World | drones Crashed Drone Was Part of Fleet Spying on Iran US considered a retrieval mission, but decided against it By Evann Gastaldo Posted Dec 7, 2011 7:39 AM CST Copied In this Jan. 31, 2010 file photo, an unmanned US Predator drone flies over Kandahar Air Field, southern Afghanistan, on a moon-lit night. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth, File) The CIA drone that was lost in Iran over the weekend is part of a fleet that has been spying on Iran for years, US officials tell the AP. The US has a number of stealth aircraft at a base in Shindad, Afghanistan, as part of an effort to establish a long-term presence there for surveillance and possibly special ops. After the drone crashed, US officials considered a covert mission to retrieve or destroy it, but decided it was too risky, the Wall Street Journal notes. An official says that the US knew immediately when the drone crashed in a remote part of eastern Iran. A "catastrophic" malfunction is suspected, as the drone was programmed to return to base even if it lost its data link, Reuters notes. The AP adds that the drone crashed while deep in Iran's airspace, 140 miles from the Afghan border in Kashmar. Officials initially thought Iran failed to detect it and feared being accused of an act of war if a team entered the country to retrieve it. Click for more on the secrets the drone could reveal to Iran. Read These Next Beneath the upcoming White House ballroom: a new, pricey bunker. One state hosts 5 of America's top 10 windiest cities. Trump's Greenland note spurs calls for congressional probe, 25th. In one sense, Trump will indeed get a third term, argues an op-ed. Report an error