In a bold but suicidal move, three Iranian F-14 Tomcat fighter jets emerged from low-alтιтude flight and locked their radar onto the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group operating in the Strait of Hormuz just minutes ago.
Iranian pilots, flying the decades-old American-made aircraft that have been barely operational due to decades of sanctions and parts shortages, attempted to close distance for a missile attack. The move was immediately detected by the carrier’s advanced Aegis destroyers and E-2 Hawkeye airborne early warning aircraft.
US Navy F-35 Lightning II stealth fighters on combat air patrol responded instantly. Within moments, the advanced American jets engaged the outdated Iranian Tomcats. Two of the F-14s were destroyed by AIM-120 AMRAAM missiles before they could fire, while the third broke radar lock and fled toward the Iranian coast, sustaining heavy damage.

US Central Command confirmed the carrier group remains completely safe and fully operational. No damage was reported to any American vessel. The attempted attack is being described as a desperate, almost symbolic final gesture by the collapsing Iranian regime.
This incident comes as Iran faces total military disintegration. The regime has already lost its major ports, missile cities, underground fortresses, air bases, and sea mines factories. The Strait of Hormuz is now firmly under US control, protected by over 5,000 American troops on the ground, AH-64 Apache helicopters dominating the coast, and multiple carrier strike groups.
The fact that Iran was forced to send its remaining vintage F-14s on a near-suicide mission against the world’s most powerful carrier group highlights how little operational capability the regime has left. What was once Iran’s most advanced fighter is now a relic being thrown into a hopeless fight.

America’s technological superiority remains overwhelming. The F-35s proved once again why they are generations ahead of Iran’s aging fleet. The Iranian regime that began this war on February 28 is now reduced to throwing outdated aircraft into near-certain death.
US forces continue to maintain total dominance in the region. The Abraham Lincoln and its escorts remain on station, enforcing security over the critical waterway through which 20% of global oil flows.
This dramatic encounter is still developing. Further updates will follow as US forces ᴀssess the full situation and maintain relentless pressure on the collapsing Iranian regime.
