Transcript of A Daring Rescue Behind Enemy Lines New

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00:00:01

From The New York Times, I'm Rachel Abrams, and this is The Daily. Over the weekend, the United States military pulled off a stunning rescue behind enemy lines in Iran. The mission to save an injured airman was as complicated as it was daring. Today, my colleague Eric Schmidt explains how the U.S. pulled it off and why this victory may be short-lived. It's Tuesday, April 7th. Eric Schmidt, welcome back to The Daily.

00:00:48

Thank you.

00:00:48

So over the weekend, the administration pulls off this operation that seems like It could have been ripped from a Hollywood movie, right? And we're going to get to the details of it, but before we do, Eric, just set the stage for us and tell us what was happening in the war in the days leading up to this rescue mission.

00:01:05

Sure. So by Friday, it was the end of the fifth week of the air campaign that Israel and the United States was waging against Iran. In retaliation, Iran had closed the Strait of Hormuz. That sent gasoline prices here in the U.S. skyrocketing and economic reverberations across the globe. And in the polls, the war was also unpopular, but the administration was trying to sell the point that they were winning. This was a successful military campaign and that the United States had actually achieved air dominance over Iran.

00:01:38

Meaning that they controlled the airspace over Iran. That's what our military was saying.

00:01:41

That's right. And then early Friday, we got the news that an American warplane had actually been shot down over Iran. The first time that had happened in the war. And so this was a real jolt that, wait a minute, we've been hearing from the administration that everything's, the United States has such control over the skies that they can fly just about any mission. Then suddenly we hear about this F-15E Strike Eagle plane getting shot down.

00:02:06

And what was the plane doing in Iranian airspace to begin with?

00:02:10

So we don't know exactly what its mission was, but most likely it was carrying out a mission to strike one of these many military targets. It's a heavy-duty bomber, drops bombs, 2,000 pounds or more on targets. And so it's been one of the real workhorses of this campaign.

00:02:26

And who was in the plane, Eric?

00:02:28

So the F-15E is a two-seat plane. You have a pilot in the front, and then the officer behind him is called a weapons systems officer. These are both Air Force pilots, fairly experienced. So early Friday morning over Iran, this F-15E gets hit, and they immediately eject. From the plane. The first thing that happens in an ejection is the canopy of their plane pops off. They then eject one after the other, but it's a few seconds apart. So when they parachute down, they could be miles apart. They don't land in necessarily the same place. The winds could be different. There's all sorts of variables that make it difficult to determine exactly where they land. So once this happens, the military is immediately alerted that there's a problem on the ground, and they go into search and rescue mode. Now, these aviators are wearing special vests in their flight suits that have communications on them. They have a special beacon they can use to signal their location. And within about 6 hours, the pilot is scooped up, you know, by search and rescue teams. He came under fire, but they were able to get him out of Iranian territory and back to Kuwait.

00:03:38

And the other guy, though, at this point, what does the military know about him.

00:03:43

So the problem with the weapons systems officer was hours went by and they had no contact with him.

00:03:49

So they don't know if he's injured, they don't know if he's dead, they don't know that he's captured, they don't know anything.

00:03:53

Exactly. And they're worried about that. But this is how pilots are trained. They want to get to someplace safe and someplace where they can communicate their position without being detected. What we now know is that he climbed this 7,000-foot ridgeline, Even though he's injured—

00:04:11

7,000 feet.

00:04:12

Yeah. He's scrambling up this rugged mountain space. And this is in southwestern Iran. Again, it's now in daytime. And he is scrambling up, but he's also conscious that he doesn't want to be seen or detected. So he eventually makes it up to the top. Even though he's kind of bloodied and injured, he makes it up to the top of this ridgeline. He finds a crevice to hide in.

00:04:32

Wow.

00:04:33

So meanwhile, the military still doesn't know where he is. And they enlist the CIA to help them. The CIA has all sorts of super-duper technology, including some, it seems to be possibly, very secret surveillance drones that would help them locate the aviator where he may be. And sure enough, they do. And they pass along that location to the Pentagon. At right about the same time, the aviator who's been in his mountain hideout, he surfaces to communicate on his beacon. Think of it as a super duper beeper that'll communicate a signal, an encrypted signal, to the Americans looking for him.

00:05:18

Okay, so at this point in time, Eric, obviously this airman is trying to evade capture by the Iranians, but can you just explain the stakes of that a little bit?

00:05:27

So the stakes are huge for both sides. For the US, they're following through on their credo to leave no service member behind. and they'll basically pull out all the stops to do it. For the Iranians, however, this would be a huge propaganda coup. If they can capture an American airman and bring him back to Tehran and parade him in front of the cameras, here would be another way that they could push back by saying, we've got one of your service members and we're going to use him in leverage with whatever bargaining we go forward with. And this matters so much that the Iranian regime put a huge bounty out for anybody who can help locate the airmen. By some accounts, it was as much as $60,000 for people who, if they could turn in information to the Iranian forces who are searching for him now.

00:06:11

So it basically sounds like this is a race against time at this point. The airman knows that he has to evade capture. The Iranians know that the U.S. is probably looking for him, and the U.S. probably knows that the Iranians are trying to grab him, right?

00:06:24

That's right. So both sides kind of marshal their resources. The Iranians send out multiple search parties looking for this guy. Again, they've offered this bounty, so everybody's on the lookout for some kind of American airman in a, you know, or a parachute or any signs of life from where this guy is. On the other hand, the Americans, they mount this massive operation, dozens of aircraft. They get SEAL Team Six and other special operations guys mustered. They gotta try and get in, locate this guy, and get him out before the Iranians on the ground can reach him. And so they come up with a deception plan because they're trying to buy time for this military search and rescue force to get there on the scene. So again, the CIA CIA comes back into this picture here, and they basically start putting out word covertly that they've already recovered this guy and he's over here, miles and miles away from the actual location what they're doing. The whole objective here is to confuse the Iranians on the ground to think, you know, where is this guy? Is he over here? Is he over there? We see bombings happening all over the place.

00:07:28

We hear these messages that are fake messages saying, you know, the Americans have got this guy. He's coming out by the coastline. No, no, he's over at this mountain line. It's all to buy time for this big rescue force that now knows where the guy is hiding. They just have to get there in time to grab him. So the United States sends in under the cloak of darkness these two C-130 cargo planes that are especially made to land in austere land airstrips. And inside the aircraft are several small helicopters, because remember, this guy's up, up on top of a 7,000-foot mountain. They don't have time to hike up there, and they can't land anything and that. So they have to get a special helicopter that's small enough to get to this area and fly up. So off they go up the mountain. And sure enough, the aviator is there. He's waiting for them. They come in. Their guns are firing to keep anybody else away. They pick him up. And it looks like this amazing drama that's now gone on for over 24 hours may finally be over. I'm actually getting texts from sources saying, we've got him.

00:08:33

He's safe. He's recovered. And we're about to publish our story. When somebody else says, "Whoa, wait a minute. There's a problem. There's a serious problem." The problem is, as these C-130 planes are maneuvering to try and take off again, getting— they've gotten all the helicopters back in, everything's ready to go, the nose gear gets stuck in this kind of sandy, dirty soil. It's apparently kind of wet as well. And so they can't move it. So after all of this, these planes are stuck in the mud, essentially. Stuck in this dirt.

00:09:08

They're physically stuck. They can't move.

00:09:09

They're physically stuck. They can't move it. They're trying to figure out. Finally, they just say, "We can't do this. We have to go to Plan B." And in this case, it means they're gonna send 3 new planes, different planes, in to basically get the commando team as well as the downed airmen. And so this means that the Americans have to buy themselves more time. And what they do until these new aircraft can arrive is they basically create a ring of fire around this airbase where they're basically blasting away from high-altitude bombers anybody that gets near it. So the replacement planes finally arrive. They were able to load up the commandos, get the airmen on board, and off they go, 1, 2, 3 in succession. One plane takes off, then about 15 minutes the next plane takes off, and finally the third plane takes off. The last thing they do the military does is they have to destroy these aircraft that they originally flew in on, the ones that got stuck in the sand, the helicopters that came with them, because they've got all this sensitive technology on them that they don't want to fall into Iranian hands.

00:10:14

So this is kind of the irony of all this. At the end of the mission, they actually bombed the planes that were helping to rescue.

00:10:20

Wow.

00:10:20

But by now, the 3 aircraft are airborne and they're on their way to Kuwait. The airman is being treated aboard, and soon he and the pilot, who they've obviously been treating, will be on flights to Germany in a medical hospital there. So the successful rescue gave President Trump a huge victory, which he touted at a Monday press conference at the White House. And we're here today to celebrate the success of one of the largest, most complex, most harrowing combat searches I guess you would call it a search and rescue mission ever attempted by the military, where he praised the military, he praised the CIA. So in a breathtaking show of skill and precision, lethality and force, America's military descended on the area, talking about only the American military could have pulled off such an amazing rescue operation, rescued the stranded officer, destroyed all threats and exited Iranian territory while taking no casualties of any kind. But despite this, this still leaves a very unpopular war that's created all kinds of economic consequences around the world and obviously in the United States. And it still leaves many of the president's strategic goals unfinished.

00:11:48

We'll be right back. So Eric, the United States and the Trump administration are obviously touting this rescue operation as a huge victory. How are the Iranians viewing it?

00:12:10

Well, the Iranians are also touting it as a big victory for different reasons. Of course, they were successful in shooting down the American combat plane, no doubt about that. They also basically demonstrate that the Americans don't fully control the airspace, as Secretary Hegseth has talked about, this air dominance, that they are still able to launch ballistic missiles and drones. And in fact, some of our other reporting has indicated that the Iranians are still able to fire off about 15 to 30 ballistic missiles every day, as well as 50 to 100 drones, one-way attack drones. So they still have significant capability, whether it's to fire at American warplanes or to fire fire at energy infrastructure around the neighboring Gulf countries. It's still a significant problem, and thus it shows the Iranians still have some will to fight and some capability to fight.

00:13:01

Given all of that, what does it tell us about what the United States has actually accomplished in the war? Because right now, this is week 6, and I bet that a lot of people had either assumed or understood that the United States had destroyed a lot of Iran's military capabilities that, as you've said, seem to be working to some extent.

00:13:19

That's right. So you've got a military campaign that by many measurements is actually succeeding. The United States military, along with Israel, has been able to destroy or degrade much of Iran's missile program, much, if not most, of its drone program, its navy, and its air force. But two things can be true here. You can still have a resilient Iranian military that's able to pop off missiles and drones when it wants, at the same time where the American military has badly degraded what the regime can do long-term. But the political goals, the political and strategic goals are not necessarily on track. The president has given contradictory explanations as to what his endgame really is here. And at his news conference, even as he was touting the success of this rescue mission, he angrily lashed out and threatened the Iranians to basically say the entire country can be taken out in one night. And that night might be tomorrow night. Basically threatening to bomb bridges and power plants and, you know, who knows what else if they don't come to the bargaining table and have a resolution to this by some time on Tuesday night.

00:14:27

That is such an existential threat that he is making. I feel like this rescue mission, this victory that he just had, has almost emboldened him in some way, just listening to some of these threats.

00:14:38

Well, you know, it's interesting because a lot of us thought that it would actually chasten him. It would kind of show him the risks of this kind of military operation when so much of the success of it hinged on the rescue or not of this one airman. But I think you're right, Rachel, that he has basically taken this and said, you know what, this amazing American military machine that I have, they can do just about anything. And I'm going to take this rescue operation and I'm going to double down now and I'm going to increase the threats and use this bombing power that I have to go after this infrastructure that supports not just the military, but millions of civilians across this country. These power plants, for instance, are used both by the military as well as just regular civilians. And many legal experts say this would be unlawful, this would be against international law to carry out these kind of strikes.

00:15:28

Before this plane went down, Eric, on Friday and this rescue mission happened, so much of the reporting on the war focused on whether there could be some kind of an off-ramp. And I wonder if both the United States and Iran are claiming victory right now after this rescue mission. Isn't that some path to an off-ramp?

00:15:47

It's possible. Certainly in listening to the president at the news conference, he is still at least saying he wants a diplomatic resolution to this. And in fact, Iran on Monday submitted a new 10-point proposal that included terms that would allow for some kind of protocol for safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz, but would also include the lifting of sanctions against Iran. Now, the vice president, J.D. Vance, is going to be traveling to Europe this week, so it's possible he could be involved in meetings if these negotiations were to get further along. But much of this is still unclear, and a lot of experts that we talked to still believe that negotiations are a long ways off.

00:16:25

So where we stand right now is that the president has set a deadline, as of now it's Tuesday evening, for the Iranians to either capitulate and accept a US proposal for ceasefire or face a barrage of attacks on its infrastructure. How should we be thinking, Eric, about where that leaves us in terms of what stage of the conflict we are currently in?

00:16:49

Well, I think if we were to be hopeful, we could say maybe we're on the brink of some kind of resolution where both sides could try and claim something out of this. But I think we're still a long ways away on some of these key issues. And the president seems to be moving in the direction of escalation, of threatening more bombing, even if it takes days or weeks. The Iranian regime, however, believes they're in the driver's seat right now. They have the leverage by still holding on to the Strait of Hormuz, that economic bottleneck that they have grabbed so quickly. And by being able to shoot down an American warplane, by able to continue to fire at energy infrastructure around the region, they've demonstrated that even though they're badly degraded in terms of military equipment, they still can launch a punch every now and then. And so I think both sides are hardening their positions at a time when at least the public rhetoric is to try and find an off-ramp.

00:17:40

This rescue operation, as we have described it, could not have been more cinematic. And also, it is coming at a time when the administration is really struggling, I think, to sell this war to an American public that is looking at the gas pump and seeing prices go up and up and up and wondering, why are we doing this? And so it feels like you could not have handed the White House a better narrative than this one, this unbelievably heroic story that shows American military might ingenuity, bravery that, as we said, could have been ripped from a movie.

00:18:14

I think that's right. And I think the White House and the Pentagon are going to try and milk this for as long as they can. The success of this operation is cinematic, and the rescue of an American airman are dramatic. But in the end, look at what you're left with. You're still left with the Straits of Hormuz closed, economic hardship throughout. You're still left with a hardline government that thinks it's winning not losing, and you're still left with this fundamental problem of how do you deal with this nearly 1,000 pounds of highly enriched uranium that's buried deep underneath the Isfahan site? And what do you do with that? The president said on Monday that that is still his main goal, is to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. But he has not laid out any of the objectives on how you do that. So even with the military success overall, and even with this very successful rescue of these two airmen on Friday, the The administration is still left with a lot of really difficult problems to address.

00:19:21

Eric Schmidt, thank you so much.

00:19:23

Thank you.

00:19:39

We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. 4 astronauts on the Artemis II spacecraft made history on Monday afternoon when they officially reached the farthest distance from Earth that human beings have ever traveled. The astronauts passed 248,655 miles the record set by the Apollo 13 mission in 1970. And they passed behind the far side of the moon, seeing parts of it never before observed with human eyes. And— Welcome to Today on this Monday morning. We are so glad you started your week with us, and it is good to be home.

00:20:21

Yes, it is good to have you back at home.

00:20:23

Savannah Guthrie returned to the Today Show for the first time since the disappearance of her mother, Nancy. Pregnancy in February. Guthrie did not make explicit references to her mother, who police believe was kidnapped from her home, but she became emotional when she greeted fans who waited for her outside of Rockefeller Center. And these signs are so beautiful. You guys have been so beautiful. I've received so many letters, so much kindness to me and my whole family. We feel it, we feel your prayers. So thank you so Today's episode was produced by Ricky Novetskiy and Rachael Bonja. It was edited by Mark George with help from Lisa Chow. Research help from Susan Lee. Contains music by Marian Lozano and Dan Powell. Our theme music is by Wonderly. This episode was engineered by Alyssa Moxley. That's it for The Daily. I'm Rachel Abrams. See you tomorrow. Tomorrow.

Episode description

Over the weekend, the U.S. military pulled off a risky mission to save an injured airman whose fighter jet had been shot down in Iran.
Eric Schmitt, who covers national security for The New York Times, explains how Washington pulled it off.
Guest: Eric Schmitt, a national security correspondent for The New York Times based in Washington.
Background reading: 

Inside the harrowing race against time to find the U.S. airman in Iran.
Analysis: Iran’s downing of a plane and the U.S. rescue leave both sides dangerously emboldened.

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