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Sara Haines responds to Isabel Brown comments on marriage, motherhood

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“The View” co-host Sara Haines said Wednesday that criticism of her earlier comments on marriage and motherhood had been “misconstrued,” responding to backlash tied to remarks made by Isabel Brown encouraging Gen Z women to prioritize marriage and having children.

“My ultimate beef with this is that it wraps a woman’s worth up in her ovaries,” Haines said on the “Behind the Table” podcast. “Marriage, children, it’s a choice … The world has over 8 billion people. We no longer need to force people to procreate and pump out babies. We have arrived here.”

The discussion came after the segment on the daytime talk show drew criticism online, particularly from Brown, who argued Haines’ remarks dismissed traditional family values.

FCC LAUNCHING PROBE INTO ABC’S ‘THE VIEW’ AMID CRACKDOWN ON EQUAL TIME FOR CANDIDATES

Sara Haines

Sara Haines on “The View” on Wednesday, March 29, 2023. (Lou Rocco/ABC)

Haines said her intent was not to discourage marriage or motherhood, but to address what she described as societal pressure placed on women.

“My issue was with the greater message,” Haines said. “I love babies. I love being married. I love all those things. But there’s so much pressure in this world on women to define themselves by if they’re married and if they have babies.”

She said her perspective was informed by her own life experiences and those of women around her.

“My take comes from a place of empathy and life lived,” Haines said. “Knowing so many women, having been single, like dating for years and not knowing if I was going to find my person to get married.”

Haines said she believed the expectation that women can easily marry and have children does not reflect reality for many.

“They make it sound like this easy choice. Get married, have kids,” she said. “There are so many amazing women I know that aren’t meeting people.”

‘THE VIEW’ GUEST HOST CALLS ON DEMS TO STOP OBSESSING OVER TRUMP, PROMOTE BETTER FUTURE INSTEAD

Pregnant woman

Happy pregnant young woman touching her pregnant belly and standing by the window. (iStock)

She also pointed to challenges surrounding fertility and alternative paths to parenthood.

“So many people I know have struggled for some reason having babies,” Haines said. “Whether it was fertility — I’m friends with a lot of gay couples that have had to fight non-traditional surrogates, all these things.”

Haines said conversations about women frequently center on marital status and children.

“We ask women all the time about marriage and kids and that seems to be all they’re worth,” she said.

“The beauty of progress in time is that we don’t have to put that on people’s shoulders … You do what you can and what you want because you have a life beyond that.”

Haines said she believed her comments had been taken out of context by some conservative figures.

“I refuse to read it because right when I saw some of the headlines, I thought, here we go again,” Haines replied.

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Daily Wire host Isabel Brown on "Fox & Friends"

Isabel Brown, host of “The Isabel Brown Show” appears on the Fox News Channel on Mar. 31, 2026. (Fox & Friends/Screengrab)

“Conservative influencers have kind of misconstrued what you guys were saying on the show and what the point of it is,” podcast host and “The View” executive producer Brian Teta said. 

“I definitely think she misconstrued — whether that was willful or ignorance, she’s missing my whole point,” Haines said, referring to Brown.

Haines reiterated that her comments were meant to affirm women regardless of their life circumstances.

“I know too many women that, for whatever reason, aren’t married, don’t have kids, and they matter,” she said. “I would never want to dim someone’s light in life by saying they matter less because of that.”

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Fox News Digital reached out to Isabel Brown and The Daily Wire for comment, but did not immediately hear back.



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Microsoft removes Support and Recovery Assistant from Windows

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Windows

Microsoft has deprecated and removed the Support and Recovery Assistant (SaRA) command-line utility from all in-support versions of Windows updates starting March 10.

SaRA is a free scriptable tool that helps troubleshoot and resolve common issues with Office, Microsoft 365, Outlook, and Windows by running a series of automated diagnostic tests on Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10, and Windows 11 systems.

According to Microsoft, the latest version of the utility should identify the root cause and then either automatically fix the issue, provide step-by-step instructions for a manual fix, or help users contact Microsoft support.

“If you’re an IT admin, migrate away from the Microsoft Support and Recovery Assistant utility (SaRA). This command-line utility is deprecated to help secure and harden your environment,” Microsoft said on Friday.  “The Get Help command-line tool has similar capabilities and is recommended as a replacement for the SaRA utility. You’ll need to download it and use GetHelpCmd.exe to run your scenarios.”

Just as SaRA, Get Help is a self-contained, enterprise-ready diagnostic tool for troubleshooting specific Windows client issues affecting various Microsoft 365 apps, such as Microsoft Outlook and Microsoft Teams.

Administrators can use Get Help from the command line or via a script, such as PowerShell, to run it remotely on endpoints in their organization.

As Microsoft explains, the main difference between the GetHelpCmdLine and SaraCmdLine environments is that the infrastructure powering Get Help provides enhanced security.

SaRA is one of several services and apps the company announced it would deprecate in recent years. For instance, in May 2025, Microsoft also notified Microsoft Authenticator users that the password autofill feature would be deprecated in July and gave them until August 1st to export their passwords before the feature was removed from the app.

The company also told Microsoft Publisher users that the desktop publishing app would be removed from Microsoft 365 after October 2026 and, more recently, started retiring the Microsoft Lens PDF scanner app for Android and iOS devices in January, with plans to remove it from app stores on February 9 and to disable the app’s functionality by March.

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How Asia became ground zero for the oil crisis | News

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As the Iran war disrupts oil flows, fuel shortages hit Asia first. Is this the start of a wider global energy crisis?

As oil flows come under threat due to the Iran war, parts of Asia are already under strain. Fuel supplies are tightening, prices are rising, and some countries warn stocks may run out. Far from the battlefield, the impact is immediate. What does this reveal about just how fragile the global energy system is?

In this episode: 

  • Vina Nadjibulla (@VinaNadjibulla), Vice-President of Research & Strategy, The Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada

Episode credits:

This episode was produced by Marcos Bartolomé and Sarí el-Khalili with Spencer Cline, Chloe K. Li, Tuleen Barakat and our host, Malika Bilal. It was edited by Tamara Khandaker and Sarí el-Khalili. Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. 

The Take production team is Marcos Bartolomé, Sonia Bhagat, Spencer Cline, Sarí el-Khalili, Tamara Khandaker, Chloe K. Li, Alexandra Locke, Melanie Marich, Catherine Nouhan, Alex Roldan, and Noor Wazwaz. Our host is Malika Bilal. 

Our editorial interns are Maya Hamadeh and Tuleen Barakat. Our engagement producers are Adam Abou-Gad and Vienna Maglio. Andrew Greiner is lead of audience engagement. Our video editors are Hisham Abu Salah and Mohannad al-Melhem. Alexandra Locke is The Take’s executive producer. 

Connect with us:

@AJEPodcasts on X, Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube



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NYPD shoots man wielding 13-inch knife outside East Harlem grocery store

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A crazed man was shot by police after wielding a 13-inch kitchen knife outside a grocery store, the New York Police Department said.

“Once again, we are reminded of the dangers that our officers confront every time they put on their uniform. And this morning was no different,” Inspector Andrew Natiw, the executive officer of the Patrol Bureau of Manhattan North, said in a Monday morning news conference.

According to the NYPD, on Monday at 1:15 a.m., a 53-year-old got into a verbal fight with another person inside the City Fresh Market on East 120th Street and Third Avenue.

Multiple employees had to physically remove him from the store after he became “irate and disorderly,” the NYPD said. The man returned to the store a short time later with a large kitchen knife in his hand, banging on the window, according to police.

Suspect holding large knife outside of grocery store.

At approximately 1:44 a.m., officers from the 25th Precinct responded to 120th St and 3rd Ave. for a police-involved shooting with a suspect who seemed to be armed with a large kitchen knife who was seen on a nearby supermarket’s surveillance camera menacing workers prior to his confrontation with police. (Video by Dakota Santiago (FreedomNewsTV))

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Surveillance video captured the man wielding a 13-inch knife, yelling, pressing against the store’s glass, police said.

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Employees locked the door and called 911 just after 1:30 a.m. 

When officers arrived, they told the man to drop the knife multiple times, but he “quickly advanced toward the officers with the knife extended out.”

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13-inch kitchen knife with black handle.

Police shot a 53-year-old man armed with a 13-inch knife in East Harlem early Monday. (NYPD NEWS)

Authorities said that one of the officers shot the suspect and immediately requested EMS and rendered aid to the 53-year-old suspect.

The suspect, they said, was removed to Harlem Hospital where he went into surgery, and is in critical but stable condition.

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NYPD officers standing outside a store exterior

Police recovered a 13-inch kitchen knife outside an East Harlem grocery store after they say a man charged officers with it. (WNYW)

The NYPD declined to provide a name of the suspect. Police said the man has a history of prior arrests and was known to law enforcement.

Investigators recovered approximately seven shell casings at the scene. The incident remains under investigation.



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Access Denied

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Access Denied You don’t have permission to access “http://hindi.news18.com/cricket/umpire-stabbed-to-death-in-cricket-match-over-run-out-dispute-accused-absconding-10346565.html” on this server.

Reference #18.50200117.1775498668.1444721

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Democrats blast Trump for Iran ‘war crimes’ threat; Republicans supportive | US-Israel war on Iran News

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Several Democrats have condemned Donald Trump after the United States president renewed his threat to destroy Iran’s civilian infrastructure in a profanity-laden message.

Democratic legislators questioned the Republican’s mental stability after an Easter Sunday message in which he threatened to bomb Iran’s power plants and bridges, which legal experts said would amount to war crimes.

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Congresswoman Yassamin Ansari, who is of Iranian descent, called for invoking the 25th Amendment to remove Trump from the presidency, suggesting he is unfit to serve.

“The President of the United States is a deranged lunatic, and a national security threat to our country and the rest of the world,” Ansari wrote in a social media post.

For more than two weeks, Trump has been threatening to “obliterate” Iran’s civilian infrastructure if Tehran does not open the Strait of Hormuz.

But Sunday’s social media post – which coincided with the Easter holiday, included an expletive and invoked the name of Allah – was especially jarring to many of Trump’s critics at home and around the world.

“Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!!” Trump wrote.

“Open the F****n’ Strait, you crazy bastards, or you’ll be living in Hell – JUST WATCH! Praise be to Allah.”

Hakeem Jeffries, the top Democrat in the House of Representatives, called the message “disgusting and unhinged”.

“Something is really wrong with this guy,” Jeffries wrote on X.

‘Immoral madman’

In the war’s opening US-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, an attack on a girls school in the south of the country killed more than 170 people, mostly children.

Multiple visual investigations have shown that the strike was likely carried out by a US Tomahawk missile.

US-Israeli air raids have also struck several universities across Iran as well as residential buildings and medical centres.

International humanitarian law prohibits the targeting of civilians and the destruction of civilian infrastructure as a form of collective punishment.

Senator Elissa Slotkin, a centrist Democrat and former CIA operative, said attacks against Iran’s civilian infrastructure would violate the Geneva Conventions and the Pentagon’s own Law of War Manual.

“It is both irresponsible and wrong to indiscriminately kill civilians in Iran and destroy civilian infrastructure like bridges and power plants – particularly when the President said this war was to aid the Iranian people,” Slotkin said.

Progressive Senator Bernie Sanders called on his fellow lawmakers to stop the war after Trump’s threat.

“These are the ravings of a dangerous and mentally unbalanced individual. Congress has got to act NOW. End this war,” he wrote in a social media post.

For his part, Senator Jeff Merkley stressed that the US military is legally required to refuse orders to commit war crimes.

“President Trump’s profanity-laden Easter threat to attack Iran’s civilian infrastructure – power plants and bridges – are the words of a frustrated and immoral madman,” the Democrat said.

Iran has remained defiant against Trump’s threats.

Unable to match the firepower of the US and Israel, Tehran has been blocking the Strait of Hormuz to choke off oil supplies globally and raise the cost of the war for Washington.

The Iranian military has also been firing missiles and drones against Israel and across the entire region.

Republican support

Trump and his aides have been insisting that Iran’s military capacity has been destroyed with only a “few” missiles left in Tehran’s arsenal.

Despite the mounting criticism of the war, the US president’s Republican allies have largely stood behind him.

“President Trump is right to insist that any negotiated deal meets our military and strategic objectives. If Iran baulks, he’s right to blow up their crucial infrastructure so they can’t go back to their old ways,” Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said on Monday.

Congressman Don Bacon accused the war’s critics of living in a “bubble”, saying the Iranian government has killed about 1,000 Americans since 1979.

The number likely refers to US casualties in the Middle East resulting from attacks carried out by groups allied with Iran during US military interventions in the region.

“You cannot let a country frequently target Americans and not respond. The Ayatollah and his henchmen had this coming for a long time,” Bacon wrote on X, referring to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed on the first day of the war.

The US-Israel war has killed more than 2,000 people in Iran, according to Iranian officials who said they are mostly civilians.

Despite the mounting civilian casualties, Trump said on Monday that Iranians want their country to be bombed.

“The Iranian people, when they don’t hear bombs go up, they’re upset. They want to hear bombs because they want to be free,” he said.



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Wisconsin deputy exposed to airborne fentanyl treated with Narcan

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A Wisconsin sheriff‘s deputy sifting through money taken from an illegal immigrant suspect arrested on drug charges became ill when she was hit in the face with airborne powdered fentanyl and cocaine, authorities said. 

The exposure happened when Jose Fredy Rodriguez Acuna, 25, of Portage, was being booked into the jail on March 31, the Columbia County Sheriff’s office said. 

Acuna had been arrested earlier that day during a traffic stop. While he was being booked into the jail, deputies were taking inventory of Acuna’s belongings, authorities said.

“While manipulating US Currency taken from the subject, she unfolded a bill which contained a powdery substance,” said Columbia County Sheriff Roger Brandner. “The powdery substance became airborne directly into the face of the deputy causing an exposure.”

FBI ARRESTS 55 IN MASSIVE DRUG RING WITH ALLEGED CHINA SUPPLIER FLOODING US STREETS WITH FENTANYL

Jose Fredy Rodriguez Acuna, 25, seen in a mugshot in Wisconsin.

Jose Fredy Rodriguez Acuna, 25, was arrested in Wisconsin on drug charges. A deputy became sick when she was hit in the face with airborne powdered cocaine and fentanyl from money belonging to Acuna, authorities said. (Getty Images; Columbia County Sheriff’s Office)

The deputy suffered a “medical event” and needed immediate care, authorities said. Other deputies administered Narcan, an over-the-counter nasal spray or injection that rapidly reverses opioid overdoses, on the sick deputy.

A person holding a small bag of white powder on a street

A deputy suffered a “medical event” after being exposed to alleged powdered cocaine and fentanyl. (iStock)

The deputy was taken to a hospital and was expected to make a full recovery. 

FATAL DRUG COMBINATION SPARKS ALERT AS ‘RHINO TRANQ’ SPREADS ACROSS US

The powdered substance tested positive for cocaine and fentanyl, the sheriff’s office said.  Last week, Acuna was charged with possession of cocaine and possession of narcotic drugs

He was ordered held on a $1,000 cash bond. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) lodged a detainer request with the sheriff’s office and he was taken into federal custody.

A close-up of a pill press machine shaping a tablet in New York City.

A close-up image of a pill press machine in New York on June 24, 2024. (Andrew Kelly/Reuters)

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Brandner noted that people arrested for drug offenses often conceal drugs and paraphernalia in their belongings during the intake process.

“The danger doesn’t stop on the street, and our jail staff must be prepared for his danger,” he said. “?Our staff did a fantastic job identifying and responding to this life-threatening emergency. We are thankful that the deputy will be able to recover.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to ICE.



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pcTattleTale stalkerware maker sentence includes fine, supervised release

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A federal judge has sentenced the maker of stalkerware pcTattleTale, which went out of business after a data breach, to supervised release and a $5,000 fine.

Bryan Fleming pleaded guilty in January to a charge of intentionally manufacturing, possessing or selling a device with the knowledge that it would be primarily used for surreptitious interception of communications. On Friday, a judge handed down Fleming’s sentence.

It was the first stalkerware conviction since 2014, when the maker of StealthGenie, pled guilty and also didn’t serve prison time, instead receiving a $500,000 fine from the court.

According to Fleming’s plea agreement, his incriminating activity began as early as 2017, as the owner of Fleming Technologies LLC.

“Defendant’s software enabled buyers to covertly and remotely monitor a victim’s cellular telephone and computer activities, including, texts, emails, phone calls, geo-location, and web browsing,” the agreement states. “Defendant began directly advertising his spying software to persons wanting to spy on spouses or partners without their knowledge.”

It continued: “Defendant’s spying software covertly created a video every time a victim’s device was used, which captured any and all activity occurring on the device. The person monitoring the device could log into a remote dashboard and monitor the activity on the victim’s device.”

An undercover agent from Homeland Security Investigations, a division of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, posed as a marketing affiliate and customer to communicate with Fleming, according to a 2022 indictment.

pcTattletale went out of business in 2024 after suffering a data breach. Researchers have found that stalkerware apps often fail to protect personal information collected during their use.

An attorney for Fleming didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Monday morning.

Tim Starks

Written by Tim Starks

Tim Starks is senior reporter at CyberScoop. His previous stops include working at The Washington Post, POLITICO and Congressional Quarterly. An Evansville, Ind. native, he’s covered cybersecurity since 2003. Email Tim here: tim.starks@cyberscoop.com.


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Greek PM vows to tackle ‘deep state’ in wake of farm fraud scandal | Greece

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The Greek prime minister has vowed to tackle what he has called a “deep state” he says is plaguing the country, as he sought to address a growing political crisis over a farm fraud scandal that has forced the resignation of multiple government ministers.

In a speech, aired on national TV, Kyriakos Mitsotakis attempted to limit the damage, describing the revelations as “a turning point” that had turbo-charged his commitment to rooting out entrenched corruption.

“I am striving to transform Greece into a modern European state,” he said, acknowledging its pervasive clientelistic political system. “[This] is a new starting point in the fight against the ‘deep state’.”

The leader’s intervention came days after he was compelled to reshuffle his cabinet for a second time after the scheme of fraudulent EU subsidy claims first surfaced last year.

The scandal widened last week when the European public prosecutor’s office (EPPO) announced it was investigating 20 members of Mitsotakis’s centre-right New Democracy party. Close to €300m (£260m) is alleged to have been siphoned through a state subsidy agency that has since been dissolved, over a five-year period beginning in 2017.

False claims allegedly involved banana plantations on Mount Olympus, olive groves on military air force installations and archaeological sites being cited as grazing land for livestock.

With fallout from the scandal showing no sign of abating, calls for early elections have grown. Criticism of Mitsotakis, usually a deft handler of crises, has also mounted despite his pro-business government emphasising that the fraudulent scheme began two years before he assumed power in 2019.

Georgios Samaras, an assistant professor of public policy at King’s College London, likened the leader’s address to “pure evasion and straightforward damage control”, more than nine months after he gave a similar speech revealing the state’s inadequacy in dealing with corruption.

The farm fraud scandal was of such magnitude, Samaras said, it could “yet become this government’s most serious crisis to date”.

EPPO, which has led the investigations, last week called for the parliamentary immunity of 11 New Democracy MPs to be lifted for acts of wrongdoing allegedly committed in 2021, two years after Mitsotakis assumed power. Several are prominent figures including Konstantinos Tsiaras and Ioannis Kefalogiannis, the agricultural and civil protections ministers, who both stepped down on Friday.

Intercepted phone conversations in which politicians are allegedly heard attempting to secure subsidy payments for their constituents are reportedly included in the findings of case files EPPO has presented.

“The investigation concerns alleged felonies and misdemeanours against the financial interests of the EU, namely instigation of breach of trust, computer fraud and false attestation with the intent to obtain for another an unlawful benefit,” EPPO said in a statement.

Mitsotakis on Monday called on the agency to proceed swiftly in deciding who it will prosecute, saying his MPs “have already suffered personal and political harm. They have the minimal right to defend themselves”.



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CENTCOM commander directed strike on IRGC in underground facility

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High-level sources have informed Fox News that during rescue efforts in Iran after a U.S. fighter jet was shot down, the commander of U.S. Central Command directed an attack against an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps headquarters in an underground facility.

While the airman rescue was going on, CENTCOM Commander Admiral Brad Cooper directed a strike on an IRGC headquarters in an underground facility near Tehran — it was done with B2 bombers, using massive ordinance penetrators, the same weapon used last year in Operation Midnight Hammer, according to the sources. Fox News is told the headquarters was obliterated.

The US military B1 bombers (BONES) dropped 100 of their 2,000-pound bombs during the rescue operations to keep Iranians away from the rescue area during the operation, according to a senior U.S. defense official.

A senior military source told Fox News, “we delivered the heat” on the IRGC.

RESCUE EXPERT SAYS MOST DANGEROUS MOMENT COMES AFTER ‘JACKPOT’ CALL IN RECOVERY BEHIND ENEMY LINES

CENTCOM Commander Admiral Brad Cooper

Admiral Charles Bradford “Brad” Cooper II, Commander of US Central Command speaks during a joint press conference with US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, at US Central Command (CENTCOM) headquarters at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, Florida, on March 5, 2026.  (Octavio JONES / AFP via Getty Images)

CENTCOM noted in a press release that U.S. forces had rescued two service members after their F-15E was downed.

Fox News was told that the operation took place between the two rescues: Cooper ordered the B2s to fly round trip from Whiteman AFB in the US because they received time-sensitive intelligence about the location of a large number of IRGC commanders inside this underground bunker in Tehran, and the Massive Ordinance Penetrator bunker buster bombs were dropped by the B2 warplanes.

AIRMAN RESCUE SHOWS US CAN PENETRATE ENEMY TERRITORY ‘ANYWHERE’ IN IRAN, FORMER PENTAGON OFFICIAL WARNS

F-15E wreckage

Wreckage is seen from what Iranian authorities say is a U.S. military helicopter that crashed during a mission to rescue the missing American pilot of an F-15E that was downed, in a handout image provided on April 5, 2026 in an unspecified location in Iran. (Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance/Handout via Getty Images)

Following the rescues, President Donald Trump declared in a Truth Social post, “We have rescued the seriously wounded, and really brave, F-15 Crew Member/Officer, from deep inside the mountains of Iran. The Iranian Military was looking hard, in big numbers, and getting close. He is a highly respected Colonel. This type of raid is seldom attempted because of the danger to ‘man and equipment.’ It just doesn’t happen!” 

RETIRED F-16 PILOT SAYS RESCUED US AIRMAN’S SURVIVAL IN IRAN HIGHLIGHTS INTENSE EVASION TRAINING

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“The second raid came after the first one, where we rescued the pilot in broad daylight, also unusual, spending seven hours over Iran. An AMAZING show of bravery and talent by all!” he said.



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