US forces asked trapped airman key personal question to prove it wasn’t trap

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Frantic US officials asked the Air Force colonel trapped in Iran a key personal question about his father to try to quickly suss out whether his previous strange radio messages to them were a trap.

After Tehran shot down the airman’s F-15E jet Friday, the badly wounded weapons officer limped more than a mile up a mountain partly to boost his signal and send the message, “God is great,” officials said.

The message can be translated into the Islamic phrase, “Allahu Akbar,” confusing US officials, CBS News reported.

An F-15E pilot and weapons officer were downed in Iran on Friday, leading to a weekend rescue mission. SEPAH NEWS/AFP via Getty Images

“What he said on the radio sounded like something a Muslim would say,” President Trump told Axios

US forces were further confused when the weapons officer sent a four-digit number that they did not immediately recognize.

“We said, ‘What is he talking about?” an official told CBS.

Eventually, the team realized that the four-digit number was a police code for a cop in distress or in urgent need of assistance — similar to the 10-13 code used by NYPD officers.

President Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth likened the rescue of the weapons officer to an Easter miracle. Anadolu via Getty Images

The team then asked the colonel a question about his father that only he would know to confirm his potential captors weren’t sending them into a trap.

The officer answered correctly, and military officials were able to verify his identity and confirm he was not taken hostage, according to CBS.

The heroic, tough-as-nails airman spent about 36 hours in an area Trump said was “teeming with terrorists” in the Zagros Mountain range — all after suffering serious injuries and having a $60,000 bounty on his head. His pilot had already been rescued hours after their crash.

The massive, elite operation mounted over the weekend to rescue the colonel involved 100 special operations forces, led by SEAL Team 6, with Delta Force commandos and Army Rangers on standby, according to the New York Times.

The wreckage of US aircraft that needed to be destroyed after getting stuck in the sand during the hectic rescue mission. SIPA/Shutterstock

The Pentagon also deployed more than 150 planes for the operation, including 64 fighter jets, four bombers, 48 refuelers, 13 rescue aircraft and 26 intelligence and jamming aircraft, CBS reported.

The CIA reportedly assisted in pulling off a diversionary tactic that saw the US plant fake intel that the soldier had already been rescued and was being driven out of Iran, paving the way for the actual retrieval mission.

The intelligence agency also helped to track and locate the colonel to the mountain crevice where he was hiding, with the weapons officer flown out of Iran by 12 a.m. Easter Sunday.

Iran showed off images of the destroyed aircraft. Handout via Getty Images

US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth would go on echoing the phrase “God is good” multiple times after the rescue mission, likening its success to an Easter miracle.

“Shot down on Good Friday, hidden in a cave, a crevice, all of Saturday and rescued on Sunday,” Hegseth said at a White House press briefing featuring Trump and top administration security and military officials.

“Flown out of Iran as the sun was rising on Easter Sunday. A pilot reborn. All home and accounted for, a nation rejoicing. God is good,” Hegseth said.

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