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The US lost a fighter jet over Iran, reports say, adding to a growing list of aircraft losses in the war

The US military lost a fighter aircraft over Iran, according to multiple American media reports citing US officials, as well as Iranian reports.

Iran’s Tasnim, a semi-official news agency associated with the country’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, said that Tehran shot down an American fighter jet. Both Iranian and American media reports say that a search for the pilots is ongoing.

The Iranian media report came as photos of debris said to be from an F-15 fighter jet and video footage said to show search and rescue operations with Black Hawk helicopters and a C-130 Hercules aircraft circulated online.

Iranian media outlets have repeatedly claimed successes against US combat aircraft, assertions that US Central Command — which oversees American forces in the Middle East — has quickly disputed in the past.

CENTCOM has not publicly addressed the latest claims and declined to confirm or deny them in response to Business Insider’s questions. The Pentagon and the Air Force also did not comment.

Other aircraft losses in the Iran war

The Pentagon has said that the destruction of Iranian air defenses has given the US air superiority over Iran, creating a more permissive environment for air operations. Even with air superiority, the battlefield is not without risks, though.

US media reports from the New York Times, CNN, and others said that the jet lost in Iran was shot down.

The US Air Force has lost several aircraft during Operation Epic Fury, which began in late February. This, however, marks the first loss over Iran.

At the start of the Iran war, three US F-15s were mistakenly shot down by Kuwaiti air defenses in what CENTCOM described as “an apparent friendly fire incident.” All six crew members survived.

Then on March 12, a US KC-135 refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq, killing all six crew members. A second American aircraft involved in the incident landed safely.

Iran has also shot down a number of MQ-9 Reaper drones and destroyed or damaged support aircraft on the ground at US bases in the Gulf region, including an E-3 Sentry.

There have also been some close calls. On March 19, for instance, a US F-35 stealth fighter jet made an emergency landing at a base in the Middle East after flying a combat mission over Iran. Reports indicated it was damaged by Iranian fire.

Last week, video footage circulating online appeared to show a US Navy F/A-18 Super Hornet narrowly avoiding being shot down by an Iranian surface-to-air missile.

Meanwhile, roughly 350 US service members have been wounded in the war, though 315 of them have already returned to duty, a military official told Business Insider this week. Six troops remain seriously hurt, while 13 have been killed.

Kelsey Baker contributed to this reporting.




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Polly Thompson

Elon Musk’s Starlink is adding 20,000 new users a day as it hits 9 million customers

Moving at superspeed isn’t limited to SpaceX’s rockets.

Elon Musk’s satellite and rocket company has secured one million new customers for its Starlink internet in under seven weeks and is now active in 155 markets, the company wrote in a post on X on Monday evening.

“Starlink is connecting more than 9M active customers with high-speed internet across 155 countries, territories, and many other markets,” the company said.

In a similar post from November 5, SpaceX said Starlink had 8 million customers, meaning that its customer base has expanded at a rate of more than 20,000 per day since that date.

SpaceX, which uses a constellation of more than 9,000 low-orbit satellites to provide its Starlink internet connection, including to remote areas, is reportedly planning to go public next year at a valuation of $1.5 trillion.

Elon Musk, who founded the company in 2002, said this month that the satellite network was “by far” the largest driver of SpaceX’s revenue.

The numbers close an explosive year of growth for SpaceX. In a December 2024 progress report, SpaceX said Starlink had 4.6 million customers, and by August 2025, the number was up to 7 million.

Global web traffic from users on SpaceX’s satellite-based internet service more than doubled in 2025, according to data from Cloudflare, a cybersecurity company that handles tens of millions of requests between users and websites every second.

Around two dozen airlines have also announced plans to use Starlink to offer high-speed WiFi on their planes, and SpaceX has signalled it could soon launch its own mobile carrier service powered by the satellite network.

SpaceX has successfully commercialized reusable rockets, a feat previously thought impossible by many within the space industry, and now launches more cargo into orbit than any other company.

It has also capitalized on opportunities that emerged as NASA and the Pentagon moved away from government-only spaceflight, and filled a massive unmet demand in global connectivity.

Led by Musk, who is the CEO and founder, SpaceX is also known for its intense, efficiency-driven culture.

SpaceX ultimately plans to fulfill its billionaire founder’s ambitious visions of colonizing Mars and putting data centers in space with its giant Starship rocket.

SpaceX did not immediately respond to Business Insider’s request for comment.




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