Iran destroyed an American E-3 Sentry AWACS aircraft during a missile and drone attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia

signalmankenneth

Verified User
This incident significantly impacts the U.S. military's situational awareness and command capabilities in the region.

How Iran destroyed US base’s $500m battlefield nerve centre​

The mangled airframe of the four-engined US air force jet stands on the runway of Prince Sultan air base in Saudi Arabia.

Amid the twisted metal, what looks like a large flying saucer lies upside down.

It is, or was, the rotating radar dome that usually sits above the E-3 Sentry, one of the jewels in America’s military crown – essentially a $500m (£375m) flying battlefield nerve centre that allows commanders to track everything in the air across hundreds of miles.

As of Friday morning, the United States had 16 of the vital but ageing Cold War-era aircraft, with roughly 40 per cent of the fleet deployed to the Middle East.

Now they have 15, after Iran attacked Prince Sultan with, it is believed, ballistic missiles and drones, injuring 12 US personnel, two seriously, and damaging up to five air-to-air refuelling tankers.

The point of impact, just where the radar dome attaches to the Sentry, suggests a precision strike by a drone, a more accurate weapon than a ballistic missile when used by Iran.

It also hints at a worrying level of intelligence on the part of Tehran.

On Saturday, Volodymyr Zelensky revealed that Russia – already accused of sharing military information and hardware with Iran during the war – had taken satellite images of the Saudi base in the days before the strike.

“Do they [Russia] help Iranians?” the Ukrainian president said in an interview with NBC. “Of course. How many per cent? One hundred per cent.”

It is the latest of several successful Iranian hits on US bases in the region which, it emerged this week, had forced some personnel to evacuate to the relative safety of nearby offices and hotels.

Coming almost four weeks since the launch of Operation Epic Fury, a war Donald Trump promised would enable the Iranian people to overthrow the regime, the attack suggests the Pentagon underestimated the potency and resilience of Tehran’s offensive capability.

The destruction of an E-3 Sentry is a particular setback for United States Central Command (Centcom).

The ageing planes – the youngest of which was delivered in 1992 – known as airborne early warning and control aircraft are among the most precious assets in America’s conventional arsenal, able to track other aircraft, drones and missiles across a 250-mile radius.

A direct replacement for the high-tech aircraft would cost $500m in today’s money. However, there is no existing production line. Boeing’s E-7 Wedgetail, the nearest equivalent, has a $700m price tag.

Commanders will have to consider how to protect the aircraft, just when maximum attention is needed to plan for a US ground assault on southern Iran, should Mr Trump give the order.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/iran-destroyed-us-500m-battlefield-183519547.html

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There were 68 AWACS in the world. I guess now there are only 67. The last one was build a third of a century ago. There is no way to build a new one. We would have to build a new design, which costs a lot of money to design.

Apparently, the generals begged Hegseth not to just leave it there to be destroyed, but Hegseth thought he was smarter than everyone else.
 
There were 68 AWACS in the world. I guess now there are only 67. The last one was build a third of a century ago. There is no way to build a new one. We would have to build a new design, which costs a lot of money to design.

Apparently, the generals begged Hegseth not to just leave it there to be destroyed, but Hegseth thought he was smarter than everyone else.
Two of the biggest idiots making decisions that will throw the world into recession if this goes on much longer.
 
Two of the biggest idiots making decisions that will throw the world into recession if this goes on much longer.
AFAIK, Clinton and Obama never lost a single aircraft or airman in their aerial campaigns in Libya, Kosova, Iraq.
The USA had 16 active military AWACS at week ago. We have completely lost one of them, and another was severely damaged. This means our defenses have been severely degraded. trump/Hegseth blocked the maintenance of reserve AWACS, so it will be a few years before we get back on our feet.

THIS IS BAD!!! @Libhater

In other news, diesel has hit $5.490, with no end to the rise in sight. trump has given up on trying to fix his disaster, and is surrendering the Strait of Hormuz to Iran. This is a huge win for Iran.
 
The E-3 has a crew of about 20.....is very expensive to operate.... was only sent to this war because all of the Empires ground based radars were destroyed early.

The need for the E-3 is another in a long list of Empire miscalculations... which is why they were never replaced.

Also the F-35 has often been called a flying computer, because it was supposed to make the E-3 unneeded.

But the F-35 is a piece of shit.
 
This incident significantly impacts the U.S. military's situational awareness and command capabilities in the region.

How Iran destroyed US base’s $500m battlefield nerve centre​

The mangled airframe of the four-engined US air force jet stands on the runway of Prince Sultan air base in Saudi Arabia.

Amid the twisted metal, what looks like a large flying saucer lies upside down.

It is, or was, the rotating radar dome that usually sits above the E-3 Sentry, one of the jewels in America’s military crown – essentially a $500m (£375m) flying battlefield nerve centre that allows commanders to track everything in the air across hundreds of miles.

As of Friday morning, the United States had 16 of the vital but ageing Cold War-era aircraft, with roughly 40 per cent of the fleet deployed to the Middle East.

Now they have 15, after Iran attacked Prince Sultan with, it is believed, ballistic missiles and drones, injuring 12 US personnel, two seriously, and damaging up to five air-to-air refuelling tankers.

The point of impact, just where the radar dome attaches to the Sentry, suggests a precision strike by a drone, a more accurate weapon than a ballistic missile when used by Iran.

It also hints at a worrying level of intelligence on the part of Tehran.

On Saturday, Volodymyr Zelensky revealed that Russia – already accused of sharing military information and hardware with Iran during the war – had taken satellite images of the Saudi base in the days before the strike.

“Do they [Russia] help Iranians?” the Ukrainian president said in an interview with NBC. “Of course. How many per cent? One hundred per cent.”

It is the latest of several successful Iranian hits on US bases in the region which, it emerged this week, had forced some personnel to evacuate to the relative safety of nearby offices and hotels.

Coming almost four weeks since the launch of Operation Epic Fury, a war Donald Trump promised would enable the Iranian people to overthrow the regime, the attack suggests the Pentagon underestimated the potency and resilience of Tehran’s offensive capability.

The destruction of an E-3 Sentry is a particular setback for United States Central Command (Centcom).

The ageing planes – the youngest of which was delivered in 1992 – known as airborne early warning and control aircraft are among the most precious assets in America’s conventional arsenal, able to track other aircraft, drones and missiles across a 250-mile radius.

A direct replacement for the high-tech aircraft would cost $500m in today’s money. However, there is no existing production line. Boeing’s E-7 Wedgetail, the nearest equivalent, has a $700m price tag.

Commanders will have to consider how to protect the aircraft, just when maximum attention is needed to plan for a US ground assault on southern Iran, should Mr Trump give the order.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/iran-destroyed-us-500m-battlefield-183519547.html

View attachment 79655
They're close to 3/4 of a billion dollars each. And the one in that pic you are talking about is a total loss.
 
This incident significantly impacts the U.S. military's situational awareness and command capabilities in the region.

How Iran destroyed US base’s $500m battlefield nerve centre​

The mangled airframe of the four-engined US air force jet stands on the runway of Prince Sultan air base in Saudi Arabia.

Amid the twisted metal, what looks like a large flying saucer lies upside down.

It is, or was, the rotating radar dome that usually sits above the E-3 Sentry, one of the jewels in America’s military crown – essentially a $500m (£375m) flying battlefield nerve centre that allows commanders to track everything in the air across hundreds of miles.

As of Friday morning, the United States had 16 of the vital but ageing Cold War-era aircraft, with roughly 40 per cent of the fleet deployed to the Middle East.

Now they have 15, after Iran attacked Prince Sultan with, it is believed, ballistic missiles and drones, injuring 12 US personnel, two seriously, and damaging up to five air-to-air refuelling tankers.

The point of impact, just where the radar dome attaches to the Sentry, suggests a precision strike by a drone, a more accurate weapon than a ballistic missile when used by Iran.

It also hints at a worrying level of intelligence on the part of Tehran.

On Saturday, Volodymyr Zelensky revealed that Russia – already accused of sharing military information and hardware with Iran during the war – had taken satellite images of the Saudi base in the days before the strike.

“Do they [Russia] help Iranians?” the Ukrainian president said in an interview with NBC. “Of course. How many per cent? One hundred per cent.”

It is the latest of several successful Iranian hits on US bases in the region which, it emerged this week, had forced some personnel to evacuate to the relative safety of nearby offices and hotels.

Coming almost four weeks since the launch of Operation Epic Fury, a war Donald Trump promised would enable the Iranian people to overthrow the regime, the attack suggests the Pentagon underestimated the potency and resilience of Tehran’s offensive capability.

The destruction of an E-3 Sentry is a particular setback for United States Central Command (Centcom).

The ageing planes – the youngest of which was delivered in 1992 – known as airborne early warning and control aircraft are among the most precious assets in America’s conventional arsenal, able to track other aircraft, drones and missiles across a 250-mile radius.

A direct replacement for the high-tech aircraft would cost $500m in today’s money. However, there is no existing production line. Boeing’s E-7 Wedgetail, the nearest equivalent, has a $700m price tag.

Commanders will have to consider how to protect the aircraft, just when maximum attention is needed to plan for a US ground assault on southern Iran, should Mr Trump give the order.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/iran-destroyed-us-500m-battlefield-183519547.html

View attachment 79655
Are you happy about that?
Fuck you asshole, you supported the assassination of your president so, fuck you!
 
Destroyed 2.

Cost to replace is about $1 billion.
The theoretical replacement cost for one is $720 million, but the reality is they are irreplaceable. We will never make another AWACS. We could design a new similar plane, but that would require a lot more money to design from scratch.

One is definitely completely destroyed. It is not coming back. The other is damaged, but from my understanding completely repairable, in a few months, maybe a year or two.
 
They're close to 3/4 of a billion dollars each. And the one in that pic you are talking about is a total loss.
And Trump had his military leave it sitting out in the wide open with not even a camoflage tarp over it to make satellite detection difficult.

The same Trump who screeched about Biden not protecting the military equipment in Afghanistan and that his magats screeched along with.
 
This incident significantly impacts the U.S. military's situational awareness and command capabilities in the region.

How Iran destroyed US base’s $500m battlefield nerve centre​

The mangled airframe of the four-engined US air force jet stands on the runway of Prince Sultan air base in Saudi Arabia.

Amid the twisted metal, what looks like a large flying saucer lies upside down.

It is, or was, the rotating radar dome that usually sits above the E-3 Sentry, one of the jewels in America’s military crown – essentially a $500m (£375m) flying battlefield nerve centre that allows commanders to track everything in the air across hundreds of miles.

As of Friday morning, the United States had 16 of the vital but ageing Cold War-era aircraft, with roughly 40 per cent of the fleet deployed to the Middle East.

Now they have 15, after Iran attacked Prince Sultan with, it is believed, ballistic missiles and drones, injuring 12 US personnel, two seriously, and damaging up to five air-to-air refuelling tankers.

The point of impact, just where the radar dome attaches to the Sentry, suggests a precision strike by a drone, a more accurate weapon than a ballistic missile when used by Iran.

It also hints at a worrying level of intelligence on the part of Tehran.

On Saturday, Volodymyr Zelensky revealed that Russia – already accused of sharing military information and hardware with Iran during the war – had taken satellite images of the Saudi base in the days before the strike.

“Do they [Russia] help Iranians?” the Ukrainian president said in an interview with NBC. “Of course. How many per cent? One hundred per cent.”

It is the latest of several successful Iranian hits on US bases in the region which, it emerged this week, had forced some personnel to evacuate to the relative safety of nearby offices and hotels.

Coming almost four weeks since the launch of Operation Epic Fury, a war Donald Trump promised would enable the Iranian people to overthrow the regime, the attack suggests the Pentagon underestimated the potency and resilience of Tehran’s offensive capability.

The destruction of an E-3 Sentry is a particular setback for United States Central Command (Centcom).

The ageing planes – the youngest of which was delivered in 1992 – known as airborne early warning and control aircraft are among the most precious assets in America’s conventional arsenal, able to track other aircraft, drones and missiles across a 250-mile radius.

A direct replacement for the high-tech aircraft would cost $500m in today’s money. However, there is no existing production line. Boeing’s E-7 Wedgetail, the nearest equivalent, has a $700m price tag.

Commanders will have to consider how to protect the aircraft, just when maximum attention is needed to plan for a US ground assault on southern Iran, should Mr Trump give the order.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/iran-destroyed-us-500m-battlefield-183519547.html

View attachment 79655
Cheer for our enemies much?
 
This incident significantly impacts the U.S. military's situational awareness and command capabilities in the region.

How Iran destroyed US base’s $500m battlefield nerve centre​

The mangled airframe of the four-engined US air force jet stands on the runway of Prince Sultan air base in Saudi Arabia.

Amid the twisted metal, what looks like a large flying saucer lies upside down.

It is, or was, the rotating radar dome that usually sits above the E-3 Sentry, one of the jewels in America’s military crown – essentially a $500m (£375m) flying battlefield nerve centre that allows commanders to track everything in the air across hundreds of miles.

As of Friday morning, the United States had 16 of the vital but ageing Cold War-era aircraft, with roughly 40 per cent of the fleet deployed to the Middle East.

Now they have 15, after Iran attacked Prince Sultan with, it is believed, ballistic missiles and drones, injuring 12 US personnel, two seriously, and damaging up to five air-to-air refuelling tankers.

The point of impact, just where the radar dome attaches to the Sentry, suggests a precision strike by a drone, a more accurate weapon than a ballistic missile when used by Iran.

It also hints at a worrying level of intelligence on the part of Tehran.

On Saturday, Volodymyr Zelensky revealed that Russia – already accused of sharing military information and hardware with Iran during the war – had taken satellite images of the Saudi base in the days before the strike.

“Do they [Russia] help Iranians?” the Ukrainian president said in an interview with NBC. “Of course. How many per cent? One hundred per cent.”

It is the latest of several successful Iranian hits on US bases in the region which, it emerged this week, had forced some personnel to evacuate to the relative safety of nearby offices and hotels.

Coming almost four weeks since the launch of Operation Epic Fury, a war Donald Trump promised would enable the Iranian people to overthrow the regime, the attack suggests the Pentagon underestimated the potency and resilience of Tehran’s offensive capability.

The destruction of an E-3 Sentry is a particular setback for United States Central Command (Centcom).

The ageing planes – the youngest of which was delivered in 1992 – known as airborne early warning and control aircraft are among the most precious assets in America’s conventional arsenal, able to track other aircraft, drones and missiles across a 250-mile radius.

A direct replacement for the high-tech aircraft would cost $500m in today’s money. However, there is no existing production line. Boeing’s E-7 Wedgetail, the nearest equivalent, has a $700m price tag.

Commanders will have to consider how to protect the aircraft, just when maximum attention is needed to plan for a US ground assault on southern Iran, should Mr Trump give the order.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/iran-destroyed-us-500m-battlefield-183519547.html

View attachment 79655
images
 
You don't see much of anything....
"

"How Iran destroyed US base’s $500m battlefield nerve centre".....blatant cheerleading our enemies...​

i could see how you read it that way if you are stupid.

For the rest of us, who do not think government is perfect and when we see them make stupid mistakes that cost the US treasure and/or lives, we call out those mistakes hoping they will learn and get better.

But we know. we know, magats could see Trump send waves of soldiers to the death and they would say we all need to cheer it as great as calling out Trump and the leadership for their bad choices somehow supports the enemies. Fact is the stupidity of magats cheering bad decisions is what supports the enemies the most. They love you magats cheerleading and clapping like seals for Trump and Hegseth stupidity.
 
i could see how you read it that way if you are stupid.

For the rest of us, who do not think government is perfect and when we see them make stupid mistakes that cost the US treasure and/or lives, we call out those mistakes hoping they will learn and get better.

But we know. we know, magats could see Trump send waves of soldiers to the death and they would say we all need to cheer it as great as calling out Trump and the leadership for their bad choices somehow supports the enemies. Fact is the stupidity of magats cheering bad decisions is what supports the enemies the most. They love you magats cheerleading and clapping like seals for Trump and Hegseth stupidity.
Which excuses your decades old support for our enemies in no way, traitor.
 
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