NFL
US Army Rangers Ambushed Deep in Iran – 32 Survive 45 Minutes Under Fire
😱 US Army Rangers Ambushed Deep in Iran – 32 Survive 45 Minutes Under Fire 😱
In the early morning hours of 6:27 a.m. local time, a covert operation was about to unfold in northern Iran, just 45 kilometers southeast of Tehran.
The U.S. Army Rangers, specifically from the elite 75th Ranger Regiment, were inserted via four MH-47G Chinooks, flying low through the freezing mountain air.
Their target was an underground command complex belonging to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), buried deep beneath solid rock and believed to be the nerve center for coordinating military operations across the region.
For three months, U.S. intelligence had meticulously tracked this facility, employing satellite surveillance, signal interception, and cyber infiltration to confirm its location and capabilities.
With traditional airstrikes deemed ineffective against such fortified positions, the only viable option left was a direct assault from within
As the helicopters approached the target, Iranian radar units detected their low-altitude flight, but it was too late for an effective response.
The Chinooks skimmed the ridge lines, exposing themselves for only seconds before anti-aircraft batteries could lock onto them.
In an instant, the sky erupted with tracer rounds as ZSU-23 anti-aircraft guns opened fire from the mountain ridges.
Despite taking hits, the Rangers were not deterred; fast ropes were deployed, and within 40 seconds, boots hit Iranian soil.
The first Ranger element quickly secured the ridgeline under heavy fire, establishing suppressive arcs while Carl Gustaf teams fired high explosive rounds into the enemy anti-aircraft positions.
One Iranian gun position was obliterated in a fiery explosion, but the threat was far from neutralized.
The IRGC had already mobilized 120 special operations troops trained for bunker defense, anticipating such an incursion.
As the Rangers breached the only visible entrance, a reinforced blast door, thermal imaging confirmed the presence of heavy machine guns waiting inside.
Shaped charges were detonated, and the resulting explosion shook the mountain, sending shockwaves across the valley.
However, as the Rangers entered through the smoke and debris, they immediately found themselves in a kill zone.
PKM machine guns opened fire from reinforced sandbag positions, and the confined tunnel amplified the chaos of gunfire, creating a deadly pressure chamber.
Despite suffering casualties, the Rangers pressed on, throwing flashbangs and fragmentation grenades to suppress the Iranian defenders.
After four minutes of brutal close-quarters combat, the first defensive line collapsed, but the battle was far from over.
Meanwhile, a second Ranger element was scaling the ridge to access a ventilation shaft, believing it wide enough for vertical insertion.
However, Iranian defenders detected their movement and flooded the shaft with automatic fire, forcing one Ranger to fall and fracture his leg.
Despite the danger, the team pressed forward, dropping flash charges down the shaft before completing their descent under covering fire from the main assault.
By 6:42 a.m., the Iranian command center realized they were facing a full internal breach, and encrypted calls for reinforcements were sent out.
However, the narrow mountain road was already under Ranger sniper control, preventing any vehicles from reaching the facility
Inside the bunker, lights flickered as power lines were severed during the firefight, and backup generators activated, casting the corridors in ominous red emergency lighting.
As the Rangers continued their assault, they cleared level two after 11 minutes of relentless fighting, preventing the Iranians from sealing internal blast doors.
The final blast door leading to the command center was nearly three feet thick, designed to withstand bunker buster bombs, but not for internal breaches.
Rangers stacked multiple synchronized charges at weak points identified from pre-mission schematics, and when it detonated, the pressure wave was deafening.
Inside the command center, Iranian officers scrambled to destroy intelligence servers, but the Rangers moved in swiftly, engaging in a final, violent confrontation.
Gunfire echoed in the enclosed chamber, with Rangers clearing server aisles while medics tended to the wounded.
At 7:12 a.m., 45 minutes after the initial insertion, the last organized resistance fell silent.
The bunker was now under American control, but the aftermath was grim—16 Rangers were wounded, three critically, while dozens of Iranian defenders were killed or captured.
Multiple command servers were seized intact, allowing analysts in Washington to extract vital intelligence, including drone strike coordinates and militia funding routes.
The once-untouchable facility had fallen in under an hour, sending shockwaves through the geopolitical landscape.
This operation illustrated a powerful message: sometimes, even the deepest bunkers in the world are not safe from determined forces
