Phantom In Service with Iran
Next to Israel, Iran was the largest overseas operator of the Phantom. A   total of 32 F-4Ds, 177 F-4Es, and 16 RF-4Es (plus 8 F-4Es borrowed from the USA   and subsequently returned) were supplied to Iran before the fall of the Shah and   the rise of the Islamic fundamentalist regime resulted in a cutoff of further   arms supplies. 
The Shah of Iran had ambitious plans to use his country's oil wealth to make   Iran into a major military power in the Persian Gulf region. The United States   government actively supported the Shah's ambitions, hoping that his government   would be effective counter to any Soviet expansionist intentions in the area. As   part of this expansion of Iranian military power, the Nirou Havai Shahanshahiye   Iran (Imperial Iranian Air Force) placed a order for 16 F-4Ds in 1967. A second   batch of 16 more F-4Ds was ordered later. 
The first batch of F-4Ds arrived in Iran on September 8, 1968, with a total   of 32 F-4Ds being ultimately delivered to the Imperial Iranian Air Force.   Iranian F-4Ds were used in several unsuccessful attempts to intercept Soviet   MiG-25s that were spying on Iran. The first combat use by Iran of the F-4D was   in 1975 when Iran provided military assistance to the Sultan of Oman in actions   against rebels. One of these F-4Ds was lost to ground fire. 
In further pursuit of the Shah's ambitious goals, the government of Iran   ordered 208 F-4Es from McDonnell during the early and mid-1970s. The first   examples were delivered in March of 1971. A total of 177 F-4Es were delivered to   the Imperial Iranian Air Force between the years 1971 and 1979. However, in   1979, the growing unrest in Iran forced the Shah to flee his country and go into   exile, and a fanatical Islamic fundamentalist revolution took over the   government. The new Islamic Republic of Iran immediately began to assume an   anti-Western stance, and on February 28, 1979, the US government placed an   embargo on further arms deliveries to Iran. The remaining 31 F-4Es on the   contract were never delivered. 
After Germany, Iran was the largest customer for the RF-4E, a unarmed   reconnaissance version of the F-4E built strictly for export. A total of 27   examples were ordered by Iran. The first RF-4E destined for Iran rolled off the   production line at McDonnell in St Louis in the late fall of 1970. The first   RF-4Es arrived in Iran in 1971. Fifteen more RF-4Es were delivered in succeeding   years. However, the final 11 RF-4Es destined for Iran were cancelled in February   of 1979 for political reasons after the fall of the Shah. 
By the time that the Shah was forced to flee, Iran had 188 operational   Phantoms. However, the arms embargo against Iran imposed by the West caused a   severe spare parts and maintenance problem. Even the best-equipped units were   often poorly trained and could not operate without Western contractor support.   The political upheavals caused by the fundamentalist revolution made the   situation much worse, with many pilots and maintenance personnel following the   Shah into exile. As a result, by 1980 the Islamic Republic Iranian Air Force   (IRIAF) was only a shadow of its former self, and when Iraq attacked Iran in   September of 1980, only 40 percent of the Iranian Phantom fleet was operational. 
The Iran-Iraq war began on September 22, 1980 with an Iraqi air attack on six   Iranian air bases and four Iranian army bases. It was followed by an Iraqi land   attack at four points along a 700-kilometer front. Before the war ended in 1988,   somewhere between 500,000 and a million people were dead, between 1 and 2   million people were injured, and there were two to three million refugees.   Although little-covered in the Western media, the war was a human tragedy on a   massive scale. 
Air power did not play a dominant role in the Iran-Iraq war, because both   sides were unable to use their air forces very effectively. At first, IRIAF   Phantoms took part in deep penetration raids against targets in and around   Baghdad and supported ground operations at the front. Fighter-vs-fighter combat   was rather rare throughout the entire course of the Iran-Iraq war. During the   first phase of the war, Iranian aircraft had the fuel and the endurance to win   most of these aerial encounters, either by killing with their first shot of an   AIM-9 or else by forcing Iraqi fighters to withdraw. However, at this stage in   the war the infrared homing missiles used by the fighters of both sides were   generally ineffective in anything other than tail-chase firings at medium to   high altitudes. In addition, most of the time, the APQ-120 radar of the Iranian   F-4E Phantoms was inoperable because of the lack of spare parts caused by the   arms embargo, which meant that the Sparrow missile could not be fired. 
Initially, Iranian pilots had the edge in training and experience, but as the   war dragged on, this edge was gradually lost because of the repeated purges   within the ranks of the Iranian military which removed experienced officers and   pilots who were suspected of disloyalty to the Islamic fundamentalist regime or   those with close ties or sympathies with the West. Losses during the first 9   months of the Iran-Iraq war were estimated to be 60 Phantoms, with many more   being out of action due to cannibalization or the lack of spare parts. The   effects of the arms embargo and the shortage of spare parts caused the number of   Phantoms which were available for combat steadily to decrease, and at the   beginning of 1983, only 12 to 35 Phantoms could be put into the air at any given   time. As Iranian capabilities declined, Iraqi capabilities gradually improved.   After 1982, Iraq managed to improve its training and was able to acquire newer   and better arms from French manufacturers, especially the Dassault Breguet Super   Etendard and the Mirage F-1. The Mirage F-1 was capable of firing the Matra   R-550 Magic air-to-air missile, which had a 140-degree attack hemisphere, a   head-on attack capability, high-g launch and maneuver capability, and a 0.23 to   10-km range. The Magic could also be launched from the MiG-21, and proved to be   far superior than the standard Soviet-supplied infrared homer, the Atoll. Mirage   F-1s were reported to have shot down several Iranian aircraft with Magic   missiles and as having scored kills even at low altitudes. After 1982, Iraq   generally had the edge in most air-to-air encounters that took place, with Iran   losing most of the few air-to-air encounters that took place after 1983 unless   it used carefully-planned ambushes against Iraqi planes that were flying   predictable routes. The Iranians could not generate more than 30-60 sorties per   day, whereas the number of sorties that Iraq could mount steadily increased year   after year, reaching a peak as high as 600 in 1986-88. 
The Iranians found it extremely difficult to keep their Phantom fleet   operational all throughout the Iran-Iraq war. The Phantom is a very complex,   maintenance-intensive aircraft, requiring 135 man-hours of maintenance in the   shop for each hour in the air. The lack of spare parts caused by the arms   embargo plus the general lack of adequate numbers of trained maintenance   personnel made things even worse. A defecting Iranian colonel claimed that   Iran's F-4 force was down to only 20 flyable aircraft by the end of 1986, with   no RF-4Es still being operational. 
Iran was only able to keep its F-4s flying by scrounging spare parts and   replacements from whatever source it could. Israel secretly delivered Phantom   spare parts to Iran, presumably thinking that by doing this it would help to   keep Iraq occupied. There were reports that Israel supplied critical spare parts   for the Phantom's APQ-120 radar, which made it possible to fire the Sparrow   semiactive radar-homing missile. In addition, Iran was able to purchase some   arms supplies by buying them on the world market, either legally or illegally.   In August 31, 1984, an Iranian F-4 pilot defected with his aircraft to Saudi   Arabia, and upon investigation his aircraft was found to have components that   came from Israel and several NATO countries. 
Another clandestine source of arms for Iran was the United States. The United   States government generally tilted toward Iraq during the initial stages of the   war, and even supplied some intelligence to Iraq. However, in an attempt to win   the freedom of hostages held by pro-Iranian guerillas in Lebanon, the United   States began a clandestine shipment of arms to Iran in 1985. Most of these arms   consisted of TOW and Hawk missiles, but there are reports that spare parts for   the Phantom's APQ-120 radar were also delivered. Israel was an important   intermediary in these arms deliveries. The story finally leaked out into the   media in November of 1986. It was later revealed that the money obtained in   payment from Iran had been diverted to pay for arms supplied to the Contras in   Nicaragua, in direct contravention of Congressional prohibition of such   deliveries. The revelation of this arms deal in the media was a major source of   embarrassment to the Reagan administration and caused a constitutional crisis. 
There is even a report that 23 ex-USAF F-4Es were secretely transferred to   Iran in the mid 1980s via Paraguay. 
On June 5, 1984, two Iranian F-4Es were intercepted by two Saudi Arabian   F-15C Eagles when they appeared to threaten Saudi oil facilities, and one of the   F-4Es was shot down. This was the only time when one McDonnell product shot down   another. 
Although Phantom availability remained quite low all throughout the remainder   of the Iran-Iraq war, as late as January of 1988, the IRIAF was still able to   mount rocket attacks during the tanker war in the Gulf. 
When the war ended in 1988, the IRIAF probably had only a dozen or less   Phantoms that were still in good enough condition to fly. Estimates of the   number of Phantoms that are currently operational with the IRIAF vary widely.   Somewhere between 70 and 75 Phantoms are believed to be currently flying in   Iran. Surprisingly, a few F-4Ds actually remain in service, but most of the   IRIAF Phantoms are the F-4E version, plus a small-number of RF-4Es. IRIAF   Phantoms have been subject to local upgrades--the APQ-120 radar of the F-4E and   the APQ-109 radar of the F-4D have been significantly improved in range in both   the tracking and search modes, and the IRIAF F-4E now even has a limited   look-down, shoot-down capability. Most of the IRIAF Phantoms are now operated in   an air-to-ground role or maritime strike capacity. 
The following is a list of USAF serial numbers of Phantoms delivered to Iran.   All of these aircraft were new builds, with none being diverted from USAF   stocks. 
 
  67-14869/14876		McDonnell F-4D-35-MC Phantom 
67-14877/14884		McDonnell F-4D-36-MC Phantom 
68-6904/6911		McDonnell F-4D-37-MC Phantom  
68-6912/6919		McDonnell F-4D-38-MC Phantom  
69-7711/7726		McDonnell F-4E-46-MC Phantom 
69-7727/7742		McDonnell F-4E-47-MC Phantom 
71-1094/1101		McDonnell F-4E-51-MC Phantom 
71-1102/1115		McDonnell F-4E-52-MC Phantom 
71-1116/1129		McDonnell F-4E-53-MC Phantom 
71-1130/1142		McDonnell F-4E-54-MC Phantom 
71-1143/1152		McDonnell F-4E-55-MC Phantom 
71-1153/1166		McDonnell F-4E-56-MC Phantom 
72-266/269		McDonnell RF-4E-48-MC Phantom 
73-1519/1534		McDonnell F-4E-57-MC Phantom 
73-1535/1549		McDonnell F-4E-58-MC Phantom 
73-1550/1554		McDonnell F-4E-59-MC Phantom 
74-1725/1728		McDonnell RF-4E-61-MC Phantom 
74-1729/1736		McDonnell RF-4E-62-MC Phantom 
75-222/257		McDonnell F-4E-63-MC Phantom	
				Order cancelled in 1979
78-751/754		McDonnell RF-4E Phantom 
				Order cancelled in 1979, planes
				reduced to components.
78-788			McDonnell RF-4E Phantom 
				Order cancelled in 1979, plane
				reduced to components.
78-854/864		McDonnell RF-4E Phantom 
				Order cancelled in 1979.
  
Last revised April 1, 2000
Source :: Joseph Baugher  [ http://home.att.net/~jbaugher1/f4_44.html]