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Remember when Top Gun: Maverick came out a few years ago?
I do.
Honestly, it was an awesome movie. Tom Cruise nailed it. And hearing that iconic music fill the theater again gave me chills! I bet you can hear it in your head right now, can’t you?
Ok, ok, I’ll play it:
EPIC!!!
Thirty years later and it still hits just as hard.
But I want to talk about the plot….because when that movie came out, I distinctly remember everyone talking about how the enemy was almost certainly Iran, although never named.
And now, the exact plot of the movie, including the nearly-impossible end-run bombing flight with two strikes necessary seems to be playing out almost verbatim on the world stage.
How is this even possible?
I’m far from the only person noticing this:
OK, is it just me, or does the planned bombing of the Iran nuclear sight seem very similar to the plot of top gun 2. Needs two direct hits. pic.twitter.com/Cz8HpPyCkt
— Paulie B. (@Sall_Goodman) June 18, 2025
Taking out Iran’s Fordow nuk site is literally the plot line of Top Gun 2. pic.twitter.com/QUv4mOstOo
— Dan Collins (@DanCollins2011) June 20, 2025
Top Gun 2 isn’t just a movie—it’s soft power conditioning the masses.
They’re not selling a movie. They are selling public consent for the empire’s next illegal criminal war.
Hollywood’s War Propaganda: How They Sell Illegal Wars as “Entertainment”
Top Gun 2 isn’t just a movie—it’s soft power conditioning the masses.
Cheer for US fighter jets bombing the “villain” Iran
Normalize illegal wars as heroic blockbusters
Train the public to applaud… pic.twitter.com/6fI4Nxqt1z — Mark (@Mark4XX) June 18, 2025
Credit to everyone who called it three years ago when the movie came out…
I very much remember people at the time saying this was a propaganda movie and would eventually play out in real life.
They were right.
I said when it came out, Top Gun 2 was my favorite war propaganda movie.
Now, we’re living it. They’ve been prepping the American public for years for a war in Iran. Thanks @CIA! #NoWarWithIran #IsraelIranConflict #AmericaFirst pic.twitter.com/KuAMWXMSvI— Emily Mangione (@EmilyMangione) June 18, 2025
But it’s not just “crazy Internet theories”….here is Fox News breaking it all down:
NOW – U.S. bombing Iran will be like a “Top Gun movie” — Foxpic.twitter.com/pCthyIHGzf
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) June 21, 2025
I turned to ChatGPT to ask what it thinks, and it confirmed as well….the resemblance is uncanny to say the least:
Top Gun: Maverick (2022), the sequel to the 1986 original Top Gun, features an unnamed adversary as the target of a dangerous aerial mission. The enemy is never explicitly identified, but many viewers and analysts have speculated that Iran is the implied nation for several key reasons:
Summary Focused on Enemy Identity Speculation:
The mission in the film involves destroying an illegal underground uranium enrichment facility before it becomes operational — a plot element that mirrors real-world concerns about Iran’s nuclear program.
The facility is located in a rugged, mountainous region with snow, similar to parts of Iran’s geography, particularly the Alborz or Zagros mountain ranges.
The enemy uses fifth-generation fighter jets (likely Su-57s), and surface-to-air missiles, which aligns with Iran’s military procurement from Russia.
The enemy flies F-14 Tomcats, which the U.S. retired in 2006. Iran is the only country besides the U.S. that still operates F-14s — a very specific clue pointing in Iran’s direction.
The filmmakers go to lengths not to name the enemy, likely to avoid geopolitical controversy or jeopardize global box office revenue (a common practice in modern Hollywood blockbusters).
Public and Critical Interpretation:
Numerous commentators, military analysts, and fans — particularly online — have concluded the enemy is almost certainly Iran, even if the film never confirms it.
However, some viewers have proposed alternative interpretations (e.g., North Korea or a fictional rogue state), though these are considered less plausible due to the F-14 clue.
The decision to keep the enemy unnamed was seen by many as a strategic choice to maintain international marketability while still crafting a narrative clearly inspired by real-world tensions with Iran.
Conclusion:
While Top Gun: Maverick never directly names Iran, the combination of the mission objectives, aircraft types, terrain, and nuclear context has led many viewers and analysts to reasonably infer that Iran was the thinly veiled antagonist in the story.