US special forces launched a high-stakes raid into Iran on Sunday to rescue an injured airman left stranded in a remote mountainous region after his aircraft was shot down two days earlier. Details have emerged about how the US raced against the clock and advancing Iranian operatives to find the officer deep inside hostile territory. The airman's ordeal began on Friday when an F-15E Strike Eagle jet was shot down over south-western Iran - the first incident of its kind in more than 20 years.
The two US military personnel on board ejected, and while the pilot was rescued the same day, the second crew member - a weapons operator - became separated and remained stranded in a sparsely populated, rugged region. Official confirmation soon followed swirling reports that a US airman was missing inside a war zone.
While US aircraft were seen flying low over the area on Saturday, Iran offered a bounty of £50,000 ($66,100) to anyone who found him alive, and videos shared on social media, which have not been verified by the BBC, appeared to show armed civilians searching.
The airman was armed with a handgun, US officials said, and would have received training for this situation, which involves intermittently turning on a beacon signal to help locate him, getting to high ground, establishing communications and concealing himself. The crew member hid in a mountain crevice and restricted the use of his beacon signal out of concern it could be picked up by Iran, Trump administration officials confirmed at a news conference on Monday.
A senior Trump administration official said the CIA was able to trace the airman's exact location and informed the Pentagon, which would have also had to rule out the possibility the beacon signal was an Iranian trap. US President Donald Trump later said the airman's location was monitored '24 hours a day' as he was 'being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour'.
At Monday's news conference, the president said the US soldier was severely injured, treated his own wounds, and - while bleeding profusely - scaled cliffs to transmit his location.
The rescue mission involved 155 aircraft, including four bombers, 64 fighters, 48 refuelling tankers, 13 rescue aircraft, and more, Trump said. 'We were bringing them all over, and a lot of it was subterfuge,' he added. 'We wanted to have them think he was in a different location, because they had a vast military force out there - thousands of people were looking.'
However, the operation was not without challenges. Two planes tasked with retrieving rescue crews became bogged down in soil and were unable to take off from the remote base in Iran they had used to land. US officials said the planes were destroyed to keep them out of enemy hands, standard practice for the military.
Iran's military said two US C-130 military transport planes and two Black Hawk helicopters were destroyed during the operation - and that 'a deception and escape mission at an abandoned airport in southern Isfahan... was completely foiled', but US officials have denied they came under attack.
The rescued airman later landed in Kuwait for medical treatment. Trump said he was 'seriously wounded' but 'will be just fine'. Further details about the airman's identity have not been disclosed.
The two US military personnel on board ejected, and while the pilot was rescued the same day, the second crew member - a weapons operator - became separated and remained stranded in a sparsely populated, rugged region. Official confirmation soon followed swirling reports that a US airman was missing inside a war zone.
While US aircraft were seen flying low over the area on Saturday, Iran offered a bounty of £50,000 ($66,100) to anyone who found him alive, and videos shared on social media, which have not been verified by the BBC, appeared to show armed civilians searching.
The airman was armed with a handgun, US officials said, and would have received training for this situation, which involves intermittently turning on a beacon signal to help locate him, getting to high ground, establishing communications and concealing himself. The crew member hid in a mountain crevice and restricted the use of his beacon signal out of concern it could be picked up by Iran, Trump administration officials confirmed at a news conference on Monday.
A senior Trump administration official said the CIA was able to trace the airman's exact location and informed the Pentagon, which would have also had to rule out the possibility the beacon signal was an Iranian trap. US President Donald Trump later said the airman's location was monitored '24 hours a day' as he was 'being hunted down by our enemies, who were getting closer and closer by the hour'.
At Monday's news conference, the president said the US soldier was severely injured, treated his own wounds, and - while bleeding profusely - scaled cliffs to transmit his location.
The rescue mission involved 155 aircraft, including four bombers, 64 fighters, 48 refuelling tankers, 13 rescue aircraft, and more, Trump said. 'We were bringing them all over, and a lot of it was subterfuge,' he added. 'We wanted to have them think he was in a different location, because they had a vast military force out there - thousands of people were looking.'
However, the operation was not without challenges. Two planes tasked with retrieving rescue crews became bogged down in soil and were unable to take off from the remote base in Iran they had used to land. US officials said the planes were destroyed to keep them out of enemy hands, standard practice for the military.
Iran's military said two US C-130 military transport planes and two Black Hawk helicopters were destroyed during the operation - and that 'a deception and escape mission at an abandoned airport in southern Isfahan... was completely foiled', but US officials have denied they came under attack.
The rescued airman later landed in Kuwait for medical treatment. Trump said he was 'seriously wounded' but 'will be just fine'. Further details about the airman's identity have not been disclosed.



















