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Iran Thinks CIA Drones Took out its F-14 Tomcat

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Iran Thinks CIA Drones Took out its F-14 Tomcat

Here's What You Need to Know: To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
Iran is the only other country besides the United States to operate arguably history’s most powerful interceptor aircraft, the F-14 Tomcat. And the Islamic republic has worked the twin-engine, swing-wing fighters hard.

The F-14s played a major role in Iran’s war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988. Iranian Tomcat pilots were the only ones to successfully employ the F-14’s long-range, heavyweight AIM-54 Phoenix missile to shoot down enemy planes.

In the decades after the war, Tehran repaired and upgraded the surviving F-14s, scouring the globe for parts in defiance of a U.S. government embargo.
The Americans retired their F-14s in 2006, but around 40 of Iran’s Tomcats remain active. Their main role is defending Iran’s nuclear sites. It’s a mission that has brought the interceptors in close contact with some very mysterious aircraft, according to a bizarre and fascinating 2013 story in Combat Aircraft magazine by reporter Babak Taghvaee.

The Iranians believed the objects were spy drones belonging to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, sent to sniff out Tehran’s suspected atomic weapons program. But they attribute to these alleged unmanned aerial vehicles flight characteristics and capabilities far beyond what any known drone can achieve.

And in 2012 one of the alleged flying robots reportedly also shot down an F-14 attempting to intercept it. Or at least some Iranians seem genuinely to believe so.
Over the decades Tehran has built three major nuclear facilities that could, in theory, be used to assemble atomic weapons: reactors at Bushehr and Arak and an enrichment plant at Natanz.
This infrastructure became public knowledge in 2002. No doubt the CIA took a strong interest, potentially long before that date. “A number of reconnaissance UAVs were sent to collect intelligence to prepare for a possible attack” by Western forces, Taghvaee wrote.

To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
The UAVs could jam radars and disrupt interceptors’ navigation systems. They flew “outside the atmosphere” at speeds of up to Mach 10. They could hover. Flying at night, they emitted a telltale blue light that led to their nickname: “luminous objects.”

“In several cases … F-14s faced them but were unable to operate their armament systems properly,” Taghvaee wrote. One Tomcat taking off to intercept a luminous object on Jan. 26, 2012, mysteriously exploded, killing both crewmen. Taghvaee implies the alleged UAV was somehow responsible, as the F-14 in question was “one of the fittest” of the 40 or so Tomcats then in service.

It should go without saying that the CIA and the Pentagon most likely fly reconnaissance aircraft near—and even over—Iranian nuclear sites. In 2012 and 2013, Iranian fighters tried to intercept American Predator drones outside Tehran’s airspace. In the 2013 incident, a U.S. Air Force F-22 stealth fighter blocked the intercept with some Top Gun-style theatrics.

In 2009, the Air Force copped to the existence of a new, previously secret drone operated in conjunction with the intelligence agency. The RQ-170 Sentinel was based in southern Afghanistan within a short flying distance of Iran. In December 2011, a Sentinel crashed on the Afghanistan-Iran border and was captured by Iranian troops.

Neither the Predator nor the Sentinel is particularly high-flying nor can hover or glow blue. And neither has the electrical power to scramble radars and navigation gear.
Rumors abound that the Air Force and CIA operate a stealthy new drone that has not been disclosed to the public. Even if they do, it’s unlikely that the new UAV is capable of Mach-10 hypersonic flight—the Pentagon is still struggling to reach Mach five.

So if Iranian F-14s truly are chasing around super-fast, super-high-flying, and lethal UFOs, what exactly are they? Who knows.
David Axe served as Defense Editor of the National Interest. He is the author of the graphic novels War Fix, War Is Boring and Machete Squad.
This article first appeared in 2019 and is being reprinted for reader interest.



@SQ8 @PanzerKiel @Blacklight @Ark_Angel @Rashid Mahmood @airomerix @Hodor @Raider 21 @dbc @gambit @Dazzler @Signalian @KAL-EL @RescueRanger @Tps43 @jaibi @Irfan Baloch


any such cases with the Pakistan Air Force? trying to intercept glowing objects 🤔 🤫
 
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iranian%20f-14%20pilots.jpg



Iran Thinks CIA Drones Took out its F-14 Tomcat

Here's What You Need to Know: To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
Iran is the only other country besides the United States to operate arguably history’s most powerful interceptor aircraft, the F-14 Tomcat. And the Islamic republic has worked the twin-engine, swing-wing fighters hard.

The F-14s played a major role in Iran’s war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988. Iranian Tomcat pilots were the only ones to successfully employ the F-14’s long-range, heavyweight AIM-54 Phoenix missile to shoot down enemy planes.

In the decades after the war, Tehran repaired and upgraded the surviving F-14s, scouring the globe for parts in defiance of a U.S. government embargo.
The Americans retired their F-14s in 2006, but around 40 of Iran’s Tomcats remain active. Their main role is defending Iran’s nuclear sites. It’s a mission that has brought the interceptors in close contact with some very mysterious aircraft, according to a bizarre and fascinating 2013 story in Combat Aircraft magazine by reporter Babak Taghvaee.

The Iranians believed the objects were spy drones belonging to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, sent to sniff out Tehran’s suspected atomic weapons program. But they attribute to these alleged unmanned aerial vehicles flight characteristics and capabilities far beyond what any known drone can achieve.

And in 2012 one of the alleged flying robots reportedly also shot down an F-14 attempting to intercept it. Or at least some Iranians seem genuinely to believe so.
Over the decades Tehran has built three major nuclear facilities that could, in theory, be used to assemble atomic weapons: reactors at Bushehr and Arak and an enrichment plant at Natanz.
This infrastructure became public knowledge in 2002. No doubt the CIA took a strong interest, potentially long before that date. “A number of reconnaissance UAVs were sent to collect intelligence to prepare for a possible attack” by Western forces, Taghvaee wrote.

To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
The UAVs could jam radars and disrupt interceptors’ navigation systems. They flew “outside the atmosphere” at speeds of up to Mach 10. They could hover. Flying at night, they emitted a telltale blue light that led to their nickname: “luminous objects.”

“In several cases … F-14s faced them but were unable to operate their armament systems properly,” Taghvaee wrote. One Tomcat taking off to intercept a luminous object on Jan. 26, 2012, mysteriously exploded, killing both crewmen. Taghvaee implies the alleged UAV was somehow responsible, as the F-14 in question was “one of the fittest” of the 40 or so Tomcats then in service.

It should go without saying that the CIA and the Pentagon most likely fly reconnaissance aircraft near—and even over—Iranian nuclear sites. In 2012 and 2013, Iranian fighters tried to intercept American Predator drones outside Tehran’s airspace. In the 2013 incident, a U.S. Air Force F-22 stealth fighter blocked the intercept with some Top Gun-style theatrics.

In 2009, the Air Force copped to the existence of a new, previously secret drone operated in conjunction with the intelligence agency. The RQ-170 Sentinel was based in southern Afghanistan within a short flying distance of Iran. In December 2011, a Sentinel crashed on the Afghanistan-Iran border and was captured by Iranian troops.

Neither the Predator nor the Sentinel is particularly high-flying nor can hover or glow blue. And neither has the electrical power to scramble radars and navigation gear.
Rumors abound that the Air Force and CIA operate a stealthy new drone that has not been disclosed to the public. Even if they do, it’s unlikely that the new UAV is capable of Mach-10 hypersonic flight—the Pentagon is still struggling to reach Mach five.

So if Iranian F-14s truly are chasing around super-fast, super-high-flying, and lethal UFOs, what exactly are they? Who knows.
David Axe served as Defense Editor of the National Interest. He is the author of the graphic novels War Fix, War Is Boring and Machete Squad.
This article first appeared in 2019 and is being reprinted for reader interest.



@SQ8 @PanzerKiel @Blacklight @Ark_Angel @Rashid Mahmood @airomerix @Hodor @Raider 21 @dbc @gambit @Dazzler @Signalian @KAL-EL @RescueRanger @Tps43 @jaibi @Irfan Baloch


any such cases with the Pakistan Air Force? trying to intercept glowing objects 🤔 🤫
Do not waste your time on anything that cites Babak Taghvaee as its source. lol
 
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Didn't Iran have a famous UFO encounter where they used F-4 to intercept near Tehran?

This stuff is questionable though and National Interest love to make some ridiculously inaccurate claims and publish 50% bullshit articles with 50% fear mongering. Think about this particular claim. If US had such drones that can hover and fly outside and inside atmosphere at least up to mach 10 and perform incredible armament feats like destroying a F-14 suddenly from long range and jamming everything, why would they use Sentinel and Predator drones many years after already having such drones in service. Why would you spend most of you defence budget buying stone weapons when you have machine gun? If such things are real, immediately it is unchallengable by anyone and such weapons will be mostly the only thing such a country would buy. This is not about 4th gen fighter compared to 5th gen fighters but something like 0th gen compared with 6th gen. It makes no sense at all. Some tall claims are just tall claims.

According to many American nuclear silo operators, UFOs been disabling nuclear missiles in US since 1960s. According to some alleged Soviet operators, UFOs been activating Soviet nuclear missiles since 1960s. Chinese are super quiet about all the UFO stuff hahaha. Maybe there is no such thing at all, there are no visits detected in China or the state consider this for some reason to be highest secret? Is that likely at all? I would suggest there are visits since too many countries governments do report on some that are so unlikely to be natural things, at least natural things we understand and are part of scientific awareness.
 
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Iran should buy Su30SM2 to replace these F14.
These F14 don't have much combat power and need to consume a lot of maintenance funds
 
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Isn't Iran buying Su-35? Basically the modern F-14 if they get R-37M with Su-35. Su-35 should have even more range than the old F-14 and even more payload capability. F-100 engines cannot compare with the newer Al-41. Of course modern 5th gen fighters with supercruise are better interceptors since they can perform better supercruise than Su-35. Top speed is nearly just as good in case fuel is not an issue and speed to target is everything.
 
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Do Iranians really think that a 1970s era F-14 is worth a risk for US to shoot it down? I mean in event of war, F-14s will be a target practice. Imagine you are the only kid in the block with VCR and rest of the kids are on netflix youtube online streaming etc, thats how outdated F-14 is. Even the 200000000000000000+ km range AIm54 will be useless against 21st century EW systems carried in any strike packages.
 
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Must be slow news day to put up a complete nonsensical garbage attributed to an author with zero credibility and dating back two decades. I am sure Bobby the moon man was flying the UFO saucers that took out the F-14. Mr. Babak Taghvaee should stick to telling these tall tales at the local Chai Khane.
 
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Iran should buy Su30SM2 to replace these F14.
These F14 don't have much combat power and need to consume a lot of maintenance funds
The F-14A was the finest plane of its era, but is now over 40 years old and definitely needs replacement. It is a testament to Iranian engineering prowess that these venerable machines are still flying and have been upgraded and still pack a punch. In capable IRIAF hands they are still very lethal air combat fighter.

Persian Tomcats: How Iran Keeps its 1970s F-14 Fleet Viable Through Domestic Modernisation




During the 1970s the Iran was a leading client for a range of advanced Western armaments, and under the leadership of the Pahlavi dynasty the country was a key defence partner of the United States and its Western European allies which was strategically located on the Soviet Union's borders. While Iran was widely known to be pursuing a nuclear deterrent, which would target both its Arab neighbours and the neighbouring USSR, it had also planned major investments in conventional arms including purchasing over 300 American F-16 fighters, subsidising research and development costs for a land based variant of the F-18, and possibly even acquiring Invincible Class aircraft carriers from Britain which would be escorted by American Oliver Hazer Perry Class destroyers. Although none of these purchases materialised due to the Pahlavi dynasty's overthrow in 1979, which was a serious loss to the defence sectors of multiple Western countries, Iran had made one prolific purchase of American fourth generation fighter aircraft before this - the F-14A Tomcat.




article_60ec49ef684715_25251638.jpeg

U.S. Navy F-14 with Six AIM-54 Phoenix Missiles



The F-14 was the heaviest fourth generation fighter ever developed, rivalled in size only by the Soviet MiG-25 and MiG-31 interceptors, and was the most capable fighter in the U.S. Military which had been developed specifically for long range interception of enemy aircraft. The Tomcat was the first fourth generation fighter to enter service anywhere in the world, and joined the U.S. Navy from 1974 which would be its only operator other than the Iranian Air Force. The fighter's very high cost and high maintenance requirements meant that even the U.S. Military purchased it in only limited numbers, and Iran was the only foreign country which was willing to invest in acquiring it. The Tomcat was reportedly personally chosen by the Iranian head of state, Mohamed Reza Shah, who favoured it over the competing heavyweight fighter the F-15 that had been developed for the U.S. Air Force. The F-14's sensors were far more powerful, and it benefitted from 'fire and forget' capabilities which the F-15 lacked and from almost triple the air to air engagement range which made it overwhelmingly more capable for beyond visual range air to air combat. Although the F-15 had a higher climb rate and operational altitude, the F-14 had an overwhelming advantage in most other areas with its only significant drawback being its much higher operational costs and maintenance needs. With the F-15 struggling to engage Soviet MiG-25R Foxbat jets, a reconnaissance variant of the well known interceptor, the F-14 was the ideal aircraft to challenge Soviet reconnaissance flights over Iranian territory. When it received its first F-14s Iran became the second country in the world only after the United States to operate fourth generation fighters, with 79 aircraft delivered out of a total order of 80.




article_60ec4a678ac538_41543936.jpg

Iranian F-14 Fighter Squadron



The collapse in Iranian-U.S. relations after the Pahlavi Dynasty's overthrow led the U.S. to cut supplies of spare parts or new armaments to the Iranian Air Force, leading to widespread estimates by Western analysts that the Iranian fleet would be left totally inoperable within three years if not less. The toll of an eight year war with Iraq from 1980-1988, which saw Iranian F-14s shoot down more Iraqi aircraft than the whole rest of the Iranian Military combined, took an even greater toll on supplies despite its ability to acquire parts through third parties. Iran has nevertheless continued to field F-14s for over 40 years, and has even managed to expand the number of operational airframes over time, equip the aircraft with new weapons, and enhance the aircraft's electronics, sensors and other key subsystems.




article_60ec4aa38db606_59758100.jpeg

Iranian F-14 Under Refurbishment



Iran has developed extensive infrastructure to service and refurbish its F-14 fleet alongside its older F-4 and F-5 fighters, as well as a defence industry capable of producing parts for these fighters. By the turn of the century, the country's technicians has reportedly made close to 300 separate modifications to the Tomcat to improve its performance. Recent developments in 3d printing technologies have reportedly allowed the country to expand the number of F-14s in service by making it easier and cheaper to produce complex spare parts, while the fighters' wiring, sensors and avionics have all largely been replaced. Iran has developed a relatively sophisticated and self reliant military aviation industry, as reflected most prolifically in its flying stealth drone programs which have proven successful in combat as well as its Kowsar lightweight fourth generation fighter program. This has placed it in a strong position not only to service and refurbish, but also to extensively modernise its F-14s. A modernisation program to upgrade the F-14As to F-14AM standard began in the mid-2010s, and would extend the aircraft's operational lives until 2030 and allow them to better contend with modern enemy fighters such as the Royal Saudi Air Force's F-15SA or U.S. Navy's F-18E Block Super Hornets. Superior avionics and adaptations to F-14's fire control system played an important role in bringing the Tomcat into the 21st century, and complemented efforts to equip the aircraft with new weaponry.




article_60ec3e9d2f4f88_12735334.jpg

Iranian Kowsar Fighter




Iran's inability to acquire new American missiles for its F-14s had led it to modify the jets from the 1990s to be able to deploy Soviet origin missiles, including the R-27 long range air to air missile and R-73 infra red guided missile. The R-27 was much shorter ranged and less capable than the AIM-54 the fighters were originally equipped with, but was also far smaller and lighter meaning it could also be carried by normal sized aircraft and on the F-14 would facilitate a much better flight performance due to its lower weight. The R-73's reliability and ability to fire at extreme angles, meanwhile, made it by many accounts the most capable short ranged air to air missile of its time. Although they improved the F-14's versatility, these missiles were not well suited to the Tomcat's primary mission which was very long range interceptions - something only the American AIM-54 and Russian R-33 and K-100 were well suited to at the time. This led Iran to eventually reverse engineer and extensively improve the AIM-54 domestically, which provided it with a similar looking but more capable missile named the Fakour 90.




article_60ec49d6950311_64090502.jpg

Iranian Fakour 90 Air to Air Missile



The AIM-54 was prized for its speed, its long range and its high manoeuvrability, and carried a powerful radar and large 61kg warhead - over triple that of the AIM-120 missiles carried by modern American fighters. The Fakour 90 has, according to Iranian sources, improved on these characteristics and provided a much extended range from approximately 190km to around 250-300km. The AIM-54 is the only air to air missile in the world recorded to have destroyed three fighters with a single impact - a feat achieved during the Iran-Iraq War - and was key to allowing the F-14s to gain a kill ratio of over 160:3 against the Iraqi Air Force during the war. Its successor, which will be made available from domestic sources, is a vital asset to the F-14 fleet today as the aircraft continue to be relied on heavily for Iran's defence. How long the Iranian Air Force can continue to rely on the F-14 remains questionable, but it was announced in 2020 that the country was developing a new class of heavyweight fighter which could well eventually serve as a replacement and bear several similarities to the F-14.




article_60ec4add2055c5_23911235.jpg

Russian Su-57 and Su-35 Heavyweight Fighters






The Iranian military aviation sector's extensive experience with the Tomcat over more than 45 years will likely prove a major asset to efforts to develop a new class of aircraft - much as Iranian experience with both the F-14 and the F-5 is widely thought to have influenced its development of the lightweight Kowsar jet. The possibility also remains that Iran could replace the F-14 with a foreign sourced fighter, and with Russian being the only party other than the U.S. offering heavyweight fighters for export a design such as the Su-35 or Su-57 could be chosen in future, with the Su-57 in particular representing a very considerable improvement over the Tomcat with a much lower reported operational cost. The possibility also remains that Iran could eventually seek to replace the F-14s at a much later date with an indigenous unmanned aircraft, with the country's drones having proven formidable in combat and tests of drones with air to air capabilities having already begun in the country.





Iranian F-14 Under Refurbishment




During the 1970s the Iran was a leading client for a range of advanced Western armaments, and under the leadership of the Pahlavi dynasty the country was a key defence partner of the United States and its Western European allies which was strategically located on the Soviet Union's borders. While Iran was widely known to be pursuing a nuclear deterrent, which would target both its Arab neighbours and the neighbouring USSR, it had also planned major investments in conventional arms including purchasing over 300 American F-16 fighters, subsidising research and development costs for a land based variant of the F-18, and possibly even acquiring Invincible Class aircraft carriers from Britain which would be escorted by American Oliver Hazer Perry Class destroyers. Although none of these purchases materialised due to the Pahlavi dynasty's overthrow in 1979, which was a serious loss to the defence sectors of multiple Western countries, Iran had made one prolific purchase of American fourth generation fighter aircraft before this - the F-14A Tomcat.




article_60ec49ef684715_25251638.jpeg

U.S. Navy F-14 with Six AIM-54 Phoenix Missiles



The F-14 was the heaviest fourth generation fighter ever developed, rivalled in size only by the Soviet MiG-25 and MiG-31 interceptors, and was the most capable fighter in the U.S. Military which had been developed specifically for long range interception of enemy aircraft. The Tomcat was the first fourth generation fighter to enter service anywhere in the world, and joined the U.S. Navy from 1974 which would be its only operator other than the Iranian Air Force. The fighter's very high cost and high maintenance requirements meant that even the U.S. Military purchased it in only limited numbers, and Iran was the only foreign country which was willing to invest in acquiring it. The Tomcat was reportedly personally chosen by the Iranian head of state, Mohamed Reza Shah, who favoured it over the competing heavyweight fighter the F-15 that had been developed for the U.S. Air Force. The F-14's sensors were far more powerful, and it benefitted from 'fire and forget' capabilities which the F-15 lacked and from almost triple the air to air engagement range which made it overwhelmingly more capable for beyond visual range air to air combat. Although the F-15 had a higher climb rate and operational altitude, the F-14 had an overwhelming advantage in most other areas with its only significant drawback being its much higher operational costs and maintenance needs. With the F-15 struggling to engage Soviet MiG-25R Foxbat jets, a reconnaissance variant of the well known interceptor, the F-14 was the ideal aircraft to challenge Soviet reconnaissance flights over Iranian territory. When it received its first F-14s Iran became the second country in the world only after the United States to operate fourth generation fighters, with 79 aircraft delivered out of a total order of 80.




article_60ec4a678ac538_41543936.jpg

Iranian F-14 Fighter Squadron



The collapse in Iranian-U.S. relations after the Pahlavi Dynasty's overthrow led the U.S. to cut supplies of spare parts or new armaments to the Iranian Air Force, leading to widespread estimates by Western analysts that the Iranian fleet would be left totally inoperable within three years if not less. The toll of an eight year war with Iraq from 1980-1988, which saw Iranian F-14s shoot down more Iraqi aircraft than the whole rest of the Iranian Military combined, took an even greater toll on supplies despite its ability to acquire parts through third parties. Iran has nevertheless continued to field F-14s for over 40 years, and has even managed to expand the number of operational airframes over time, equip the aircraft with new weapons, and enhance the aircraft's electronics, sensors and other key subsystems.




article_60ec4aa38db606_59758100.jpeg

Iranian F-14 Under Refurbishment



Iran has developed extensive infrastructure to service and refurbish its F-14 fleet alongside its older F-4 and F-5 fighters, as well as a defence industry capable of producing parts for these fighters. By the turn of the century, the country's technicians has reportedly made close to 300 separate modifications to the Tomcat to improve its performance. Recent developments in 3d printing technologies have reportedly allowed the country to expand the number of F-14s in service by making it easier and cheaper to produce complex spare parts, while the fighters' wiring, sensors and avionics have all largely been replaced. Iran has developed a relatively sophisticated and self reliant military aviation industry, as reflected most prolifically in its flying stealth drone programs which have proven successful in combat as well as its Kowsar lightweight fourth generation fighter program. This has placed it in a strong position not only to service and refurbish, but also to extensively modernise its F-14s. A modernisation program to upgrade the F-14As to F-14AM standard began in the mid-2010s, and would extend the aircraft's operational lives until 2030 and allow them to better contend with modern enemy fighters such as the Royal Saudi Air Force's F-15SA or U.S. Navy's F-18E Block Super Hornets. Superior avionics and adaptations to F-14's fire control system played an important role in bringing the Tomcat into the 21st century, and complemented efforts to equip the aircraft with new weaponry.




article_60ec3e9d2f4f88_12735334.jpg

Iranian Kowsar Fighter




Iran's inability to acquire new American missiles for its F-14s had led it to modify the jets from the 1990s to be able to deploy Soviet origin missiles, including the R-27 long range air to air missile and R-73 infra red guided missile. The R-27 was much shorter ranged and less capable than the AIM-54 the fighters were originally equipped with, but was also far smaller and lighter meaning it could also be carried by normal sized aircraft and on the F-14 would facilitate a much better flight performance due to its lower weight. The R-73's reliability and ability to fire at extreme angles, meanwhile, made it by many accounts the most capable short ranged air to air missile of its time. Although they improved the F-14's versatility, these missiles were not well suited to the Tomcat's primary mission which was very long range interceptions - something only the American AIM-54 and Russian R-33 and K-100 were well suited to at the time. This led Iran to eventually reverse engineer and extensively improve the AIM-54 domestically, which provided it with a similar looking but more capable missile named the Fakour 90.




article_60ec49d6950311_64090502.jpg

Iranian Fakour 90 Air to Air Missile



The AIM-54 was prized for its speed, its long range and its high manoeuvrability, and carried a powerful radar and large 61kg warhead - over triple that of the AIM-120 missiles carried by modern American fighters. The Fakour 90 has, according to Iranian sources, improved on these characteristics and provided a much extended range from approximately 190km to around 250-300km. The AIM-54 is the only air to air missile in the world recorded to have destroyed three fighters with a single impact - a feat achieved during the Iran-Iraq War - and was key to allowing the F-14s to gain a kill ratio of over 160:3 against the Iraqi Air Force during the war. Its successor, which will be made available from domestic sources, is a vital asset to the F-14 fleet today as the aircraft continue to be relied on heavily for Iran's defence. How long the Iranian Air Force can continue to rely on the F-14 remains questionable, but it was announced in 2020 that the country was developing a new class of heavyweight fighter which could well eventually serve as a replacement and bear several similarities to the F-14.




article_60ec4add2055c5_23911235.jpg

Russian Su-57 and Su-35 Heavyweight Fighters






The Iranian military aviation sector's extensive experience with the Tomcat over more than 45 years will likely prove a major asset to efforts to develop a new class of aircraft - much as Iranian experience with both the F-14 and the F-5 is widely thought to have influenced its development of the lightweight Kowsar jet. The possibility also remains that Iran could replace the F-14 with a foreign sourced fighter, and with Russian being the only party other than the U.S. offering heavyweight fighters for export a design such as the Su-35 or Su-57 could be chosen in future, with the Su-57 in particular representing a very considerable improvement over the Tomcat with a much lower reported operational cost. The possibility also remains that Iran could eventually seek to replace the F-14s at a much later date with an indigenous unmanned aircraft, with the country's drones having proven formidable in combat and tests of drones with air to air capabilities having already begun in the country.





Iranian F-14 Under Refurbishment




During the 1970s the Iran was a leading client for a range of advanced Western armaments, and under the leadership of the Pahlavi dynasty the country was a key defence partner of the United States and its Western European allies which was strategically located on the Soviet Union's borders. While Iran was widely known to be pursuing a nuclear deterrent, which would target both its Arab neighbours and the neighbouring USSR, it had also planned major investments in conventional arms including purchasing over 300 American F-16 fighters, subsidising research and development costs for a land based variant of the F-18, and possibly even acquiring Invincible Class aircraft carriers from Britain which would be escorted by American Oliver Hazer Perry Class destroyers. Although none of these purchases materialised due to the Pahlavi dynasty's overthrow in 1979, which was a serious loss to the defence sectors of multiple Western countries, Iran had made one prolific purchase of American fourth generation fighter aircraft before this - the F-14A Tomcat.




article_60ec49ef684715_25251638.jpeg

U.S. Navy F-14 with Six AIM-54 Phoenix Missiles



The F-14 was the heaviest fourth generation fighter ever developed, rivalled in size only by the Soviet MiG-25 and MiG-31 interceptors, and was the most capable fighter in the U.S. Military which had been developed specifically for long range interception of enemy aircraft. The Tomcat was the first fourth generation fighter to enter service anywhere in the world, and joined the U.S. Navy from 1974 which would be its only operator other than the Iranian Air Force. The fighter's very high cost and high maintenance requirements meant that even the U.S. Military purchased it in only limited numbers, and Iran was the only foreign country which was willing to invest in acquiring it. The Tomcat was reportedly personally chosen by the Iranian head of state, Mohamed Reza Shah, who favoured it over the competing heavyweight fighter the F-15 that had been developed for the U.S. Air Force. The F-14's sensors were far more powerful, and it benefitted from 'fire and forget' capabilities which the F-15 lacked and from almost triple the air to air engagement range which made it overwhelmingly more capable for beyond visual range air to air combat. Although the F-15 had a higher climb rate and operational altitude, the F-14 had an overwhelming advantage in most other areas with its only significant drawback being its much higher operational costs and maintenance needs. With the F-15 struggling to engage Soviet MiG-25R Foxbat jets, a reconnaissance variant of the well known interceptor, the F-14 was the ideal aircraft to challenge Soviet reconnaissance flights over Iranian territory. When it received its first F-14s Iran became the second country in the world only after the United States to operate fourth generation fighters, with 79 aircraft delivered out of a total order of 80.




article_60ec4a678ac538_41543936.jpg

Iranian F-14 Fighter Squadron



The collapse in Iranian-U.S. relations after the Pahlavi Dynasty's overthrow led the U.S. to cut supplies of spare parts or new armaments to the Iranian Air Force, leading to widespread estimates by Western analysts that the Iranian fleet would be left totally inoperable within three years if not less. The toll of an eight year war with Iraq from 1980-1988, which saw Iranian F-14s shoot down more Iraqi aircraft than the whole rest of the Iranian Military combined, took an even greater toll on supplies despite its ability to acquire parts through third parties. Iran has nevertheless continued to field F-14s for over 40 years, and has even managed to expand the number of operational airframes over time, equip the aircraft with new weapons, and enhance the aircraft's electronics, sensors and other key subsystems.




article_60ec4aa38db606_59758100.jpeg

Iranian F-14 Under Refurbishment



Iran has developed extensive infrastructure to service and refurbish its F-14 fleet alongside its older F-4 and F-5 fighters, as well as a defence industry capable of producing parts for these fighters. By the turn of the century, the country's technicians has reportedly made close to 300 separate modifications to the Tomcat to improve its performance. Recent developments in 3d printing technologies have reportedly allowed the country to expand the number of F-14s in service by making it easier and cheaper to produce complex spare parts, while the fighters' wiring, sensors and avionics have all largely been replaced. Iran has developed a relatively sophisticated and self reliant military aviation industry, as reflected most prolifically in its flying stealth drone programs which have proven successful in combat as well as its Kowsar lightweight fourth generation fighter program. This has placed it in a strong position not only to service and refurbish, but also to extensively modernise its F-14s. A modernisation program to upgrade the F-14As to F-14AM standard began in the mid-2010s, and would extend the aircraft's operational lives until 2030 and allow them to better contend with modern enemy fighters such as the Royal Saudi Air Force's F-15SA or U.S. Navy's F-18E Block Super Hornets. Superior avionics and adaptations to F-14's fire control system played an important role in bringing the Tomcat into the 21st century, and complemented efforts to equip the aircraft with new weaponry.




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Iranian Kowsar Fighter




Iran's inability to acquire new American missiles for its F-14s had led it to modify the jets from the 1990s to be able to deploy Soviet origin missiles, including the R-27 long range air to air missile and R-73 infra red guided missile. The R-27 was much shorter ranged and less capable than the AIM-54 the fighters were originally equipped with, but was also far smaller and lighter meaning it could also be carried by normal sized aircraft and on the F-14 would facilitate a much better flight performance due to its lower weight. The R-73's reliability and ability to fire at extreme angles, meanwhile, made it by many accounts the most capable short ranged air to air missile of its time. Although they improved the F-14's versatility, these missiles were not well suited to the Tomcat's primary mission which was very long range interceptions - something only the American AIM-54 and Russian R-33 and K-100 were well suited to at the time. This led Iran to eventually reverse engineer and extensively improve the AIM-54 domestically, which provided it with a similar looking but more capable missile named the Fakour 90.




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Iranian Fakour 90 Air to Air Missile



The AIM-54 was prized for its speed, its long range and its high manoeuvrability, and carried a powerful radar and large 61kg warhead - over triple that of the AIM-120 missiles carried by modern American fighters. The Fakour 90 has, according to Iranian sources, improved on these characteristics and provided a much extended range from approximately 190km to around 250-300km. The AIM-54 is the only air to air missile in the world recorded to have destroyed three fighters with a single impact - a feat achieved during the Iran-Iraq War - and was key to allowing the F-14s to gain a kill ratio of over 160:3 against the Iraqi Air Force during the war. Its successor, which will be made available from domestic sources, is a vital asset to the F-14 fleet today as the aircraft continue to be relied on heavily for Iran's defence. How long the Iranian Air Force can continue to rely on the F-14 remains questionable, but it was announced in 2020 that the country was developing a new class of heavyweight fighter which could well eventually serve as a replacement and bear several similarities to the F-14.




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Russian Su-57 and Su-35 Heavyweight Fighters






The Iranian military aviation sector's extensive experience with the Tomcat over more than 45 years will likely prove a major asset to efforts to develop a new class of aircraft - much as Iranian experience with both the F-14 and the F-5 is widely thought to have influenced its development of the lightweight Kowsar jet. The possibility also remains that Iran could replace the F-14 with a foreign sourced fighter, and with Russian being the only party other than the U.S. offering heavyweight fighters for export a design such as the Su-35 or Su-57 could be chosen in future, with the Su-57 in particular representing a very considerable improvement over the Tomcat with a much lower reported operational cost. The possibility also remains that Iran could eventually seek to replace the F-14s at a much later date with an indigenous unmanned aircraft, with the country's drones having proven formidable in combat and tests of drones with air to air capabilities having already begun in the country.




Iranian F-14 Under Refurbishment


Photos of World's last active service F-14 Tomcat jets overhauled in Iran -  The Aviationist

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Unstoppable Tomcats: Retired Iranian Major Elaborates on F-14's Advanced  Capabilities2208 × 1242
 
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F-14 Tomcats ..... ............. :omghaha: .....Newsflash, the Dinosaurs died Millions of years ago, and Iran is still operating a 'Dinosaur!!! :lol::lol::lol::lol::lol:
 
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Didn't Iran have a famous UFO encounter where they used F-4 to intercept near Tehran?

This stuff is questionable though and National Interest love to make some ridiculously inaccurate claims and publish 50% bullshit articles with 50% fear mongering. Think about this particular claim. If US had such drones that can hover and fly outside and inside atmosphere at least up to mach 10 and perform incredible armament feats like destroying a F-14 suddenly from long range and jamming everything, why would they use Sentinel and Predator drones many years after already having such drones in service. Why would you spend most of you defence budget buying stone weapons when you have machine gun? If such things are real, immediately it is unchallengable by anyone and such weapons will be mostly the only thing such a country would buy. This is not about 4th gen fighter compared to 5th gen fighters but something like 0th gen compared with 6th gen. It makes no sense at all. Some tall claims are just tall claims.

According to many American nuclear silo operators, UFOs been disabling nuclear missiles in US since 1960s. According to some alleged Soviet operators, UFOs been activating Soviet nuclear missiles since 1960s. Chinese are super quiet about all the UFO stuff hahaha. Maybe there is no such thing at all, there are no visits detected in China or the state consider this for some reason to be highest secret? Is that likely at all? I would suggest there are visits since too many countries governments do report on some that are so unlikely to be natural things, at least natural things we understand and are part of scientific awareness.

 
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Iran Thinks CIA Drones Took out its F-14 Tomcat

Here's What You Need to Know: To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
Iran is the only other country besides the United States to operate arguably history’s most powerful interceptor aircraft, the F-14 Tomcat. And the Islamic republic has worked the twin-engine, swing-wing fighters hard.

The F-14s played a major role in Iran’s war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988. Iranian Tomcat pilots were the only ones to successfully employ the F-14’s long-range, heavyweight AIM-54 Phoenix missile to shoot down enemy planes.

In the decades after the war, Tehran repaired and upgraded the surviving F-14s, scouring the globe for parts in defiance of a U.S. government embargo.
The Americans retired their F-14s in 2006, but around 40 of Iran’s Tomcats remain active. Their main role is defending Iran’s nuclear sites. It’s a mission that has brought the interceptors in close contact with some very mysterious aircraft, according to a bizarre and fascinating 2013 story in Combat Aircraft magazine by reporter Babak Taghvaee.

The Iranians believed the objects were spy drones belonging to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, sent to sniff out Tehran’s suspected atomic weapons program. But they attribute to these alleged unmanned aerial vehicles flight characteristics and capabilities far beyond what any known drone can achieve.

And in 2012 one of the alleged flying robots reportedly also shot down an F-14 attempting to intercept it. Or at least some Iranians seem genuinely to believe so.
Over the decades Tehran has built three major nuclear facilities that could, in theory, be used to assemble atomic weapons: reactors at Bushehr and Arak and an enrichment plant at Natanz.
This infrastructure became public knowledge in 2002. No doubt the CIA took a strong interest, potentially long before that date. “A number of reconnaissance UAVs were sent to collect intelligence to prepare for a possible attack” by Western forces, Taghvaee wrote.

To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
The UAVs could jam radars and disrupt interceptors’ navigation systems. They flew “outside the atmosphere” at speeds of up to Mach 10. They could hover. Flying at night, they emitted a telltale blue light that led to their nickname: “luminous objects.”

“In several cases … F-14s faced them but were unable to operate their armament systems properly,” Taghvaee wrote. One Tomcat taking off to intercept a luminous object on Jan. 26, 2012, mysteriously exploded, killing both crewmen. Taghvaee implies the alleged UAV was somehow responsible, as the F-14 in question was “one of the fittest” of the 40 or so Tomcats then in service.

It should go without saying that the CIA and the Pentagon most likely fly reconnaissance aircraft near—and even over—Iranian nuclear sites. In 2012 and 2013, Iranian fighters tried to intercept American Predator drones outside Tehran’s airspace. In the 2013 incident, a U.S. Air Force F-22 stealth fighter blocked the intercept with some Top Gun-style theatrics.

In 2009, the Air Force copped to the existence of a new, previously secret drone operated in conjunction with the intelligence agency. The RQ-170 Sentinel was based in southern Afghanistan within a short flying distance of Iran. In December 2011, a Sentinel crashed on the Afghanistan-Iran border and was captured by Iranian troops.

Neither the Predator nor the Sentinel is particularly high-flying nor can hover or glow blue. And neither has the electrical power to scramble radars and navigation gear.
Rumors abound that the Air Force and CIA operate a stealthy new drone that has not been disclosed to the public. Even if they do, it’s unlikely that the new UAV is capable of Mach-10 hypersonic flight—the Pentagon is still struggling to reach Mach five.

So if Iranian F-14s truly are chasing around super-fast, super-high-flying, and lethal UFOs, what exactly are they? Who knows.
David Axe served as Defense Editor of the National Interest. He is the author of the graphic novels War Fix, War Is Boring and Machete Squad.
This article first appeared in 2019 and is being reprinted for reader interest.



@SQ8 @PanzerKiel @Blacklight @Ark_Angel @Rashid Mahmood @airomerix @Hodor @Raider 21 @dbc @gambit @Dazzler @Signalian @KAL-EL @RescueRanger @Tps43 @jaibi @Irfan Baloch


any such cases with the Pakistan Air Force? trying to intercept glowing objects 🤔 🤫

Another spineless story to support USA's invincibility originates from high-tech propaganda.
 
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any such cases with the Pakistan Air Force? trying to intercept glowing objects 🤔 🤫
Yes. A group of Vipers were flying back to Sargodha from Masroor in the mid 1980s. Lead picked up something on the radar above them. Decided to give chase, whatever the something was, blasted off into hypersonic speed, and went out of sight and range.
 
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iranian%20f-14%20pilots.jpg



Iran Thinks CIA Drones Took out its F-14 Tomcat

Here's What You Need to Know: To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
Iran is the only other country besides the United States to operate arguably history’s most powerful interceptor aircraft, the F-14 Tomcat. And the Islamic republic has worked the twin-engine, swing-wing fighters hard.

The F-14s played a major role in Iran’s war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988. Iranian Tomcat pilots were the only ones to successfully employ the F-14’s long-range, heavyweight AIM-54 Phoenix missile to shoot down enemy planes.

In the decades after the war, Tehran repaired and upgraded the surviving F-14s, scouring the globe for parts in defiance of a U.S. government embargo.
The Americans retired their F-14s in 2006, but around 40 of Iran’s Tomcats remain active. Their main role is defending Iran’s nuclear sites. It’s a mission that has brought the interceptors in close contact with some very mysterious aircraft, according to a bizarre and fascinating 2013 story in Combat Aircraft magazine by reporter Babak Taghvaee.

The Iranians believed the objects were spy drones belonging to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, sent to sniff out Tehran’s suspected atomic weapons program. But they attribute to these alleged unmanned aerial vehicles flight characteristics and capabilities far beyond what any known drone can achieve.

And in 2012 one of the alleged flying robots reportedly also shot down an F-14 attempting to intercept it. Or at least some Iranians seem genuinely to believe so.
Over the decades Tehran has built three major nuclear facilities that could, in theory, be used to assemble atomic weapons: reactors at Bushehr and Arak and an enrichment plant at Natanz.
This infrastructure became public knowledge in 2002. No doubt the CIA took a strong interest, potentially long before that date. “A number of reconnaissance UAVs were sent to collect intelligence to prepare for a possible attack” by Western forces, Taghvaee wrote.

To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
The UAVs could jam radars and disrupt interceptors’ navigation systems. They flew “outside the atmosphere” at speeds of up to Mach 10. They could hover. Flying at night, they emitted a telltale blue light that led to their nickname: “luminous objects.”

“In several cases … F-14s faced them but were unable to operate their armament systems properly,” Taghvaee wrote. One Tomcat taking off to intercept a luminous object on Jan. 26, 2012, mysteriously exploded, killing both crewmen. Taghvaee implies the alleged UAV was somehow responsible, as the F-14 in question was “one of the fittest” of the 40 or so Tomcats then in service.

It should go without saying that the CIA and the Pentagon most likely fly reconnaissance aircraft near—and even over—Iranian nuclear sites. In 2012 and 2013, Iranian fighters tried to intercept American Predator drones outside Tehran’s airspace. In the 2013 incident, a U.S. Air Force F-22 stealth fighter blocked the intercept with some Top Gun-style theatrics.

In 2009, the Air Force copped to the existence of a new, previously secret drone operated in conjunction with the intelligence agency. The RQ-170 Sentinel was based in southern Afghanistan within a short flying distance of Iran. In December 2011, a Sentinel crashed on the Afghanistan-Iran border and was captured by Iranian troops.

Neither the Predator nor the Sentinel is particularly high-flying nor can hover or glow blue. And neither has the electrical power to scramble radars and navigation gear.
Rumors abound that the Air Force and CIA operate a stealthy new drone that has not been disclosed to the public. Even if they do, it’s unlikely that the new UAV is capable of Mach-10 hypersonic flight—the Pentagon is still struggling to reach Mach five.

So if Iranian F-14s truly are chasing around super-fast, super-high-flying, and lethal UFOs, what exactly are they? Who knows.
David Axe served as Defense Editor of the National Interest. He is the author of the graphic novels War Fix, War Is Boring and Machete Squad.
This article first appeared in 2019 and is being reprinted for reader interest.



@SQ8 @PanzerKiel @Blacklight @Ark_Angel @Rashid Mahmood @airomerix @Hodor @Raider 21 @dbc @gambit @Dazzler @Signalian @KAL-EL @RescueRanger @Tps43 @jaibi @Irfan Baloch


any such cases with the Pakistan Air Force? trying to intercept glowing objects 🤔 🤫

Glowing blue !
hmmmmm.....

Blue balls ??
Glowing blue !
hmmmmm.....

Blue balls ??

:astagh:
 
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iranian%20f-14%20pilots.jpg



Iran Thinks CIA Drones Took out its F-14 Tomcat

Here's What You Need to Know: To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
Iran is the only other country besides the United States to operate arguably history’s most powerful interceptor aircraft, the F-14 Tomcat. And the Islamic republic has worked the twin-engine, swing-wing fighters hard.

The F-14s played a major role in Iran’s war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988. Iranian Tomcat pilots were the only ones to successfully employ the F-14’s long-range, heavyweight AIM-54 Phoenix missile to shoot down enemy planes.

In the decades after the war, Tehran repaired and upgraded the surviving F-14s, scouring the globe for parts in defiance of a U.S. government embargo.
The Americans retired their F-14s in 2006, but around 40 of Iran’s Tomcats remain active. Their main role is defending Iran’s nuclear sites. It’s a mission that has brought the interceptors in close contact with some very mysterious aircraft, according to a bizarre and fascinating 2013 story in Combat Aircraft magazine by reporter Babak Taghvaee.

The Iranians believed the objects were spy drones belonging to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, sent to sniff out Tehran’s suspected atomic weapons program. But they attribute to these alleged unmanned aerial vehicles flight characteristics and capabilities far beyond what any known drone can achieve.

And in 2012 one of the alleged flying robots reportedly also shot down an F-14 attempting to intercept it. Or at least some Iranians seem genuinely to believe so.
Over the decades Tehran has built three major nuclear facilities that could, in theory, be used to assemble atomic weapons: reactors at Bushehr and Arak and an enrichment plant at Natanz.
This infrastructure became public knowledge in 2002. No doubt the CIA took a strong interest, potentially long before that date. “A number of reconnaissance UAVs were sent to collect intelligence to prepare for a possible attack” by Western forces, Taghvaee wrote.

To protect the nuke facilities, in 2004 Iran deployed a task force composed of eight F-4E fighters and eight F-14s plus a former 707 airliner and a C-130 cargo plane outfitted with sensors and radios for command and control. The task force encountered what it believed were CIA drones with “astonishing flight characteristics.”
The UAVs could jam radars and disrupt interceptors’ navigation systems. They flew “outside the atmosphere” at speeds of up to Mach 10. They could hover. Flying at night, they emitted a telltale blue light that led to their nickname: “luminous objects.”

“In several cases … F-14s faced them but were unable to operate their armament systems properly,” Taghvaee wrote. One Tomcat taking off to intercept a luminous object on Jan. 26, 2012, mysteriously exploded, killing both crewmen. Taghvaee implies the alleged UAV was somehow responsible, as the F-14 in question was “one of the fittest” of the 40 or so Tomcats then in service.

It should go without saying that the CIA and the Pentagon most likely fly reconnaissance aircraft near—and even over—Iranian nuclear sites. In 2012 and 2013, Iranian fighters tried to intercept American Predator drones outside Tehran’s airspace. In the 2013 incident, a U.S. Air Force F-22 stealth fighter blocked the intercept with some Top Gun-style theatrics.

In 2009, the Air Force copped to the existence of a new, previously secret drone operated in conjunction with the intelligence agency. The RQ-170 Sentinel was based in southern Afghanistan within a short flying distance of Iran. In December 2011, a Sentinel crashed on the Afghanistan-Iran border and was captured by Iranian troops.

Neither the Predator nor the Sentinel is particularly high-flying nor can hover or glow blue. And neither has the electrical power to scramble radars and navigation gear.
Rumors abound that the Air Force and CIA operate a stealthy new drone that has not been disclosed to the public. Even if they do, it’s unlikely that the new UAV is capable of Mach-10 hypersonic flight—the Pentagon is still struggling to reach Mach five.

So if Iranian F-14s truly are chasing around super-fast, super-high-flying, and lethal UFOs, what exactly are they? Who knows.
David Axe served as Defense Editor of the National Interest. He is the author of the graphic novels War Fix, War Is Boring and Machete Squad.
This article first appeared in 2019 and is being reprinted for reader interest.



@SQ8 @PanzerKiel @Blacklight @Ark_Angel @Rashid Mahmood @airomerix @Hodor @Raider 21 @dbc @gambit @Dazzler @Signalian @KAL-EL @RescueRanger @Tps43 @jaibi @Irfan Baloch


any such cases with the Pakistan Air Force? trying to intercept glowing objects 🤔 🤫
Pakistan have encountered UFOs around kahuta.
 
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