BY Brenden AckermanMarch 20, 2026
2 months ago
BY 
 | March 20, 2026
2 months ago

U.S. F-35 makes emergency landing after combat mission over Iran as IRGC claims shootdown

A United States Air Force F-35 fighter jet made an emergency landing at a U.S. airbase in the Middle East on Thursday after flying a combat mission over Iran. The pilot is alive and in stable condition, according to a spokesman for U.S. Central Command.

Iran's Revolutionary Guard is telling a different story.

As reported by Breitbart, the IRGC and Iranian state media claim they hit an American F-35 at 02:50 local time using what they describe as an "advanced, modern air defense system." Iranian state media went further, stating that "the fate of the fighter jet is unclear and under investigation, and the likelihood of its crash is very high."

There's one problem with that narrative: the jet landed, and the pilot walked away.

What CENTCOM Has Confirmed

The facts, as they stand, are straightforward. CENTCOM acknowledged the incident and confirmed the aircraft returned to base.

"The aircraft landed safely, and the pilot is in stable condition. This incident is under investigation."

The specific airbase has not been identified, and the pilot has not been named. CENTCOM has not confirmed what caused the emergency landing, whether it was mechanical, combat-related, or something else entirely. The investigation is ongoing.

What CENTCOM has not done is validate a single element of Iran's version of events.

Iran's Propaganda Machine Fires Before Verification

The IRGC released footage it claims shows the moment an air defense system struck the F-35. Three frames of that footage, notably, appear to show the aircraft intact after the alleged blast. Neither Iran's claims nor its footage has been verified.

This is a familiar pattern. The Iranian regime has a long history of inflating military accomplishments for domestic consumption, particularly when its sovereignty is being tested by American and allied operations. Claiming a shootdown of the world's most advanced stealth fighter would be a propaganda coup of enormous proportions, which is precisely why it should be treated with enormous skepticism.

As things stand, there have been no confirmed successful Iranian interceptions of United States or Israeli manned aircraft over the course of Operation Epic Fury. Zero. Iran's air defense systems have been under sustained pressure throughout the campaign, and their track record of verifiable kills against fifth-generation aircraft remains nonexistent.

That hasn't stopped state media from rushing to claim otherwise.

The F-35 and the Bigger Picture

Emergency landings occur in combat aviation due to a range of reasons, including mechanical failures, system malfunctions, battle damage, and precautionary protocol after anomalies detected in flight.

The fact that an F-35 returned safely from a combat mission over hostile territory is itself a notable data point. The aircraft was designed to operate in the most contested airspace on earth, and if it sustained damage while still bringing its pilot home, that demonstrates the platform's survivability rather than its vulnerability.

The investigation will determine what happened. Until then, the only confirmed facts are that the jet flew a mission, the jet landed, and the pilot survived.

Why Iran Needs This Story

Iran's regime is under extraordinary military pressure. Its nuclear infrastructure and military installations have been targeted. Its proxies across the region have been degraded. Its air defenses have failed to prevent sustained operations over its own territory.

In that context, claiming a shootdown of an American F-35 isn't military analysis. It's survival messaging. The IRGC needs to tell its own population, and the broader Islamic world, that it can punch back. Whether it actually did is a separate question entirely, one that the unverified footage and hedging language from Iranian state media do not answer.

Notice the careful phrasing: "the likelihood of its crash is very high." Not "we destroyed it." Not "the aircraft was confirmed down." The IRGC is leaving itself room to walk this back if the evidence collapses, which is not the language of a military force confident in its kill.

What Comes Next

CENTCOM's investigation will ultimately provide clarity. If the F-35 sustained combat damage from an Iranian air defense system, that will be significant, both tactically and strategically. If it didn't, Iran will have added another chapter to its catalog of fabricated military victories.

Either way, the mission was flown. The pilot came home. And American combat operations over Iran continued.

Tehran can claim whatever it wants. The sky above it tells a different story.

Written by: Brenden Ackerman
Brendan is is a political writer reporting on Capitol Hill, social issues, and the intersection of politics and culture.

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