A Military Survival Thriller

Beacon in the Zagros

A Military Survival Thriller

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"48 hours behind enemy lines. One pistol. One beacon. A mountain crevice invisible to all — except those who came to bring him home."

— AiGotHim.com

F-15E Strike Eagle — two-seat cockpit with pilot and WSO visible during aerial refueling

F-15E Strike Eagle — Pilot and Weapons Systems Officer visible in the twin cockpit

The Timeline

48 Hours in the Zagros

Friday 06:00 Local — Hour Zero
The Strike

An Iranian Third Khordad missile system locks onto an F-15E Strike Eagle flying deep over southern Iran. The aircraft is hit. Both crew members eject into the vast, unforgiving Zagros Mountains — the first American aircraft lost to enemy fire in over two decades.

Friday 08:00 Local — Hour 2
Contact

Both crew members make radio contact. The pilot drifts toward lower ground. The WSO — a Colonel — lands hard on a steep slope at 4,000 feet. Wounded but mobile. His inventory: a pistol, a comm device, a tracking beacon. He stashes his chute and starts climbing.

Friday 13:00 Local — Hour 7
First Rescue

US special forces extract the pilot in broad daylight — an unusual and dangerous move. Their Black Hawk takes small arms fire. The helicopter lands safely, crew wounded but alive. The Colonel is still climbing, alone.

Friday Night — Hour 12
The Hunt

The IRGC cordons the province. Basij militia join the search. Iran offers a bounty. The Colonel moves through oak forests and rocky ridgelines in darkness, climbing toward a 7,000-foot ridgeline. Behind him, the wreckage of his aircraft still burns in the valley.

Saturday — Hour 24
The Deception

The CIA launches a deception campaign — spreading false word inside Iran that both crew members have been recovered and are being exfiltrated overland. IRGC forces scramble to the wrong locations. Meanwhile, invisible capabilities search for one man hidden in a mountain crevice.

Saturday Night — Hour 36
Found

CIA assets locate the Colonel — 7,000 feet above sea level, tucked into the Zagros ridgeline. Hundreds of military and intelligence personnel from every branch converge. Dozens of aircraft loaded with the most lethal weapons in the American arsenal move into position.

Sunday 02:00 Local — Hour 44
Extraction

American commandos hit the ground under air cover. Bombs clear the perimeter. A fierce firefight erupts at the extraction point — IRGC forces engage the rescue team. Through the smoke and noise, they reach the Colonel. Wounded, exhausted, alive.

Sunday Morning — Hour 48
"WE GOT HIM"

The President's message goes out to the world. The Colonel is airborne, heading to safety. Seriously wounded. Really brave. One of the most daring search and rescue operations in US military history.

F-15 Eagle with afterburners blazing during takeoff

F-15 Eagle — Twin Pratt & Whitney F100 engines in full afterburner

By The Numbers

The Mission

⏱️
48h
Behind enemy lines
⛰️
7,000ft
Peak elevation reached
✈️
Dozens
Aircraft deployed
🎖️
All
Service branches involved
The Novel

Out Now

Beacon in the Zagros — Book Cover

A fictional account inspired by real courage

Colonel Dan Navarro didn't plan on becoming the most wanted man in Iran. When his F-15E Strike Eagle was torn apart by a surface-to-air missile over the Zagros Mountains, he had 48 hours, a pistol, and a beacon between himself and capture.

What followed was one of the most extraordinary evasion and rescue operations in modern military history — involving special forces, CIA deception campaigns, fierce firefights, and the combined might of every branch of the US armed forces.

Chapter One — Excerpt

Ejection

The warning tone changed pitch — the one sound no aviator ever wants to hear shift from search to lock. Navarro's eyes dropped to the defensive display in the back seat. Two contacts, bearing one-nine-zero, climbing fast through the ground clutter. Third Khordad battery. He'd studied the system a hundred times in briefings. He'd never heard it sing for him.

"Mud spike, mud spike — break right, break right!" He was already reaching for the chaff when the airframe shuddered — not turbulence, not a near miss. A sound like God slamming a door. The right engine fire warning screamed first, then the left, then everything screamed at once.

"Eject, eject, eject."

He pulled the handle.

Get Your Copy

Read the full story of Colonel Dan Navarro's 48 hours in the Zagros Mountains. Available now.

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