Middle East ConflictsIran war

Iran’s Information War: How Tehran Faked an F-35 Kill, Spread Video Game Footage and Tried to Turn One Real Loss Into a Propaganda Triumph

When a U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle went down over western Iran on Friday, something extraordinary happened on social media within minutes. Iranian state television declared it had shot down a second F-35 stealth fighter. Videos purporting to show the American jet being destroyed spread to tens of millions of viewers. A clip claiming to show an Iranian missile hitting the aircraft racked up enormous view counts before fact-checkers identified it as footage from a military video game. Another video claimed to show the American pilot captured by pro-Iran forces. That too was fake.The real story was damaging enough to Washington without embellishment. A confirmed U.S. military aircraft was downed over enemy territory for the first time in this conflict, one crew member remains missing, a second aircraft was lost the same day, and two rescue helicopters were hit. But Iran was not content with the truth. Within hours of the real crash, Tehran had constructed an entirely parallel version of events built on misidentified wreckage, recycled video game footage, AI-generated imagery, and fabricated capture videos. This is the story of how that operation worked, what was real, what was manufactured, and how to tell the difference.

U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet from the 494th Fighter Squadron RAF Lakenheath
A U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle — the same type as the 494th Fighter Squadron aircraft confirmed shot down over southwestern Iran on April 3, 2026. Iran falsely claimed it was an F-35 stealth fighter. (U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons)

Watch: U.S. F-15E Shot Down Over Iran — Breaking News Coverage

A US fighter jet has been shot down over Iran, three US sources said, confirming Iranian state media reports. US forces have launched search and rescue efforts and were looking for two pilots, two of the sources said. Potential rescue efforts appeared to be captured in video posted to social media and geolocated by CNN

Where It Happened: The Crash Location

F-15E Strike Eagles from RAF Lakenheath 494th Fighter Squadron — the unit whose aircraft was shot down over Iran
F-15E Strike Eagles of the 494th Fighter Squadron based at RAF Lakenheath, Suffolk, England — the unit whose aircraft was confirmed downed over Iran on April 3, 2026. Twelve F-15Es from Lakenheath deployed to the Middle East in January 2026 as part of Operation Epic Fury. (U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons)

The F-15E went down in the mountainous Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province of southwestern Iran, a rural region spanning over 15,500 square kilometres. The area sits deep inside Iranian territory — U.S. rescue aircraft were filmed flying approximately 55 miles inside Iran, nearly 200 miles from the nearest American base. The A-10 Thunderbolt II was lost separately near the Strait of Hormuz to the south.

Zagros mountain range in southwestern Iran — the terrain where the F-15E went down on April 3 2026
The Zagros mountain range of southwestern Iran — the rugged, remote terrain surrounding the Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province where the F-15E crash site was located. Open-source analysts noted a large impact crater and burn scar consistent with a fighter-sized crash in mountainous terrain. (Wikimedia Commons)

Confirmed U.S. Aircraft Losses — April 3, 2026 Strategy Battles graphic — not to scale Iraq Kuwait Turkey Afghanistan Pakistan Saudi Arabia UAE Persian Gulf Strait of Hormuz Gulf of Oman Caspian Sea IRAN Tehran Isfahan Shiraz F-15E Strike Eagle Shot down — CONFIRMED Kohgiluyeh & Boyer-Ahmad A-10 Thunderbolt II Lost — pilot rescued safely Near Strait of Hormuz HH 2x HH-60G Pave Hawks Hit by Iranian fire — returned safely U.S. base (Kuwait area) CSAR route (~55 mi inside Iran) 494th Fighter Sqn RAF Lakenheath, UK Legend Aircraft lost Helicopter hit Rescue route U.S. base

Map: Confirmed U.S. aircraft losses April 3, 2026. Strategy Battles graphic — not to scale.

The Real Loss: What Actually Happened

A U.S. Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle from the 494th Fighter Squadron, 48th Fighter Wing, based at RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk, England, was downed over western Iran on Friday. U.S. officials confirmed the loss to CBS News, NBC News, Axios, The Washington Post, and Military Times. One crew member was rescued by U.S. special operations forces. The second crew member, a weapons systems officer, remained missing as of Friday evening. The House Armed Services Committee was notified by the Pentagon that the status of the second service member is unknown. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed the president had been briefed.

Separately, a U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II was struck near the Strait of Hormuz on the same day. The pilot navigated the damaged aircraft to Kuwaiti airspace before ejecting safely and being rescued. Two HH-60G Pave Hawk combat rescue helicopters deployed to find the F-15E crew were also hit by Iranian fire, injuring personnel on board, though both returned to base. In total, Iran caused two U.S. military aircraft to crash and hit two rescue helicopters in a single day — less than 48 hours after President Trump told the American public Iran had been “completely decimated.”

“From the structure it certainly looks like an F-15, and from the tail flash stripe markings from the 48th Fighter Wing, based at RAF Lakenheath in the United Kingdom.”

— Peter Layton, former Royal Australian Air Force officer and visiting fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute, speaking to CNN after examining Iranian wreckage images, April 3, 2026

Layer One: Calling an F-15E an F-35

Iran’s first and most consequential act of disinformation on April 3 was the misidentification of the downed aircraft. The IRGC’s Khatam al-Anbiya Headquarters spokesman declared that “a second US fifth-generation F-35 was struck and downed over central Iran by a new IRGC Aerospace Force air-defence system.” Iran’s semi-official Mehr News Agency, state broadcaster IRIB, and Tasnim News Agency all amplified the claim and it spread globally within minutes.

The wreckage told a completely different story. CNN analysis found a partial logo reading “US Air Forces in Europe” on the tail fin alongside a distinctive red stripe — markings exclusive to the F-15E of the 494th Fighter Squadron. An Advanced Concept Ejection Seat recovered near the site was confirmed as the model used in the F-15E, not the F-35. The Aviationist concluded that the debris belonged to an F-15E Strike Eagle, not a Lightning II. Two weapons experts told CBS News independently the debris was consistent with an F-15. N.R. Jenzen-Jones of Armament Research Services reached the same conclusion. Claiming to have shot down an F-35, America’s premier fifth-generation stealth fighter worth around $100 million per unit, delivers a propaganda victory of an entirely different magnitude to downing an F-15E. Iran knew what it had. It chose to call it something else.

Defence Blog went further, reporting that Iranian state television appeared to have used its own missile wreckage to fabricate footage of a downed American aircraft entirely. For our full investigation into Iran’s earlier F-35 claims, read: Iran Claims Second U.S. F-35 Downed in Two Weeks as Pentagon Stays Silent.

The Tail Fin That Exposed Iran’s Lie

Iranian state media released wreckage photos claiming to show a downed F-35. The tail fin bore a “US Air Forces in Europe” badge and a red tail flash stripe — markings used exclusively by the 494th Fighter Squadron F-15E at RAF Lakenheath. No F-35 unit uses these markings. The ejection seat found nearby was an ACES II model used in the F-15E but not the F-35. Confirmed by Peter Layton, N.R. Jenzen-Jones, CNN, and two CBS News weapons experts.

Layer Two: Video Game Footage Passed Off as Real Combat

Arma 3 military simulation video game screenshot — footage from this game was spread as real Iranian combat video on April 3 2026
Arma 3 — a military simulation video game whose photorealistic graphics have been repeatedly used to fabricate fake war footage throughout the Iran conflict. A clip from this or a similar game was spread on April 3 as real footage of the IRGC downing a U.S. F-15. The same video had first been posted online on February 28 — five weeks before the actual crash. (Bohemia Interactive)

As the misidentified wreckage images spread, a second wave of disinformation moved even faster. A video circulated widely on X claiming to show the IRGC downing an American F-15 over Qeshm Island. It appeared to show a jet struck by a missile and exploding dramatically. It was footage from a video game. Gizmodo identified it as likely taken from Arma, a military tactical shooter series known for photorealistic graphics. Lead Stories confirmed the clip matched gameplay from Arma 3 or Digital Combat Simulator. An AI detection tool estimated it was 88.5 percent likely to be AI-generated. AFP fact-checkers found the same clip had been posted on February 28, the very first day of the war, making it impossible that it showed Friday’s crash.

Fake Video Alert: The Video Game Clip

A video spread on April 3 claiming to show the IRGC downing a U.S. F-15 over Qeshm Island was identified as Arma 3 or Digital Combat Simulator footage. The same clip was first posted online on February 28 — five weeks before the F-15E crash. Lead Stories estimated it was 88.5% likely AI-generated. The audio features an off-screen character shouting “target hit!” in an artificial way. Sources: Lead Stories, AFP, Gizmodo.

Watch: Iran’s Disinformation Campaign

Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) claimed Thursday that it struck a US F-35 stealth fighter jet over central Iran. FRANCE 24’s Reza Sayah reports from Tehran, Iran

Layer Three: Fake Capture Videos and Bounty Appeals

HH-60G Pave Hawk combat search and rescue helicopter — two were hit by Iranian fire during the F-15E rescue mission April 3 2026
An HH-60G Pave Hawk combat search-and-rescue helicopter — two were deployed to recover the downed F-15E crew on April 3 and were struck by Iranian small arms fire approximately 55 miles inside Iran, nearly 200 miles from the nearest U.S. base. Both returned safely. (U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons)

Iran’s third line of disinformation concerned the fate of the missing F-15E crew member. As the real search-and-rescue operation unfolded across the mountains of Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province, Iranian state television broadcast appeals urging civilians to find and hand over any American pilot. The governor of the province offered ten billion tomans — approximately $76,000 — for anyone who handed over the “criminal American pilot.” An earlier on-screen message had urged citizens to “shoot them if you see them.”

Within hours, a video spread on X claiming to show the American pilot in the custody of a pro-Iran militia calling itself the Sons of Haidar al-Karrar. The clip showed a pixelated figure with arms raised approaching someone with a drawn weapon. No faces were visible and no credible media organisation could verify it. Iran’s parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf taunted Washington on X: “This brilliant no-strategy war they started has now been downgraded from ‘regime change’ to ‘Hey! Can anyone find our pilots? Please?'” Neither the capture claim nor the failed rescue claim was confirmed by the Pentagon, CENTCOM, or any named U.S. official as of Friday evening.

The Rescue Mission: What Was Confirmed

U.S. forces launched a Combat Search and Rescue operation using HH-60G Pave Hawk helicopters, an HC-130J Combat King II, and at least one MQ-9 drone. Aircraft flew 55 miles inside Iranian territory, nearly 200 miles from the nearest U.S. base. Iranian police officers were filmed firing automatic rifles at the low-flying helicopters. One F-15E crew member was successfully rescued. Both Pave Hawks sustained small arms hits but returned to base safely. The fate of the second crew member remains unknown. Sources: CBS News, Washington Post, NBC News, CNN.

HC-130J Combat King II aircraft — used during the F-15E rescue mission flying low over southwestern Iran
An HC-130J Combat King II — the type of aircraft filmed flying at extremely low altitude over southwestern Iran on April 3, refuelling Pave Hawk helicopters during the search-and-rescue operation for the downed F-15E crew. The aircraft was filmed approximately 55 miles inside Iranian territory. (U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons)

The A-10 Loss: A Separate Incident

A-10 Thunderbolt II Warthog US Air Force — lost near Strait of Hormuz April 3 2026 Iran war
A U.S. Air Force A-10 Thunderbolt II — a second aircraft of this type was struck by Iranian fire near the Strait of Hormuz on April 3, 2026. The pilot ejected safely over Kuwaiti airspace and was subsequently rescued. The A-10 had been deployed in the area to hunt Iranian fast boats threatening commercial shipping through the strait. (U.S. Air Force / Wikimedia Commons)

The A-10 Thunderbolt II loss near the Strait of Hormuz was a separate incident from the F-15E shootdown. The single-seat attack aircraft had been operating in the area hunting Iranian fast boats. Iran claimed the aircraft crashed into the Persian Gulf after its air defenses targeted it near the strait. U.S. officials confirmed to The New York Times, CNN, NBC News, and The Washington Post that the A-10 was struck and the pilot ejected safely into Kuwaiti airspace before being recovered. The aircraft was destroyed.

The Disinformation Timeline: April 3, 2026

Iran Disinformation Timeline — April 3, 2026 Strategy Battles graphic Early morning F-15E Strike Eagle downed over Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province, southwestern Iran REAL — Confirmed by CBS News, NBC, Washington Post, Axios, Military Times Within minutes IRGC declares “second F-35 downed” — publishes F-15E wreckage as supposed proof FALSE — Debris confirmed as F-15E by multiple independent analysts Same hour Arma 3 video game clip shared as “real” IRGC shootdown footage — millions of views on X FAKE — Same clip posted Feb 28, 88.5% AI-generated per Lead Stories and AFP Afternoon $76,000 bounty announced. Fake “pilot captured” pixelated video spreads across X. UNVERIFIED — No U.S. official has confirmed any capture as of Friday evening Evening One F-15E crew member confirmed rescued. Second crew member status remains unknown. CONFIRMED — Pentagon issued zero formal statements throughout the entire day Throughout the day Defence Blog: Iranian state TV used its own missile wreckage to fabricate evidence of U.S. aircraft loss

Strategy Battles disinformation timeline — April 3, 2026.

What the Evidence Actually Showed

Iran’s Claim vs. What the Debris Actually Showed

  • Iran’s claim: F-35 Lightning II shot down over central Iran by new IRGC air-defence system. Pilot unlikely to have survived.
  • Tail fin markings: “US Air Forces in Europe” badge plus red tail flash. Exclusive to 494th Fighter Squadron F-15E, RAF Lakenheath. Not used on any F-35. Confirmed by Peter Layton, N.R. Jenzen-Jones, CNN, CBS News.
  • Ejection seat: McDonnell-Douglas ACES II found near crash site. Used in F-15E. The F-35 uses a Martin-Baker seat. Confirmed by CNN.
  • Aircraft layout: Twin-engine design and external mounting points visible. F-35 has a single engine and internal weapons bay. Confirmed by The Aviationist and Defence Blog.
  • Video “evidence”: Arma 3 or DCS World video game footage. First posted February 28 — one month before the crash. 88.5% likely AI-generated per Lead Stories.
  • Pentagon response: Total silence. No formal statement issued despite multiple requests from The War Zone, Breaking Defense, and Military Times.

Analysis

Iran’s information operation on April 3 was sophisticated, layered, and largely successful in the short term. Within hours of a genuine military event, Tehran had constructed a parallel narrative that reached hundreds of millions of people through state media amplification and social media virality. The three-layer strategy — misidentifying the aircraft, flooding the zone with video game footage, and fabricating capture claims — was designed not to convince experts but to overwhelm ordinary viewers with a volume of content that made the false narrative feel more established than the true one.

The truth is damaging enough for Washington without embellishment. A manned U.S. combat aircraft was downed over enemy territory for the first time in this conflict. A second was lost the same day. An American service member’s fate is unknown in hostile territory with a $76,000 bounty on their head. Less than 48 hours before all of this, President Trump told the American people Iran had “no anti-aircraft equipment” and that its radar was “100% annihilated.” The Pentagon said nothing publicly all day. Iran’s fabrication was not for the world’s benefit. It was for its domestic audience, and for the historical record Tehran wants to write about this war regardless of what actually happened in the mountains of southwestern Iran on the morning of April 3, 2026.


© StrategyBattles.net – This article is for news and analysis purposes only. It is based on publicly available news sources and military updates. All rights reserved. Original reporting may come from various open sources. Not for commercial reuse without permission.

Strategy Battles Editorial Team

Strategy Battles is led by Marcus V. Thorne, a military analyst and open-source intelligence specialist with over a decade of operational experience in defence logistics and tactical conflict reporting. Marcus oversees the editorial direction of every report published on Strategy Battles, applying a rigorous multi-stage verification process designed to deliver accurate, accountable journalism in an information environment increasingly defined by wartime disinformation.

Related Articles

Back to top button