aboard as part of Operation Eagle Claw |alt= Planning for a possible rescue mission began on 6 November, two days after the hostages were taken. Army Major General
James B. Vaught was appointed as Joint Task Force commander and was to be forward-based at Wadi Kena in Egypt, reporting directly to the President. In turn, he had two field commanders: USAF Colonel James H. Kyle as the field commander for aviation and US Army Colonel
Charlie Beckwith as ground forces field commander. In planning the operation, some of the maps the US used were tourist maps. The plan was designed so all four main services of the
Department of Defense would have a part: Army, Navy, Air Force and the Marine Corps. It was planned that helicopters and
C-130 aircraft, following different routes, would rendezvous on a
salt flat (code-named
Desert One) 200 miles (320 km) southeast of
Tehran. Here the helicopters would refuel from the C-130s and pick up the combat troops who had flown in on the C-130 transports. The helicopters would then transport the troops to a mountain location (
Desert Two) closer to Tehran, from which the rescue raid would be launched into the city the following night. The Tehran CIA
Special Activities Division in-country paramilitary team, led by retired US Army Special Forces officer
Richard J. Meadows, had two assignments: to obtain information about the hostages and the embassy grounds and to transport the rescue team from
Desert Two to the embassy grounds in pre-staged vehicles.
Desert One was in the
South Khorasan Province, in the
Dasht-e Lut desert near
Tabas ();
Desert Two was located 50 miles (80 km) short of Tehran at . A small advance force infiltrated Tehran and secured a warehouse where five Ford trucks and two Mazda vans with facade compartments that would conceal the assaulters as they went through Iranian checkpoints were kept.
Assault teams The ground forces consisted of 93 Delta soldiers to assault the embassy and a 13-man special forces assault team from
Detachment A to assault the Ministry of Foreign Affairs where three further hostages were being held. A third group of 12
Rangers were to act as the roadblock team at the
Desert One landing area. Rangers were also tasked with taking and holding the Manzariyeh Air Base near Tehran to be used to escape from Iran. In addition, the CIA had prepared an in-country team of 15 Iranian and American
Persian-speakers, most of whom would act as truck drivers. Eight
United States Navy (USN)
RH-53D Sea Stallion (Call signs:
Bluebeard 1 – 8) helicopters were positioned aboard , off the coast of Iran. The helicopters would fly to
Desert One, refuel, load up the Delta Force and part of the Ranger teams, then fly further to
Desert Two. As it would be close to morning, the helicopters and ground forces would hide during the day at
Desert Two. The rescue operation would take place the second night.
Rescue raid aboard with special identification stripes added specifically for
Operation Eagle Claw First, CIA officers who were already inside Iran would bring trucks they had sourced to
Desert Two. Together, the CIA officers and ground forces would then drive from
Desert Two into Tehran. This team would assault the embassy and Foreign Affairs building, eliminate the guards, and rescue the hostages, with air support from Air Force
AC-130 gunships flying from
Desert One. The hostages and rescue team would then rendezvous with the helicopters from
Desert Two at the nearby
Amjadieh Stadium, where the hostages and rescue teams would board the helicopters.
Egress In parallel to the rescue, an Army Ranger company would capture the abandoned Manzariyeh Air Base, () about southwest of Tehran, to allow two
C-141 Starlifters to arrive from Saudi Arabia. The helicopters would bring all parties from the stadium to the Manzariyeh airbase, and the C-141s would fly them to an airbase in Egypt. The eight helicopters would be destroyed before departure.
Protection and support Protection for the operation was to be provided by
Carrier Air Wing Eight (CVW-8) operating from
Nimitz and
CVW-14 operating from . For this operation, the aircraft bore special invasion stripe identification on their right wings. This was necessary to distinguish support aircraft from Iranian
F-14 and
F-4 aircraft purchased by Iran from the US in the time of the Shah. CVW-14 Marine F-4Ns were marked with a red (VMFA-323) or yellow (VMFA-531) stripe enclosed by two black stripes while CVW-14 attack aircraft (
A-7s and
A-6s) had an orange stripe enclosed by two black stripes. ==The mission==