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For B-2 Pilots, a 37-Hour Nonstop Mission to Iran and Back

June 24, 2025
in News
For B-2 Pilots, a 37-Hour Nonstop Mission to Iran and Back
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In the years before they flew their 37-hour mission to strike Iran’s nuclear site at Fordo, the U.S. Air Force pilots spent at least 24 hours straight in a B-2 bomber flight simulator that is a replica of their cockpit.

In the days or weeks leading up to the mission, they most likely ran simulated runs on a target made to look like the heavily fortified site buried deep in a mountain.

Almost everything about the mission, flown from Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri, would feel the same with just a couple of big differences, said retired Lt. Gen. Steven L. Basham, who flew the plane in training and combat missions for nine years.

In the real mission, flown in the early hours of Sunday morning in Iran, the pilots would “feel the clunk” of their weapons bay doors opening, briefly changing the shape of the stealth plane and potentially exposing it to enemy radar.

The B-2s that attacked Fordo were each carrying two Massive Ordnance Penetrator bombs designed to disable the deeply buried target. When the two-person crews released their payload, weighing a total of 60,000 pounds, their B-2 most likely surged briefly upward, General Basham said.

For the pilots, it was almost certainly a new feeling.

Other bombers in the American arsenal, such as the B-1 and B-52, played big roles in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, dropping huge numbers of bombs in support of ground troops. But the B-2 — the most expensive plane in history, at $2.2 billion a copy — played a much more specialized role.

For some of the pilots, Sunday’s mission was possibly the first time that they flew the B-2 in combat and dropped bombs. The strikes also marked the first use of the GBU-57 bunker buster bombs in combat.

In the hours after the strike U.S. military and intelligence officials were still assessing the damage both to the site at Fordo and to the Iranian leadership’s psyche.

“Our hope is that the lesson that the Iranians have learned here is look, we can fly a bunker buster bomb from Missouri to Iran completely undetected without landing once on the ground, and we can destroy whatever nuclear capacity you build up,” Vice President JD Vance told Fox News in an interview on Monday. “I think that lesson is what’s going to teach them not to rebuild their nuclear capacity.”

The first 30-plus hour B-2 missions took place during the 1999 war in Kosovo. At the time, the idea of flying a combat sortie and returning home in time to pick up the kids from soccer practice was still novel and a bit surreal for those flying.

“It is kind of weird to get dressed in your own bathroom and then go into combat,” one B-2 pilot told The Wall Street Journal in the early days of the Kosovo war.

Since then B-2 pilots have flown combat missions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya. The B-2 bombers, which were built to carry nuclear weapons, regularly fly deterrence missions in Europe and Asia from their Missouri base.

The last 25 years have taught the Air Force and its pilots a lot about flying long missions. Today, staff doctors and physiologists at Whiteman Air Force Base specialize in helping B-2 pilots prepare their bodies to spend long stretches in the cockpit.

If they have sufficient notice, the pilots will try to adjust their sleep schedules so that their body clocks will be in sync with their mission.

Each B-2 is flown by a two-person crew. The small cockpit has room for a toilet and space behind the plane’s seats where a pilot can stretch out on a cot or a camping pad and take a brief nap. Both pilots are required to be in their seats during takeoff, landing, aerial re-fuelings and for the duration of their time over enemy territory.

The planes are also equipped with small heaters to warm food, but many B-2 pilots prefer simple meals like sandwiches on long missions. “You learn to drink a lot of water,” said General Basham, who flew combat missions into Kosovo.

The missions most likely played out in similar fashion to the sorties that B-2 pilots flew in earlier wars. In those earlier missions in Kosovo and Iraq, pilots saw antiaircraft guns and missiles in the sky beneath them. This time, Pentagon officials said the Iranians did not get off a shot at the B-2s or the F-35 fighter jet escorts.

In the earlier conflicts the B-2 pilots were dropping, at most, 2,000-pound precision guided bombs. This time the B-2s each dropped two, 30,000-pound munitions over their target.

General Basham could not help but wonder what it felt like to shed that kind of weight.

“It’ll be interesting to hear from the pilots,” he said.

The post For B-2 Pilots, a 37-Hour Nonstop Mission to Iran and Back appeared first on New York Times.

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