World | Iran Crashed Drone Could Spill Our Secrets Officials say it was on a CIA mission By Evann Gastaldo Posted Dec 6, 2011 7:16 AM CST Updated Dec 6, 2011 7:43 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 drone that crashed in Iran this weekend was on a CIA mission, US officials say, and some now fear that it may reveal US secrets to Tehran or its allies, China and Russia. The RQ-170 Sentinel drone—the same type used in the Osama bin Laden raid—features sophisticated stealth and surveillance technology that could be of use to America's rivals, the Los Angeles Times reports. It is believed to have the ability to "listen" to cell phone conversations and "smell" potential underground laboratories from miles above. "It's bad—they'll have everything. And the Chinese or the Russians will have it, too," says one anonymous US official. Some experts agree that Iran getting its hands on the drone is a fearsome prospect, but others don't. "A lot of information about this aircraft was already known by foreign military intelligence officials," says one defense policy analyst, adding that Iran may not even have much, since the drone likely had a self-destruct mechanism. "That means what the Iranians have is a pile of wreckage—many small and damaged pieces from which they could glean little in the way of technological insights." Read These Next Mid That 'buy now, pay later' loan may soon hit your credit score. Cops: Arizona 5th graders drew up plot to 'end' a classmate. The DOJ just fired 3 prosecutors tied to Capitol riot criminal cases. Report an error