
LANGLEY, Va. – A high-stakes “shell game” orchestrated by the CIA allowed U.S. Special Operations forces to pluck a wounded Air Force colonel from a 7,000-foot Iranian ridgeline this weekend, ending a frantic 48-hour race against the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
The mission, which President Donald Trump described as “one of the most daring in U.S. history,” relied on a sophisticated deception campaign that successfully blinded Iranian intelligence while rescuers converged on the Zagros Mountains.
A Race Against the Clock
The crisis began Friday when an F-15E Strike Eagle was downed by Iranian fire. While the pilot was recovered within seven hours, the Weapons Systems Officer (WSO)—now identified as a senior colonel—was forced to evade capture in the rugged terrain of the Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province.
Wounded and moving under the cover of darkness, the colonel hiked to a high-altitude ridgeline, hiding in a rocky crevice to avoid IRGC patrols and local tribesmen incentivized by a government bounty.
The Deception: “Moving out of Country”
As Iranian forces flooded the region, the CIA launched a “radioactive” misinformation campaign. According to senior administration officials, operatives spread digital and human intelligence across Iranian networks suggesting the airman had already been recovered and was being smuggled toward the border in a ground convoy.
The ruse worked. Sources indicate that Iranian search teams shifted their focus toward major roadways and exit points, thinning the perimeter around the colonel’s actual hiding spot. This window of “confusion and uncertainty” gave the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) the opening it needed.
The Extraction: Fire and Steel
The final rescue was a massive display of military might, involving:
- Dozens of Aircraft: Including MQ-9 Reaper drones and A-10 Thunderbolt IIs providing close air support.
- Lethal Enveloping: Drones struck “military-aged males” who approached within three kilometers of the colonel’s position.
- Controlled Chaos: U.S. commandos fired to suppress nearby Iranian units but avoided a prolonged direct firefight.
The mission was not without cost. Two UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters were damaged by enemy fire, and at least one MC-130J transport plane had to be destroyed by U.S. forces on the ground after a mechanical failure to prevent its technology from falling into Iranian hands.
“WE GOT HIM!”
The colonel was eventually flown to a base in Kuwait, where he is currently receiving medical treatment for non-life-threatening injuries. President Trump confirmed the success early Sunday morning on Truth Social, writing, “WE GOT HIM! This brave Warrior was behind enemy lines… being hunted down by our enemies who were getting closer by the hour.”
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While the Pentagon remains silent on the specific “unique technology” used by the CIA to pinpoint the airman’s beacon, the successful operation serves as a pivotal morale boost for U.S. forces as the conflict enters its sixth week.


