See the implementation. It basically stores an int:
transient volatile int modCount;
and that is incremented when there is a 'structural modification' (like remove). If iterator detects that modCount changed it throws Concurrent modification exception.
Synchronizing (via Collections.synchronizedXXX) won't do good since it does not guarantee iterator safety it only synchronizes writes and reads via put, get, set ...
See java.util.concurennt and apache collections framework (it has some classes that are optimiset optimized do work correctly in concurrent enviorment environment when there is more reads (that are unsynchronized) than writes - see FastHashMap)FastHashMap.
