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๐บ๐ธ๐ฎ๐ท What actually happens when an American pilot goes down behind enemy lines
The moment that ejection seat fires, two clocks start simultaneously.
On the ground, a disoriented pilot gathers their gear, ditches the parachute that's visible for miles, and moves. Fast.
Enemy forces can reach a crash site in under 30 minutes.
Miles away, engines are already starting. Pave Hawks drop low at 150mph. Attack aircraft begin circling. Coordinates are refined in real time.
The pilot's training takes over. SERE: Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape. Move undetected. Find water without giving away position.
Navigate without GPS. Every transmission risks detection, so communication comes in short encrypted bursts.
Just enough to say "alive" and give a location.
After 24-48 hours, fatigue and dehydration degrade everything. Decisions get harder.
Movement slows. Detection risk climbs.
This is reportedly what's playing out in southwestern Iran over the last couple of days.
Source: The Navy Channel YT