YAF owns the skies and seas: B-2 Bomber, F-18 fighter jet downed & chased away aircraft carrier

According to a source in the Ministry of Defense of the Sanaa-based government, the US aircraft carrier USS Harry S. Truman and its escort vessels are expected to leave the Red Sea soon. The source added that they do not rule out the possibility that the carrier was directly hit during recent operations.

Al Masirah via Al Akhbar

Settlers flee en masse during the so-called “Holocaust Remembrance” ceremony in Tel Aviv, following a suspected security incident that later turned out to be a false alarm.
Al Manar video

A few moments ago, a mural was erected in Palestine Square in the Iranian capital, Tehran, regarding Yemen’s downing of an F-18 fighter jet. The mural was titled: “The Hand of God is above their hands.” Yemen, those who trust in God. Al Manar

American military and political circles are in a state of shock after the Yemeni Armed Forces successfully drove a U.S. aircraft carrier out of territorial waters and shot down an F-18 fighter jet in a high-stakes operation—the second of its kind in the Red Sea. 

The downing of the American fighter jet was no ordinary event. It delivered a painful blow to Washington, carrying multiple messages: that Yemen’s military is now fully capable of confronting adversaries with unmatched prowess, and that the Red Sea has become a graveyard for American warplanes. 

CNN reported that the loss of the U.S. F-18 in the Red Sea following a Yemeni attack on the USS Truman struck Washington like a thunderbolt, as reflected in U.S. media coverage this Tuesday. 

Barbara Starr, CNN’s former national security correspondent with over 20 years of experience, noted that the USS Truman’s abrupt, evasive maneuver to escape the attack marks a highly significant development. She added that this dramatic shift points to a major improvement in the Yemeni Armed Forces’ targeting and guidance capabilities. 

Earlier, the U.S. Navy confirmed the loss of an F-18 from the USS Truman, hours after the Yemeni military spokesman announced clashes with the carrier, forcing it to retreat to the northernmost Red Sea. 

U.S. media reports indicate that initial assessments reveal the USS Harry Truman executed a sharp turn to evade Yemeni fire, contributing to the fighter jet’s crash into the sea. The $60 million aircraft sank during the carrier’s high-speed maneuver, with the Pentagon admitting: “We are aware of an F-18 fighter jet and its tow tractor (missile carrier) going overboard, with one sailor injured.”

This marks the second U.S. admission of an F-18 loss. Previously, a similar F-18 was downed after being struck by Yemeni forces, damaging both the jet and its carrier. 

In February, Fox News revealed that Yemeni forces targeted an F-18 with surface-to-air missiles—a first since clashes began between Sana’a and the U.S. Navy. Senior U.S. defense officials acknowledged this as a major escalation in military engagements between Yemeni forces and the U.S. Navy/Air Force. 

Full Al Masirah report – Pentagon in Panic Mode: Yemen Turned America’s $60M Fighter Jets into Sunken Treasures

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