Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest headlines from PapaLinc about news & entertainment.

    What's Hot

    Lady shares what happened after she sacrificed her brother’s school fee to save her boyfriend

    “If God be for you, no man can be against you, no matter how hard dey try” – Iyabo Ojo throws shades following her new achievement

    School shooting rampage leaves at least 18 injured as pupil opens fire with hunting rifle in Turkey

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Lifestyle
    • Africa News
    • International
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube WhatsApp
    PapaLincPapaLinc
    • News
      • Africa News
      • International
    • Entertainment
      • Lifestyle
      • Movies
      • Music
    • Politics
    • Sports
    Subscribe
    PapaLincPapaLinc
    You are at:Home»News»International»Why many believe the mission to rescue downed airman Dude 44 Bravo was really a smokescreen for an audacious attempt to snatch Iran’s uranium
    International

    Why many believe the mission to rescue downed airman Dude 44 Bravo was really a smokescreen for an audacious attempt to snatch Iran’s uranium

    Papa LincBy Papa LincApril 14, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read3 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Why many believe the mission to rescue downed airman Dude 44 Bravo was really a smokescreen for an audacious attempt to snatch Iran’s uranium
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email


    It was billed as an awe-inspiring mission that highlighted the astonishing ingenuity and sophistication of the world’s most powerful military.

    But now the story of how an American air force crewman of an F-15 fighter jet was rescued in Iran is at the centre of an extraordinary online debate over whether it was all an elaborate smokescreen to cover up a disastrous US attempt to snatch Tehran’s enriched uranium.

    One post by a defence commentator on X, which described the official story as ‘nonsense’, has attracted 1.5 million views.

    Details of the drama – tailor-made for a Hollywood action film – were given by a triumphant Donald Trump two days after the plane was shot down.

    The mission to rescue one airman, he said, involved a staggering ‘air armada’ of more than 155 planes, including four bombers, 64 fighters, 48 refuelling tankers and 13 rescue aircraft, as well as hundreds of special forces troops.

    The actual on-the-ground rescue was carried out under the cover of darkness by a strike force led by Navy SEAL Team 6 – the US military’s most elite unit – and Delta Force commandos flying in on two Special Operations transport planes also carrying small helicopters for the mission.

    But a technical foul-up – the planes got bogged down on a muddy runway – allegedly necessitated a second rescue mission with US bombers creating a ring of fire around their makeshift air base to repel Iranian forces.

    The missing aviator is now safe, according to Trump, who says the team that extracted him suffered no casualties.

    Why many believe the mission to rescue downed airman Dude 44 Bravo was really a smokescreen for an audacious attempt to snatch Iran’s uranium

    The site of a downed American transport plane and two helicopters involved in a rescue operation, in Isfahan province, Iran, on April 5, 2026

    But the events surrounding the ‘rescue’ are now being hotly disputed, not least by Iran. So who is telling the truth? 

    Suspicions about the White House version of events have been fuelled by the lack of information about the rescued air force colonel, the plane’s weapons systems officer, who has only ever been referred to by his call sign, ‘Dude 44 Bravo’.

    Meanwhile, his ability to walk more than a mile up a 7,000 ft ridge while – in the words of President Trump – being ‘seriously wounded’ and having very limited water has only strengthened the sceptics’ case.

    The pilot of the F-15 – who ejected separately and could have landed some distance away from his fellow crew member – swiftly switched on his special beacon (which transmits an encrypted signal) and was rescued within six hours.

    The US military was puzzled by why the other airman didn’t do likewise but it now appears he was intent on finding a location where his signal transmission would be stronger.

    Pentagon officials now say that when he did finally activate his beacon, they feared it might be an Iranian trap, as his initial radio messages were highly unusual.

    According to the US TV network CBS, his first message was ‘God is great’ (Allahu Akbar in Arabic), which he followed with a four-digit number that the US military only belatedly realised was a police code for an officer in distress. 

    Rescuers were only fully convinced he was genuine when they asked him a question about his father.

    It helped that he was almost simultaneously located by a new top-secret CIA device codenamed Ghost Murmur, which uses long-range ‘quantum magnetometry’ to trace the electromagnetic fingerprint of a human heartbeat. 

    Join the discussion

    What do you think the real motive was behind the massive US operation in Iran—rescue or something bigger?

    Wreckage believed to be from US military transport aircraft and helicopters related at a remote landing site in Iran, April 6, 2026

    Wreckage believed to be from US military transport aircraft and helicopters related at a remote landing site in Iran, April 6, 2026 

    The cutting-edge technology, developed by defence giant Lockheed Martin, uses AI software to isolate the correct heartbeat from ‘background noise’.

    The Iranian government – along with myriad online voices questioning the official US narrative – claims that the huge operation to rescue Dude 44 was, in fact, a mission to snatch its estimated 450kg of highly enriched uranium, which ended in ‘complete failure’.

    They cite the fact that the two Super Hercules MC-130J military transport planes involved were deployed to an airstrip near Isfahan, a city 200 miles away from where the F-15 was shot down.

    Isfahan is, however, close to the Natanz nuclear site, and an attempt to seize Iran’s uranium would explain the huge number of planes and special forces troops involved.

    Far more, they say, than would be required for the relatively minor job of extracting a single downed airman.

    US-based defence commentator Tyler Weaver, who calls himself Armchair Warlord on X, where he has 150,000 followers, claimed the downing of the F-15 crew and the search operation were ‘both fake’, adding: ‘Using multiple heavy transports, assault helicopters for 100+ operators is logistically absurd for rescuing one or two isolated airmen in a remote area.

    ‘A standard search operation would have used one-two silent helicopters at night and not of this scale.’

    Destroying Iran’s deeply buried uranium stockpiles has long been a priority target for Israel and the US, and numerous commentators have argued that removing them would be the strongest justification for putting American ‘boots on the ground’ in the country.

    Prior to the rescue mission, there had been reports that Trump was seriously considering sending special forces troops to do exactly that in a limited land operation.

    ‘What was that F-15 doing up in that area? What was its mission? I think it was preparing for a ground attack on the Natanz nuclear reactor,’ said defence consultant and former CIA agent Larry Johnson in a podcast. ‘The story we’ve been given is a lie.’

    Retired US special forces officer Anthony Aguilar was among those who said the use of such large transport planes – the MC-130 is a four-engine aircraft with a 132ft wing span – indicated a much bigger objective than rescuing an airman.

    He claimed the ‘rescue operation expanded’ to become the ‘desired… high-risk operation to ALSO seize the uranium in Iran’. He added: ‘This WAS intended to be that operation. It failed.’

    The airmen ejected from their plane after the Iranian shot it down during the war

    The airmen ejected from their plane after the Iranian shot it down during the war 

    The story of how an American air force crewman of an F-15 fighter jet was rescued in Iran is at the centre of an extraordinary online debate over whether it was all an elaborate smokescreen. Pictured: US planes reportedly destroyed during the rescue operation

    The story of how an American air force crewman of an F-15 fighter jet was rescued in Iran is at the centre of an extraordinary online debate over whether it was all an elaborate smokescreen. Pictured: US planes reportedly destroyed during the rescue operation 

    Ghost Murmur reportedly uses long–range 'quantum magnetometry'. Pictured: A quantum magnetometer developed by NASA

    Ghost Murmur reportedly uses long–range ‘quantum magnetometry’. Pictured: A quantum magnetometer developed by NASA 

    Despite being adapted to use the roughest of runways, the two Super Hercules that took part in the rescue operation allegedly couldn’t take off again after landing on an abandoned airstrip.

    ‘We blew them up to smithereens,’ Trump claimed, adding: ‘It was sandy, wet sand, so we thought there may be a problem taking off because of the weight of the plane. And then we also had all the men jumping back on to the planes, and they got pretty well bogged down.’

    It’s standard US military procedure to destroy hardware to prevent it falling into enemy hands.

    Iran, however, insists the two $100million (£74million) Hercules were actually destroyed – along with two Black Hawk helicopters – by their forces in a ferocious firefight.

    Anthony Aguilar disputed the claim the planes got stuck. 

    ‘I have seen MC-130Js plough through dirt, mud, snow and gravel. It is more likely that the aircraft took hits upon entry and… while on the ground,’ he tweeted.

    Whoever destroyed the planes, detractors have scoffed at the Trump administration’s boasts about the success of an operation that cost such a vast amount in ruined high-tech kit.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleRevealed: Footy fans’ conspiracy theory about AFL umpire who accused star of calling him a cheat
    Next Article Is music ruining the footy? Fans and experts are divided as AFL matches start to resemble concerts
    Papa Linc

    Related Posts

    School shooting rampage leaves at least 18 injured as pupil opens fire with hunting rifle in Turkey

    April 14, 2026

    I was in bed at 5am when the call came – Russia had invaded Ukraine: CHRIS PLEASANCE on the chaos of covering a global war

    April 14, 2026

    Headteacher who feared Southport killer was a risk ‘was accused of racially stereotyping a black boy with a knife’

    April 14, 2026
    Ads
    Top Posts

    Secret code break that ‘solved’ the Zodiac killer case: Expert who unmasked single suspect behind two of America’s darkest murders tells all on bombshell investigation

    December 24, 2025134 Views

    Tech entrepreneur uses ChatGPT to create a personalised cancer vaccine for his DOG – and the breakthrough could soon help humans too

    March 14, 2026106 Views

    Newsreader Sandy Gall personally lobbied Margaret Thatcher’s government to back the Mujahideen

    July 4, 202591 Views

    Night Of The Samurai Grand Arrivals Gallery » December 23, 2025

    December 24, 202561 Views
    Don't Miss
    Entertainment April 14, 2026

    Lady shares what happened after she sacrificed her brother’s school fee to save her boyfriend

    A lady has shared a surprising turn of events after she assisted her then-boyfriend with…

    “If God be for you, no man can be against you, no matter how hard dey try” – Iyabo Ojo throws shades following her new achievement

    School shooting rampage leaves at least 18 injured as pupil opens fire with hunting rifle in Turkey

    Fury cruises over Makhmudov to set up Joshua showdown

    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • WhatsApp

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest headlines from PapaLinc about news & entertainment.

    Ads
    About Us
    About Us

    Your authentic source for news and entertainment.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Email Us: info@papalinc.com
    For Ads on our website and social handles.
    Email Us: ads@papalinc.com
    Contact: +1-718-924-6727

    Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
    Our Picks

    Lady shares what happened after she sacrificed her brother’s school fee to save her boyfriend

    “If God be for you, no man can be against you, no matter how hard dey try” – Iyabo Ojo throws shades following her new achievement

    School shooting rampage leaves at least 18 injured as pupil opens fire with hunting rifle in Turkey

    Most Popular

    Augustina Ama Tabuah donates t-shirts to John Mahama, Kofi Arko Nokoe

    October 20, 20240 Views

    Bill Asamoah, Ship Dealer, others light up 13th 3G Awards in New York

    October 21, 20240 Views

    Ghanaians’ taxes are not linked to my private parts – MC Yeboah tackles promiscuity claims

    October 21, 20240 Views
    © 2026 PapaLinc. Designed by LiveTechOn LLC.
    • News
      • Africa News
      • International
    • Entertainment
      • Lifestyle
      • Movies
      • Music
    • Politics
    • Sports

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. Please support us by disabling your Ad Blocker.