the USS Harry S. Truman while a French aircraft carrier sailed nearby marked the latest tense naval encounter between the U.S. and Iran since Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
It also suggests incidents like it, as well as another that saw Iranian speedboats fire rockets near U. S. warships and commercial traffic in late December, remain a danger in Gulf waterways crucial to global oil supplies.
“You’re one broken rocket fin away from creating a serious international incident that could have had unfortunate consequences,” said Cmdr. Kevin Stephens, a spokesman for the U. S. Navy’s 5th Fleet based in Bahrain.
The Associated Press obtained video of the drone and a report about the overflight from the U. S. Navy through a Freedom of Information Act request. The report said the drone flight happened as the Truman and the French aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle were in international waters 89 nautical miles southwest of the Iranian port of Bushehr.
The local U. S. Navy task force first described the drone’s overflight as “safe, routine and professional.” But the internal report says the Navy’s higher command later called it “safe, abnormal and unprofessional,” as Iranian drones seldom fly over U.S. carriers.
U. S. and French sailors repeatedly confirmed the drone had its “wings clean,” the report said.