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JUST IN:Iranian Fighters Attempt to SHOOT DOWN an F-22 – The U.S. Response Is ICE COLD – HTT

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For three hours, the routine night shift had been uneventful, but at 0231 local time, a flicker on the screen caught his attention.

Something was moving, deeper inside Iranian territory than it should have been, and it had been flying undetected for nearly 40 minutes.

The operator quickly picked up the phone, initiating a response that had been long anticipated.

The mission had commenced hours earlier at Neatim airbase in southern Israel, where a detachment of F-22 Raptors had been quietly deployed.

Official Pentagon language spoke of “rotational presence” and “regional interoperability,” terms that masked the true nature of the operation.

Sending F-22 Raptors, the most advanced air superiority fighters in the U.S. arsenal, to the Middle East for routine operations was anything but ordinary.

The real objective was deep signals intelligence.

Iran’s air defense network had been modernizing rapidly, and American analysts were alarmed by the pace of this development.

The Bavar 373 system was part of a layered defense architecture, with command nodes strategically placed inland and emission patterns that satellites struggled to decode.

The stealth capabilities of the F-22, equipped with a sophisticated sensor fusion suite and electronic warfare systems, allowed them to penetrate areas where satellites could not.

For 40 minutes, the Raptors flew undetected, weaving through mountain ranges and avoiding known radar installations.

They operated at altitudes optimized for electronic collection, methodically gathering intelligence that would reshape American understanding of Iranian air defenses for years to come.

The crews communicated in short encrypted bursts, and everything was proceeding flawlessly until the Bavar 373’s passive detection network caught a glimpse of the intruders.

While it was not enough for a weapons-quality track, it was sufficient to confirm the presence of something in the sky.

By 0243, the scramble order was issued, and two Iranian F-14A Tomcats rolled out of their shelters.

The crews had been on alert, anticipating an intrusion like this, and they were determined to respond.

Despite their age, the F-14s were equipped with the powerful AWG-9 radar and the Fakur 90, a long-range air-to-air missile that demanded respect.

The mission was clear: intercept the Raptors, block their escape, and force a confrontation on Iranian terms.

This was a message that could not be misinterpreted.

As the F-14s lit their afterburners and climbed into the dark sky, the Raptors’ ALR-94 electronic warfare system had already painted a complete picture of the situation.

The moment the F-14s activated their radar, the Raptors captured, cataloged, and tracked their emissions.

By the time the Tomcats reached their cruising altitude, the Raptor pilots had already calculated firing solutions on both Iranian aircraft.

This was the fundamental asymmetry of the engagement—the F-22s did not just see first; they saw with a margin that allowed them to dictate the geometry of the fight.

The Tomcat crews, unaware that they were already the hunted, pressed forward, driven by pride, training, and orders.

They had a mission to complete, and every kilometer they closed on the Raptors was crucial.

At approximately 65 nautical miles, one of the Iranian pilots made his call, launching two Fakur 90 missiles toward the Raptors.

The electronic engagement lasted a mere 11 seconds.

The F-22s had spent the entire encounter building a precise library of the missiles’ active radar homing frequencies.

As the missiles activated in their terminal phase, the Raptors unleashed surgical interference at the exact frequencies required for the missiles to function.

Simultaneously, they deployed chaff packages, creating false returns that confused the missiles’ guidance systems.

One missile detonated on a chaff cloud, while the other lost guidance and fell into the Iranian night.

The Raptors were already crossing the border, having successfully evaded the attack.

But then, new radar contacts appeared—multiple, high, fast, and closing in with an energy signature that suggested they were not offensive.

F-35Cs had been airborne for over an hour, running a silent combat air patrol, launched from the USS Gerald R. Ford the moment the intelligence mission began.

Upon detecting the missile launches, they powered up and turned east, rapidly closing the distance.

What the F-14 crews saw on their scopes was unsettling—intermittent contacts from the F-35s, low-observable signatures that had eluded them earlier.

Their radar warning receivers screamed with targeting emissions they could not localize, and the situation was deteriorating.

With empty missile rails and no clean lock, the Iranian pilots faced a grim reality.

The F-35s approached with weapons free and a targeting solution, their geometry signaling an unavoidable confrontation.

The tactical situation for the F-14 crews collapsed rapidly.

In front of them, the Raptors were already across the border and pulling away, while behind them, the F-35s closed in fast.

With no options left, the Tomcat pilots broke south, retreating toward Trees.

The F-35s did not pursue; they simply held their position, watching the Iranian fighters fade from their sensors.

The message was delivered without a single shot fired: the U.S. could have engaged but chose not to.

By 0318, both Raptors were over Iraqi airspace, and by 0349, they were approaching Neatim.

The recordings they brought back would be analyzed for months, while Iran’s state media declared a victory.

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