Iran calls U.S. claim of downed drone a “big lie,” vows to secure Strait of Hormuz itself

Fujairah, United Arab Emirates — Iran denied again Wednesday that a U.S. warship brought down at least one of its drones in the Persian Gulf last week. U.S. Central Command chief Gen. Kenneth McKenzie told CBS News’ David Martin on Tuesday, in an interview aboard the USS Boxer amphibious assault ship, that the vessel took “decisive action” against two Iranian drones.

“We are confident we brought down one drone, (and) we may have brought down a second,” McKenzie said.  Iran’s Defense Minister Gen. Amir Hatami dismissed the claims, however, telling reporters Wednesday that when Iran shot down a U.S. drone last month it shared images of the wreckage to verify it.
“If someone claims, he should provide evidence,” Hatami said, insisting “none of our drones have been intercepted.”The commander of the Iran’s elite Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) echoed the sentiment, challenging U.S. officials to provide any evidence proving their claim to have brought down Iranian drones.”I officially declare that no Iranian or IRGC drone has been downed,” Major General Hossein Salami told reporters. “I strongly assert that it is a big lie, and we have proved it too. We have proved whatever we have done and enemies should prove their claims as well.”  Who will secure the Strait of Hormuz?In a sign that the Iranian government could be trying to ease the boiling tensions in the Gulf, Tehran declared Wednesday that Iranian forces intended to secure the Strait of Hormuz to prevent any “disturbance in shipping” through the vital waterway. The narrow Strait is the gateway from the Persian Gulf into the rest of the world’s oceans, and about a fifth of the global oil supply passes through it every year. Hours later, the BW Elm, a British-flagged commercial vessel, transited the Strait in the first such passage made by a British ship since Iran seized another U.K.-flagged tanker, the Stena Impero, and its crew last week. Iran seized the Stena just days after vowing an unspecified response to the seizure of its own tanker by British forces off Gibraltar. Tehran has accused Britain of “piracy” over that seizure, but the U.K. says it was done in line with EU sanctions barring the transfer of oil products to Syria. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani hinted Wednesday at the possibility of a possible ship-for-ship swap to ease the standoff.”We do not seek continuation of tension with some European countries,” Rouhani said. “Should they be committed to international frameworks and give up their wrong actions, including what they did in Gibraltar, they will receive a proportional response from Iran, too, in return for their suitable action.”