Trump suggests 'loose and stupid' Iranian officer attacked US drone
Donald Trump has stopped short of escalating the
worsening standoff with Iran in the Persian Gulf, suggesting that the shooting
down of a US drone could have been carried out by a “loose and stupid” Iranian
officer without authorisation from Tehran, and emphasising that the aircraft
was unmanned.
After meeting with his top national security
officials to discuss Wednesday night’s downing of a Global Hawk spy drone, the
president declared: “I would imagine it was a general or somebody that made a
mistake in shooting that drone down.
“I find it
hard to believe it was intentional if you want to know the truth. I think it
could have been somebody who was loose and stupid that did it,” Trump told
journalists. “It was a very foolish move.”
Trump reinforced the administration’s red line
that it would respond militarily if Iranian forces or proxies harm Americans –
but stressed that was not the case on this occasion.
“We didn’t have a man or woman in the drone. It
would have made a big, big difference,” Trump said. Asked how the US would
respond, he said: “You’ll find out.”
Late on Thursday, the New York Times said Trump
had initially approved attacks on a handful of Iranian targets, including radar
and missile batteries, before pulling back. Citing officials, the paper said
the operation was in its early stages and planes were in the air before it was
called off.
Later, Iran’s foreign minister and the US military
offered competing graphics showing the drone’s flight path and where it was
brought down.
Javad Zarif said Iran had recovered parts of the
drone in its waters and that it had originally taken off from the United Arab
Emirates.
A map issued by US Central Command suggested the
drone was brought down in international waters in the Strait of Hormuz.
On Thursday night, Democratic congressional
leaders urged Trump to work with US allies. House speaker Nancy Pelosi said the
administration should “do everything in our power to de-escalate”, while Senate
Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said he worried the administration “may bumble
into a war”. He said he told the president during a classified briefing there
must be a “robust, open debate” and Congress should have a real say. Adam
Schiff, the chairman of the House intelligence committee, said: “The president
certainly listened to what we had to say.”
Republican Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell,
said: “The administration is engaged in what I called measured responses.”
Political support for the administration’s Middle
East policies is shaky. On Thursday, the Senate voted against the White House’s
use of an emergency declaration to sell $8bn to its allies in the Gulf without
congressional approval. His critics are unlikely to muster enough senators to
overturn the expected presidential veto, but Thursday’s vote was a measure of
unease over Trump’s close relationship with the Saudi monarchy.
Trump said he was sticking to his promise to
extract the US from wars in the Middle East, adding: “But this is a new
wrinkle, a new fly in the ointment what happened, shooting down a drone. And
this country will not stand for it, that I can tell you.”
Iranian officials have said that the shooting down
was a deliberate act and a success of the country’s security forces, but
claimed that the aircraft was over Iranian territory.
The Iranian ambassador to the UN, Majid
Takht-Ravanchi, claimed the aircraft was “in stealth mode as it had turned off
its identification equipment and engaged in a clear spying operation”.
“When the aircraft was returning towards the
western parts of the region near the strait of Hormuz, despite repeated radio
warnings, it entered into the Iranian airspace,” Ravanchi said in a letter to
UN secretary general, António Guterres.
“The downing of the American drone was a clear
message to America … our borders are Iran’s red line and we will react strongly
against any aggression … Iran is not seeking war with any country, but we are
fully prepared to defend Iran,” the IRGC commander, Hossein Salami, said,
according to Iranian media.
Trump insisted that the Global Hawk drone was over
international waters, saying: “We have it all documented scientifically, not
just words.”
The US military said the use of a high-powered
anti-aircraft missile against a target in international airspace was a danger
to commercial airliners in the region.
“This was an unprovoked attack on a US
surveillance asset that had not violated Iranian airspace at any time during
its mission,” Gen Joseph Guastella, US Central Command’s top air force
commander, told reporters.
“This attack is an attempt to disrupt our ability
to monitor the area following recent threats to international shipping and the
free flow of commerce,” Guastella said. “The aircraft was over the strait of
Hormuz and fell into international waters.”
US officials confirmed the downed aircraft was a
US navy Global Hawk surveillance drone, which had been hit by an Iranian
surface-to-air missile over the strait of Hormuz at 11.35pm GMT.
The $130m (£102m) Global Hawk is the world’s
largest surveillance drone, packed with sophisticated electronics and the size
of a small commercial airliner. Iranian forces and allied militias had
previously fired at and brought down US Reaper drones, but this is the biggest
US target Iran has hit to date, as tensions in the region escalate.
Close to the same time as the drone was shot down,
Houthi rebels in Yemen, who are backed by Iran, hit a Saudi desalination plant
with an apparently sophisticated missile, and there have been a string of
rocket and mortar attacks on or close to US facilities in Iraq.
On Wednesday the Pentagon confirmed it was sending
an additional 1,000 troops to the Gulf in response to two attacks on commercial
tankers on 13 June which the US has blamed on Iran’s IRGC.
Trump downplayed the tanker attacks as “very
minor” but US officials have made clear to Iran that it would view an attack on
its forces by Iran or proxy militias as a threshold for a military response.
Iran said the US drone was shot down by the “3rd
Khordad” air defence system, which is an Iranian equivalent to the Russian Buk
system that downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over Ukraine in 2014. The use
of such weapons in an area of crowded skies has underlined the dangers of the
standoff in the Gulf spinning out of control.
The secretary of Iran’s supreme national security
council, Ali Shamkhani, had said on Wednesday that Tehran would respond to any
intrusion into its airspace or waters.
Shamkhani emphasised that Iran robustly protects
its aerial and maritime borders, describing its airspace as the country’s “red
line”. “No matter whose plane trespasses into it, we have always given and will
give a harsh response to intruders.”
Speaking in London, the Saudi foreign minister,
Adel al-Jubeir, said: “The international community is determined to push back
against Iran’s aggressive behaviour.”
Saying steps were being prepared to protect
shipping in the Gulf, he added: “Freedom of navigation is essential to global
security and the world economy. Any attempt to close the strait of Hormuz will
provoke a very strong reaction.”