Hate ads?! Want to be able to search and filter? Day and Night mode? Subscribe for just $5 a month!

USAF Airman Rescue in Iran Sparks Debate: Were Lost Assets Worth the Risk?

Listen to Article

Rescue Mission Overview

In a recent episode of Legally Armed America, host Paul Glasgow discusses the dramatic rescue of a USAF weapons officer from an F-15E downed in Iran. Glasgow shares an X post by Daniel Foubear questioning the mission’s value, highlighting images of three aircraft reportedly lost during the operation for the second airman’s extraction. Contrasting this, Glasgow praises a powerful response from John Conrad V, emphasizing the unyielding commitment to retrieving service members regardless of cost.

Glasgow notes the operation’s complexity, involving sleight-of-hand tactics and a solid Plan B after things went wrong. He reassures viewers that behind-the-scenes efforts were intense, even as public doubt lingered amid reports of bounties on the airman’s head. ‘Make no mistake, this was no routine extraction,’ Glasgow states. ‘There were a lot of things that went wrong and right, of course, but a lot of things that went wrong. And these guys pivoted.’

Pros, Cons, and Key Insights

The video underscores the cultural ethos driving U.S. military rescues, drawing from Conrad V’s post about pararescuemen (PJs) who ‘will take casualties and are prepared to die to rescue a single pilot or crewman.’

  • Pros: Reinforces troop morale through absolute commitment—’Our warriors are the fiercest on Earth… because they know in their bones that when they key the mic and call for help, help is coming in hot.’ Successful extraction validates the ‘no man left behind’ principle, contrasting with past events like Benghazi.
  • Cons: Significant military capital lost, including aircraft, prompting critics like Foubear to argue the ‘math doesn’t math out’ financially. Public skepticism during delays fueled doubt.
  • Specs: Involved F-15E crew (pilot rescued early, weapons officer later); PJs and special operators; communications beacons for location; multiple assets risked in hostile territory.

Glasgow concludes proudly: ‘The one guy getting out was the goal. It was not how much of our equipment we can save.’ He promotes his book Damn Liars. I’m Sorry, I THOUGHT THIS WAS AMERICA at damnliars.net.

Share this story