The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), Iran's ideological military force, claimed on Tuesday 26 May that it shot down a US MQ-9 Reaper drone over the Persian Gulf and fired on an F-35 fighter and an RQ-4 surveillance aircraft, forcing both from Iranian airspace 1. Brigadier General Abolfazl Shekarchi, the IRGC spokesman, framed the action as retaliation for the 25 May strikes on the port of Bandar Abbas, where CENTCOM destroyed two IRGC mine-laying boats and a missile site . He warned that any future US or Israeli attack would draw a very devastating response.
CENTCOM, the US military command for the Middle East, has issued no statement on the reported loss. No photograph or wreckage has been produced, so the claim rests on Iranian state media alone. The MQ-9 is a General Atomics surveillance and strike drone, unmanned and roughly $30m a unit, which is why losing one is a propaganda event rather than a casualty event.
The Congressional Research Service (CRS), the non-partisan research arm of the US Congress, logged 24 Reapers among 42 US aircraft lost or damaged through 20 May, an independent count rather than a CENTCOM figure 2. A confirmed 25th Reaper would push drone losses past half of the named total. The numbers describe a campaign bleeding hardware, not crews: the cost lands on procurement budgets and on the question of how long uncontested surveillance over The Gulf can be assumed.
What the IRGC claim does, confirmed or not, is convert a defiant statement into a defiant act on the same day Tehran's negotiators returned from Doha with no signed deal. A real strike answered a real strike while the instrument that would stop both stayed unsigned.
