
Iranian Proxy Claims It Shot Down US Refueling Plane in Iraq; US Military Says Otherwise
Key Takeaways
- A U.S. KC-135 refueling aircraft crashed in western Iraq while supporting operations against Iran.
- U.S. military reported either four or six crew members killed, with outlets conflicting.
- An Iran-aligned proxy claimed to have shot it down; U.S. Central Command denied hostile fire.
What happened
A U.S. KC-135 Stratotanker refueling plane went down in western Iraq on March 12 during operations tied to the campaign against Iran, and U.S. Central Command said two aircraft were involved and that the incident occurred in "friendly airspace."
“US military refueling plane crashes in Iraq and rescue is underway US military refueling plane crashes in Iraq and rescue is underway WASHINGTON (AP) — An American military refueling plane taking part in the operation against Iran crashed in Iraq and rescue efforts were underway, U”
CENTCOM repeatedly stated the loss was "not due to hostile fire or friendly fire," and rescue efforts were reported as ongoing while the circumstances remained under investigation.
Conflicting casualties
Reports conflict on how many crew members died.
CBS, the New York Post and other outlets reported that four of six crewmembers were confirmed dead and rescue efforts continued for the others, while PBS and some other accounts stated all six on board had been confirmed dead — a clear discrepancy the military statements and anonymous officials have not yet resolved in publicly available reporting.

Militia claim
An Iran-aligned umbrella militia, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, claimed responsibility for downing the tanker and said it had shot it down "in defense of our country’s sovereignty and airspace," but major international outlets noted those claims were uncorroborated;
“Officials told CBS News on Thursday that a second U”
CNN reported the group "did not provide evidence for its claims," and some reports cited broader Iranian military or allied militia assertions without independent verification.
Broader context
The tanker crash came amid a string of recent U.S. aircraft losses and combat casualties tied to the wider campaign with Iran:
officials confirmed that three U.S. F-15E fighters were downed last week by Kuwaiti friendly fire (with crew rescued), and U.S. outlets report between seven and 11 U.S. service members have been killed and roughly 140 injured across the conflict, figures that outlets and the Pentagon have cited as the broader human cost while operations continue.

Investigation status
Investigations and reporting remain unresolved: U.S. officials told CBS investigators were considering a mid-air collision as a possible cause,
“Rescue operations were launched immediately after the crash, and authorities are continuing to assess the situation”
images circulated on messaging apps showed a KC-135 with tail damage, the military withheld names until families were notified, and CENTCOM emphasized it would release more information as it developed — leaving key factual questions open while claims and counterclaims circulate.

More on USA
FBI Warns of Iranian Drone Plot Based on Unverified Tip; California Says No Credible Threat
10 sources compared

White House Demands ABC Retract Report Claiming Iran Sought To Launch Drone Attacks On California
11 sources compared

Cuban Leader Miguel Díaz-Canel Confirms Talks With Trump Administration to End U.S. Oil Blockage
17 sources compared

Cuba Holds Talks With Trump Administration to Seek Fuel Relief Amid Energy Crisis
52 sources compared