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Old 24th March 2026 | 14:27
  #4266 (permalink)  
Lonewolf_50
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The War of Words continues, information, and misinformation, etc: here are a few examples
U.S. Central Command issued a sharp denial on Sunday, March 22, to persistent Iranian claims that its forces shot down an American F-15 fighter jet, calling the reports outright false and pointing to an unbroken record of air superiority in the escalating conflict. In a post shared on X, CENTCOM stated plainly:
“Rumors claim the Iranian regime recently shot down a U.S. F-15 over Iran. FALSE.
U.S. forces have flown more than 8,000 combat flights during Operation Epic Fury. No U.S. fighter aircraft have been shot down by Iran. TRUE.”
Iran taking credit for Kuwait's kills? They might be doing that for internal consumption. The information war is 24/7.
The {CENTCOM} statement came amid a new wave of Iranian media assertions, including from Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps channels, alleging the downing of an F-15E Strike Eagle in recent days.
Tehran has repeatedly aired such claims since the U.S.-led air campaign began in late February, often with grainy video or photographs that military analysts have deemed inconclusive or old news.
Iranian authorities state that an “enemy” F-15 fighter jet was shot down by air defence systems after being intercepted over the country’s southern coast near Hormuz Island.
Iranian state media reported that air defences intercepted and hit an “enemy F-15” after it was tracked over the southern coast near Hormuz Island.
“An invading fighter jet was targeted by the army’s air defence,” the statement said.
Iran’s Press TV also reported the incident and shared a video claiming to show the jet being shot down.
A 29-second video clip, believed to show radar or infrared tracking, has circulated online.
The footage appears to capture missile launches targeting a fast-moving object identified as a U.S. F-15 over southern Iran.
On a more lighthearted note, I saw this the other day and laughed:
‘Hey Trump, you’re fired’:
Iranian military spokesman
As to targeting Iranian leadership, this article has some interesting bits in it for every country that has come to rely on surveillance cameras. It is a longish article, so I stuffed the second half into a spoiler. I am puzzled at why these sources and methods are being openly discussed...
The Associated Press - Business News
Iran built a vast camera network to control dissent. Israel turned it into a targeting tool
Story by DAKE KANG and SAM MEDNICK

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — The role of Israel's hijacking of Iran’s street cameras in the killing of the country’s supreme leader underscores how surveillance systems are increasingly being targeted by adversaries in wartime. Hundreds of millions of cameras have been installed above shops, in homes and on street corners across the world, many connected to the internet and poorly secured. Recent advances in artificial intelligence have enabled militaries and intelligence agencies to sift through vast amounts of surveillance footage and identify targets.

On Feb. 28, Israel vividly demonstrated the potential of such systems to be hacked and used against adversaries when Israel tracked down Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei with the help of Tehran’s own street cameras - despite repeated warnings that Iran’s surveillance systems had been compromised, according to interviews and an Associated Press review of leaked data, public statements and news reports.

The use of hacked surveillance cameras among other intelligence in the operation to kill Khamenei was described to the AP by an intelligence official with knowledge of the operation and another person who was briefed on the operation. Neither was authorized to speak with the media and both shared information on condition of anonymity.

Iran has installed tens of thousands of cameras in its capital in response to waves of protests, most recently in January, when massive nationwide demonstrations ended in a bloody crackdown that killed many thousands of Iranians.

That Tehran’s cameras were compromised was no secret: the city’s cameras were repeatedly hacked starting in 2021, and last year, a senior Iranian politician warned publicly that cameras had been compromised by Israel, posing a national security threat.

Conor Healy, director of research at surveillance research publication IPVM, said Khamenei’s killing illustrates a pressing security dilemma for governments seeking to quash dissent.

“The irony is that the infrastructure authoritarian states build to make their rule unassailable may be what makes their leaders most visible to the people trying to kill them,” Healy said. “Do you trust who is watching?”
Spoiler
 
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