Tag Archives: Operation Epic Fury

Operation Epic Fury Daily SITREP – March 08, 2026

1.0 Executive Summary

Over the preceding 36 hours, the coordinated military engagements executed by the United States and the State of Israel, designated respectively as Operation Epic Fury and Operation Roaring Lion, have undergone a profound strategic inflection. The initial operational phases, which prioritized the decapitation of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s supreme leadership and the suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD), have demonstrably transitioned into a systematic campaign of macroeconomic strangulation and defense-industrial base (DIB) dismantlement.1 The deliberate destruction of critical Iranian energy infrastructure, most notably the Shahran and Tondgouyan oil refineries in the Tehran metropolitan area, represents a calculated effort to paralyze the Iranian state’s internal logistical capacity, restrict the mobility of internal security apparatuses, and exacerbate domestic civil vulnerabilities.1

In response to the degradation of an estimated 75% to 86% of its ballistic missile launch infrastructure, the Iranian Armed Forces and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) have initiated a new asymmetric retaliatory phase, internally designated as “True Promise 4”.4 Unable to sustain high-volume ballistic barrages against heavily defended Israeli airspace, Tehran has explicitly pivoted toward saturation attacks utilizing loitering munitions (Shahed-series UAVs) and cruise missiles against softer, closer targets across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states.6 This shift has precipitated a critical regional escalation, highlighted by the unprecedented targeting of absolute life-support necessities, including a direct strike on a civilian water desalination plant in the Kingdom of Bahrain.8 This attack vector underscores a willingness by the IRGC to abandon traditional military proportionality and directly threaten the survival infrastructure of neighboring Arab states.

Diplomatically, the Iranian regime is navigating a period of severe internal friction bordering on command-and-control fracture. A highly publicized attempt by Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian to de-escalate regional tensions via an apology to Gulf states for territorial violations was immediately countermanded and retracted following aggressive public condemnation by IRGC hardliners.1 Concurrently, the Assembly of Experts, convening under extreme operational security protocols, has reportedly reached a majority consensus to appoint Mojtaba Khamenei as the new Supreme Leader.12 This succession, heavily engineered by the IRGC, signals the final consolidation of a military-security dictatorship over the traditional clerical establishment, though formal announcements remain delayed due to explicit Israeli threats to eliminate any appointed successor.14

The systemic spillover effects of this conflict have fundamentally altered the strategic and economic architecture of the Middle East. The compounding missile vectors have necessitated a 2.8 million square kilometer closure of regional airspace, severely disrupting global aviation, supply chains, and civilian evacuation efforts.17 In tandem with these developments, the United States has visibly heightened its strategic and nuclear readiness posture. The deployment of the E-6B Mercury “Doomsday” command and control aircraft to the region, combined with the abrupt cancellation of stateside training for the 82nd Airborne Division, indicates advanced Pentagon contingency planning for potential ground interventions, site exploitation of Iranian nuclear facilities, or wide-scale non-combatant evacuation operations (NEO).18 The geopolitical landscape is currently defined by maximum-pressure military operations with no immediate diplomatic off-ramps, ensuring continued volatility across the primary and proxy theaters of engagement.

2.0 Chronological Timeline of Key Events (Last 36 Hours)

Note: All events are chronologically indexed utilizing Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) to establish a standardized analytical baseline across multiple theaters of operation. This timeline incorporates a deliberate temporal overlap with the preceding reporting cycle to ensure absolute continuity of tactical and diplomatic developments.

  • March 6, 15:00 UTC: The IRGC officially initiates the 23rd wave of retaliatory strikes, designated “True Promise 4,” launching coordinated swarms of Shahed-136 loitering munitions and residual ballistic missiles targeting military and civilian infrastructure across Israel, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar.6
  • March 6, 20:00 UTC: Open-source intelligence and regional security monitors confirm extensive strikes by Iranian-backed Iraqi proxy militias targeting critical energy infrastructure in southern Iraq, including drone impacts on the Rumaila oil field and the Baker Hughes Energy City complex near Zubair.7
  • March 6, 22:30 UTC: US Central Command (CENTCOM) releases an operational assessment confirming that Iranian ballistic missile launches have decreased by 86% and drone launches by 73% since the initiation of Operation Epic Fury, corroborating the widespread destruction of Iranian launch facilities.5
  • March 7, 04:15 UTC: The Israeli Air Force (IAF) expands its target matrix, executing precision strikes on the Shahran and Tondgouyan oil refineries in the Tehran area. Secondary explosions are recorded as primary fuel storage tanks are incinerated, initiating localized energy crises.1
  • March 7, 06:30 UTC: Following escalating risks to commercial aviation, major regional carriers including Oman Air and Qatar Airways announce the indefinite suspension of multiple regional routes, reacting to the expanding 2.8 million square kilometer airspace closure across the Middle East.17
  • March 7, 08:00 UTC: The United Arab Emirates intercepts 16 of 17 inbound Iranian ballistic missiles and 113 of 117 drones; however, falling interception debris in the Al Barsha area of Dubai results in the death of a Pakistani national.15
  • March 7, 09:45 UTC: Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian issues an unprecedented public statement apologizing to neighboring Gulf states for airspace violations and collateral damage. The statement is forcefully retracted hours later following severe backlash from IRGC commanders, highlighting internal regime fractures.1
  • March 7, 14:00 UTC: Global military aviation monitors track the deployment of a US Navy E-6B Mercury (TACAMO) aircraft to the Middle East theater, signaling an elevation in US nuclear command-and-control readiness and serving as a strategic deterrent to external state actors.18
  • March 7, 18:00 UTC: Confidential leaks from within the Iranian Assembly of Experts indicate that a majority consensus has been reached regarding the succession of the Supreme Leader, with Mojtaba Khamenei identified as the chosen candidate, pending formal announcement.12
  • March 7, 19:30 UTC: The US Pentagon abruptly cancels scheduled training exercises for the headquarters element of the 82nd Airborne Division in Louisiana, ordering the Immediate Response Force (IRF) to maintain an 18-hour deployment readiness posture at Fort Bragg.20
  • March 7, 21:00 UTC: A sophisticated Iranian drone strike directly impacts a civilian water desalination plant in the Kingdom of Bahrain. The Bahraini Interior Ministry confirms material damage to the facility, marking a severe escalation in counter-value targeting.8
  • March 7, 22:55 UTC: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) initiate a renewed wave of intensive airstrikes targeting Hezbollah rocket launch infrastructure and command nodes in the southern suburbs of Beirut (Dahiya), Lebanon, responding to continued cross-border ATGM attacks.4
  • March 8, 01:46 UTC: Further Iranian ballistic and cruise missiles target the Bahraini capital of Manama. Shrapnel and blast waves cause structural fires in the Mina Salman neighborhood, resulting in verified civilian injuries.4
  • March 8, 05:58 UTC: The Kuwaiti Ministry of Defense formally confirms the activation of national air defense systems to intercept multiple hostile drones specifically targeting aviation fuel tanks at Kuwait International Airport.15
  • March 8, 06:20 UTC: Saudi Arabian air defense batteries successfully intercept a coordinated drone swarm traversing the Empty Quarter toward the Shaybah oil field, alongside the downing of nine additional drones in the eastern vicinity of Riyadh.15
  • March 8, 10:30 UTC: In a press engagement, US President Donald Trump demands the “unconditional surrender” of the Iranian regime and publicly acknowledges that the deployment of US ground troops to secure Iranian enriched uranium stockpiles remains a viable operational contingency.15

3.0 Situation by Primary Country

3.1 Iran

3.1.1 Military Actions & Posture

The operational capacity of the Iranian Armed Forces and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has been systematically degraded over the past week, yet the state remains a highly lethal actor through the application of asymmetric warfare and proxy mobilization. Assessments from both the IDF and US CENTCOM indicate that approximately 75% to 86% of Iran’s primary ballistic missile launch infrastructure has been neutralized.4 Israeli intelligence estimates that the IRGC currently possesses only roughly 120 operational ballistic missile launchers.1

This severe attrition rate has forced a demonstrable tactical pivot. The IRGC Aerospace Force has transitioned away from resource-intensive ballistic missile salvos against the heavily fortified airspace of Israel, redirecting its focus toward “True Promise 4”, a campaign defined by the saturation of softer, geographically closer targets in the Gulf using massed swarms of Shahed-136 loitering munitions and residual cruise missiles.6 The strategic logic driving this shift is twofold: to conserve remaining high-value ballistic assets for regime survival scenarios, and to inflict maximum economic and psychological pain on Gulf states hosting US logistics and command hubs.

Furthermore, the Iranian defense-industrial base (DIB) has suffered catastrophic damage. Combined US-Israeli strikes have systematically dismantled solid-propellant production facilities at the Parchin Military Complex and the Khojir Missile Production Complex, permanently crippling Iran’s ability to regenerate its ballistic missile inventory.1 Similarly, repeated strikes on the Shiraz Electronics Industries (SEI) have targeted the core of Iran’s avionics, radar, and drone guidance manufacturing capabilities.1

The maritime domain has seen the near-total annihilation of Iranian naval power. US defense officials confirm the destruction of up to 42 Iranian naval vessels, effectively neutralizing the IRGC Navy’s fast-attack craft swarms and conventional frigates, thereby securing absolute US maritime supremacy in the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf.15 In a concerning tactical evolution designed to deter further aerial bombardment, telemetry and localized intelligence indicate that surviving IRGC command elements and mobile missile units are actively dispersing into densely populated civilian infrastructure, including schools, hospitals, and mosques, employing human shielding tactics to complicate the coalition’s targeting matrix.26

3.1.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The internal political apparatus of the Islamic Republic is currently characterized by profound instability and the overt usurpation of civilian authority by the military-security state. Following the decapitation of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the opening hours of the conflict, the Assembly of Experts, the clerical body constitutionally mandated to appoint a successor, convened under extreme duress and heightened operational security. Multiple statements from assembly members, including Ayatollah Mohammad Mahdi Mirbagheri and Ahmad Alamolhoda, indicate that a decisive majority consensus has been reached.12 The selected candidate is widely confirmed to be Mojtaba Khamenei, the late Supreme Leader’s second son, who holds deep ties to the IRGC intelligence apparatus.12

However, the formal public announcement of Mojtaba Khamenei’s elevation remains delayed. This hesitation is directly attributable to acute security concerns, as Israeli military officials have publicly and explicitly warned that any newly appointed successor, alongside the clerics participating in the selection process, will immediately be designated as high-value military targets for elimination.14 This dynamic has effectively paralyzed the regime’s ability to project stable continuity of government.

Diplomatically, the Iranian state is speaking with fundamentally contradictory voices, exposing a deep schism between the nominal civilian government and the IRGC. On March 7, President Masoud Pezeshkian attempted to engineer a diplomatic off-ramp by issuing an official apology to neighboring Gulf states for the collateral damage and airspace violations caused by Iranian strikes, explicitly stating that Iran did not wish to widen the war.1 This statement was immediately met with vitriolic condemnation from hardline parliamentarians and senior IRGC commanders, who labeled the posture as “weak” and “unprofessional”.1 Within hours, Pezeshkian’s office was forced to scrub the apology from official readouts and replace it with hardline rhetoric threatening expanded attacks against any nation hosting American military assets.1 This sequence of events conclusively demonstrates that the civilian presidency possesses zero operational control over the armed forces and that the IRGC is dictating national policy.

3.1.3 Civilian Impact

The civilian toll within the Islamic Republic has reached catastrophic proportions, exacerbated by the intensity of the coalition’s bombing campaign and the IRGC’s deliberate co-location of military assets within urban centers. Official Iranian health ministries and the Iranian Red Crescent report between 1,200 and 1,332 fatalities, while independent human rights organizations and OSINT monitors estimate the true death toll may exceed 2,400 individuals, with over 10,000 wounded.15 The most devastating single civilian casualty event occurred in Minab, where a coalition missile strike reportedly killed over 150 students and teachers at a girls’ school, an incident likely linked to the facility’s proximity to a targeted IRGC naval installation.30

The recent shift in the US-Israeli targeting matrix toward economic and energy infrastructure has precipitated an acute domestic crisis that threatens the basic survival of the urban populace. The destruction of the Shahran and Tondgouyan oil refineries has led to the immediate cessation of commercial fuel distribution in the capital, triggering massive transportation gridlocks, panic buying, and rolling localized blackouts.1 The Iranian population, already exhausted by years of crippling economic sanctions, hyperinflation, and brutal state crackdowns on domestic protests, is now bracing for prolonged resource scarcity. The psychological impact of continuous, uncontested coalition aircraft operating in Iranian airspace has deeply eroded any remaining public confidence in the regime’s ability to provide basic security.32

3.2 Israel

3.2.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF), executing “Operation Roaring Lion” in seamless coordination with US forces, have achieved near-complete air supremacy over Iranian territory, operating with impunity against strategic targets.4 The scale of the Israeli aerial campaign is historic; since the operation’s inception, the Israeli Air Force (IAF) has deployed over 4,000 precision munitions, effectively blinding Iran’s Integrated Air Defense System (IADS) by destroying approximately 200 air defense systems and neutralizing 300 ballistic missile launchers.2

The geographic reality of this multi-front operational theater places Israel at the strategic center of a highly complex battlespace. The IDF must simultaneously manage inbound threat vectors from Iran in the East, Hezbollah forces operating out of Lebanon in the North, and proxy militia attacks originating from Yemen and Iraq in the South and East. Conversely, Israeli retaliatory and preemptive strike paths radiate outward, targeting deeply entrenched infrastructure in Tehran and Isfahan, while simultaneously executing tactical bombing runs over Beirut to degrade immediate border threats.

Over the last 36 hours, Israeli targeting has evolved beyond immediate counter-force threats to include deep strikes on Iran’s defense-industrial base and macroeconomic pillars. Repeated strikes on Shiraz Electronics Industries (SEI) have actively degraded Iran’s ability to manufacture avionics and guidance systems for future missile and drone production.1 Furthermore, the IDF conducted highly precise strikes on Iranian aviation assets, destroying an unspecified number of F-14 fighter jets at Isfahan Airport and Quds Force transport aircraft at Mehrabad Airport, effectively grounding the regime’s remaining fixed-wing projection capabilities.15

Simultaneously, Israel is engaged in high-intensity combat operations on its northern front. In response to continuous rocket and drone fire from Hezbollah, which has launched at least 23 separate attacks in recent days, the IDF has launched renewed ground incursions and heavy airstrikes into southern Lebanon and the southern suburbs of Beirut (Dahiya).1 The IDF reported casualties in the village of Khiyam due to sophisticated anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) ambushes executed by Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force, indicating that despite heavy bombardment, Hezbollah retains potent tactical capabilities along the border.6

Operation Roaring Lion: Key Iranian Target Categories & Strategic ImpactObjective Achieved
Ballistic Missile Production (Parchin, Khojir, Shahroud)Destruction of solid-propellant mixing facilities; halting missile regeneration.
Energy & Fuel Infrastructure (Shahran, Tondgouyan)Cessation of fuel distribution; crippling IRGC internal mobility and logistics.
Defense Industrial Base (Shiraz Electronics Industries)Disruption of avionics, radar, and drone guidance component manufacturing.
Fixed-Wing Aviation (Isfahan, Mehrabad Airports)Destruction of F-14s and Quds Force transports; elimination of aerial projection.

3.2.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The Israeli government maintains an uncompromising, maximalist policy posture. In a televised address to the nation, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to carry on the war with a “systematic plan to eradicate the Iranian regime,” publicly confirming that Israeli and US forces now exercise total control over Iranian airspace.4 Israeli diplomatic messaging has been uniquely aggressive regarding the Iranian internal succession process. The IDF and senior officials have openly broadcast warnings, including direct communications in Farsi, stating that any cleric participating in the Assembly of Experts, or any individual selected to succeed Ayatollah Khamenei, will be designated as a legitimate, high-priority military target.14

Regarding the northern front, the Israeli diplomatic stance toward the Lebanese government has hardened significantly. Prime Minister Netanyahu issued stark warnings of “disastrous consequences” should the state of Lebanon fail to enforce the terms of the collapsed 2024 ceasefire agreement and actively disarm Hezbollah.4 This rhetoric lays the diplomatic groundwork for potentially expanding the limited ground incursions in southern Lebanon into a broader theater-level offensive if cross-border fire is not suppressed.

3.2.3 Civilian Impact

Israel’s multi-layered air defense architecture, comprising the Arrow 3, David’s Sling, and Iron Dome systems, has successfully intercepted the vast majority of incoming Iranian and proxy projectiles, mitigating what would otherwise be catastrophic mass casualties.21 Nevertheless, the civilian toll and societal disruption remain severe. Since the conflict began, 10 Israeli civilians have been killed, and 1,929 individuals have been evacuated to hospitals for injuries or trauma, with 157 admitted in the last 24 hours alone.15

The physical impact on civilian infrastructure, while limited compared to Iran or Lebanon, is tangible. Intercepted debris and shrapnel have caused localized structural damage and fires in densely populated areas of central Israel, including the Ramat Gan area of Tel Aviv.10 Furthermore, the economic strain on the Israeli state is profound; the mobilization of approximately 110,000 reservists has removed a significant portion of the workforce from the civilian economy, severely impacting the technology, agriculture, and service sectors as the nation transitions to a wartime footing.2

3.3 United States

3.3.1 Military Actions & Posture

“Operation Epic Fury” represents one of the most intense, technologically advanced, and lethal aerial campaigns in modern United States military history. US Central Command (CENTCOM) reports deploying over 2,000 precision munitions from a vast array of air, land, and sea assets in the opening days of the conflict.5 The financial footprint of this rapid force projection is staggering; the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) estimates that the first 100 hours of the operation cost the Department of Defense $3.7 billion, with unbudgeted munition replacements alone accounting for $3.1 billion of that total.36

A highly significant development in US strategic posture over the last 36 hours is the deployment of the E-6B Mercury aircraft to the Middle East theater.18 Colloquially known as the “Doomsday plane,” this platform provides critical Take Charge And Move Out (TACAMO) capabilities, designed to connect the National Command Authority directly with naval ballistic missile submarines in the event of ground-based communication failures. Its presence in the region transcends tactical utility; it is a profound strategic signal to external nuclear-armed peers (specifically the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China) advising against intervention, while ensuring continuity of command should regional US bases suffer catastrophic damage from Iranian ballistic strikes.18

Concurrently, the Pentagon has taken highly unusual steps regarding its elite ground forces. The abrupt cancellation of major training exercises at Fort Polk, Louisiana, for the headquarters element of the 82nd Airborne Division has effectively held the division’s Immediate Response Force (IRF) at Fort Bragg in a state of high readiness, capable of deploying 4,000 to 5,000 paratroopers within 18 hours.20 This maneuver strongly indicates advanced contingency planning by the Joint Chiefs of Staff for potential ground operations, which could include the physical securing of highly sensitive Iranian nuclear sites, or wide-scale non-combatant evacuation operations (NEO) across the destabilized Gulf region.

US forces deployed in the region have sustained casualties amid the ongoing Iranian retaliation. Official reports confirm that six American service members were killed in action, and 18 were seriously wounded, during a sophisticated Iranian unmanned aircraft system (UAS) attack on a logistics facility in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait.37 US installations in Iraq and Syria also remain under persistent threat from Iranian-aligned militia groups.

Operation Epic Fury: Estimated Financial Costs (First 100 Hours)Cost (USD)Budget Status
Munitions Replacement$3.1 BillionUnbudgeted
Combat Losses / Infrastructure Repair$350 MillionUnbudgeted
Operations & Support Costs$196.3 MillionPartially Budgeted ($178M)
Total Estimated Cost$3.64 BillionPrimarily Unbudgeted

3.3.2 Policy & Diplomacy

United States policy under the administration of President Donald Trump has coalesced around maximalist objectives that preclude traditional diplomatic negotiations. Setting a hardline demand, President Trump explicitly stated that there will be “no deal” with the Islamic Republic short of “unconditional surrender”.15 In a significant escalation of policy rhetoric, Trump publicly acknowledged to reporters that deploying US ground troops into Iranian territory is “not off the table.” He specifically cited the strategic imperative to physically secure and extract enriched uranium stockpiles located at heavily fortified nuclear sites that were targeted during previous operations.19 Secretary of War Pete Hegseth reinforced this stance, declaring the mission “laser-focused” on ensuring Iran never obtains a nuclear weapon and annihilating its proxy networks.39

The US administration is also actively engaging in psychological warfare and political interference regarding the Iranian succession process. President Trump explicitly named Mojtaba Khamenei as an “unacceptable” choice for Supreme Leader, attempting to leverage military pressure to influence the clerical assembly’s internal deliberations.21 This stance aligns with the broader stated goal of Operation Epic Fury to create the conditions necessary for regime change from within, heavily implying support for domestic Iranian opposition forces.41

Diplomatically, the United States is experiencing friction with traditional European allies over the scale of the operation. President Trump has publicly criticized UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer for a perceived lack of immediate, robust military support for the strikes, despite the US utilizing UK bases in Cyprus for operational logistics.19 Conversely, France has temporarily authorized US aircraft to utilize certain French military bases in the Middle East, indicating a bifurcated European response to the conflict.43

3.3.3 Civilian Impact

The primary civilian impact for the United States revolves around the acute crisis of evacuating its citizens from a highly volatile war zone amidst the collapse of commercial aviation. The US State Department issued a sweeping “DEPART NOW” directive for American citizens residing in over a dozen Middle Eastern countries, explicitly warning of severe safety risks.44 However, this directive is fundamentally complicated by the closure of regional airspace, which has severely restricted the availability of commercial exit routes.

Furthermore, US diplomatic missions have become active targets. The US Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, was targeted by two Iranian drones, resulting in localized fires and limited structural damage.38 The US Embassy complex in Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone also recorded a missile impact on its helicopter landing pad, highlighting the pervasive threat to American diplomatic personnel across the entire region.46

4.0 Regional and Gulf State Impacts

The ongoing conflict has fundamentally shattered the security paradigm of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Despite years of intricate diplomatic hedging, backchannel negotiations, and recent normalization agreements aimed precisely at insulating themselves from a direct US-Iran confrontation, GCC states now find their sovereign territories under direct and sustained military assault. Iran’s legal justification for these attacks, claiming lawful self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter by designating states that host US military bases as legitimate targets, has been universally condemned by international legal scholars and regional governments as factually skewed and a dangerous violation of international norms.47

Bahrain The most alarming tactical development within the Gulf theater occurred in the Kingdom of Bahrain. In an unprecedented escalation targeting civilian survival infrastructure, an Iranian drone struck a water desalination plant.8 While Bahraini water authorities reported no immediate disruption to the national water supply network, this attack establishes a highly dangerous precedent. Given that GCC states rely almost entirely on desalination for potable water, the targeting of these facilities signals a willingness by Iran to inflict mass civilian suffering. Furthermore, Iranian ballistic missiles targeted the Bahraini capital of Manama, causing fires in the Mina Salman neighborhood and resulting in verified civilian injuries, while the IRGC concurrently claimed successful precision strikes against the US Navy’s Juffair base.4

Saudi Arabia The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia remains under heavy, continuous bombardment from Iranian drone swarms and missile forces. Over the last 36 hours, the Saudi Ministry of Defense successfully intercepted at least 14 hostile drones. These included sophisticated swarms targeting the highly strategic Shaybah oil field in the remote Empty Quarter, as well as multiple interceptions east of Riyadh.15 A separate drone attack targeted the Diplomatic Quarter in Riyadh, which houses multiple international embassies, though it was thwarted without material damage.15 Despite bearing the brunt of these attacks, Riyadh is reportedly operating a frantic, high-level diplomatic backchannel with Tehran. Supported by various European nations, Saudi officials are attempting to broker a localized cessation of hostilities to protect global energy markets from catastrophic disruption, though these efforts have yet to yield tangible de-escalation.48

United Arab Emirates (UAE) The UAE has been forced to activate its national air defense network to near-continuous capacity. In recent engagements, Emirati air defenses successfully intercepted 16 of 17 inbound Iranian ballistic missiles and 113 of 117 loitering munitions.15 However, the sheer volume of interceptions carries inherent risks; debris from a mid-air kinetic intercept fell onto a vehicle in the Al Barsha area of Dubai, resulting in the tragic death of a Pakistani national.15 In response to the crisis and the threat of supply chain severances, the UAE has mobilized private sector logistics to ensure domestic stability. The Lulu Group, a major retail conglomerate, has chartered multiple cargo flights, utilizing Etihad Airways freighters, to airlift over 80,000 kilograms of fresh produce and meat directly from India and Australia to prevent food shortages and panic buying across the Emirates.15

Qatar Qatar, host to the critical Al Udeid Air Base (the forward headquarters of US CENTCOM), has been targeted by at least 10 ballistic and 2 cruise missiles in the past 36 hours.15 While Qatari air defenses intercepted the majority of these threats, the persistence of the attacks has severely disrupted daily life. The Community College of Qatar was forced to suspend examinations indefinitely due to safety concerns.15 Recognizing the persistent, low-cost threat posed by Iranian Shahed-136 swarms, Qatari officials, in coordination with the US, have reportedly initiated emergency procurement discussions with the Ukrainian government to purchase proven Ukrainian interceptor drones, leveraging Kyiv’s extensive experience against the same weapon systems.1

Kuwait and Oman Kuwaiti airspace has been repeatedly breached. The Kuwaiti Ministry of Defense intercepted multiple drones explicitly targeting aviation fuel tanks at Kuwait International Airport, while tragically reporting that two domestic security personnel were killed in the line of duty during the attacks.15

Oman, traditionally the region’s steadfast neutral mediator, has seen its diplomatic immunity collapse entirely. Despite issuing multiple official statements strongly condemning the initial US-Israeli strikes, Omani infrastructure at the port of Duqm and the Port of Salalah was still struck by Iranian drones.49 This demonstrates unequivocally that diplomatic accommodation provides no protection from the IRGC’s regional targeting matrix, deeply isolating Oman’s previously successful foreign policy model.

Jordan Situated directly beneath the primary aerial flight path connecting Israel and Iran, Jordan has been forced to violently defend its sovereign airspace. The Jordan Armed Forces (JAF) successfully intercepted 108 of 119 missiles and drones transiting its territory over the past week. Crucially, Jordanian military officials emphasized in public briefings that these were not merely “transit” weapons aimed at Israel, but that vital installations and infrastructure within Jordanian territory were actively targeted by the Iranian munitions.52

4.1 Airspace and Aviation Crisis

The overlapping missile vectors, widespread military operations, and subsequent airspace restrictions have resulted in a staggering 2.8 million square kilometer closure of global airspace across the Middle East.17 This represents one of the most severe disruptions to commercial aviation in modern history.

AirlineOperational Status & Contingency Actions Taken
Oman AirCancelled all regional flights to AMM, DXB, BAH, DOH, DMM, KWI, BGW through March 15.
Qatar AirwaysTemporary suspension of main operations; operating limited “safe corridor” flights from LHR, FRA, CDG strictly for Doha-bound passengers.
Emirates / FlyDubaiExperiencing severe delays and cancellations; partial resumption of operations at DXB and DWC under heightened security protocols.
Kuwait AirwaysRerouting stranded passengers overland through Saudi Arabia via land borders, necessitating emergency transit visas.

This massive airspace void forces commercial carriers traversing Euro-Asian routes to execute massive geographical detours, burning unprecedented volumes of aviation fuel and straining global logistics networks. The closure has also severely hindered the ability of foreign nationals to evacuate the region, compounding the humanitarian complexities of the expanding conflict.

5.0 Appendices

Appendix A: Methodology

This Daily Situation Report (SITREP) was compiled utilizing a comprehensive, deep-sweep methodology of real-time Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT), official state broadcasts, military monitor telemetry, and independent defense journalism.4

  • Time-Window Calculation: The analytical mandate required an examination of the “last 36 hours” from the prompt’s initiation (March 8, 2026). To ensure absolute continuity of events and accurately capture the causality of military strikes and diplomatic retractions, a 12-hour overlap was intentionally programmed into the data extraction, pulling verified data from March 6 (15:00 UTC) through March 8 (12:00 UTC).
  • Conflict Resolution: In instances where casualty figures, strike success rates, or operational impacts conflicted between belligerents (e.g., Iranian state media claims of US naval sinkings versus CENTCOM’s official denials), baseline neutral sources (such as ACLED, CSIS, and independent satellite imagery analysts) were weighted highest. Unverified propaganda claims unsupported by visual evidence or secondary telemetry were discarded or strictly contextualized as psychological operations.

Appendix B: Glossary of Acronyms

  • ATGM: Anti-Tank Guided Missile.
  • C4ISR: Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance.
  • CENTCOM: United States Central Command (Theater command responsible for the Middle East).
  • CSIS: Center for Strategic and International Studies.
  • DIB: Defense Industrial Base.
  • GCC: Gulf Cooperation Council (Political and economic union of Arab states bordering the Gulf).
  • IADS: Integrated Air Defense System.
  • IAF: Israeli Air Force.
  • IDF: Israel Defense Forces.
  • IRF: Immediate Response Force (Rapid deployment element of the US 82nd Airborne Division).
  • IRGC: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Iran’s premier military and internal security branch).
  • KIA: Killed in Action.
  • NEO: Non-combatant Evacuation Operation.
  • OSINT: Open-Source Intelligence.
  • SEAD: Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses.
  • TACAMO: Take Charge And Move Out (US military system for highly survivable nuclear communications).

Appendix C: Glossary of Foreign Words

  • Basij: A paramilitary volunteer militia established in Iran, subordinate to the IRGC, utilized extensively for internal security, suppression of protests, and moral policing.
  • Knesset: The unicameral national legislature of the State of Israel.
  • Majlis: The Islamic Consultative Assembly; the national legislative body of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
  • Quds Force: The elite branch of Iran’s IRGC responsible for extraterritorial operations, unconventional warfare, and military intelligence.
  • Shahed: Persian for “Witness” or “Martyr”; a family of Iranian-manufactured loitering munitions (suicide drones) heavily utilized in the current conflict for saturation attacks.

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Sources Used

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  14. Iran’s new supreme leader has been selected, says deciding body, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/08/iran-new-supreme-leader-selected-says-deciding-body
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  18. USA Sends Doomsday Plane E-6B Mercury to Middle East, accessed March 8, 2026, https://militarnyi.com/en/news/usa-doomsday-plane-e-6b-mercury-middle-east/
  19. Trump news at a glance: US leader says Iran being ‘decimated’; admits US troop deployment not off the table – The Guardian, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/mar/08/trump-news-at-a-glance-us-leader-says-iran-being-decimated-admits-us-troop-deployment-not-off-the-table
  20. Cancellation of Army exercise fuels speculation about Mideast troop deployments, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2026/03/06/army-82nd-airborne-iran/
  21. Iran war: What is happening on day seven of US-Israel attacks?, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/6/iran-war-what-is-happening-on-day-seven-of-us-israel-attacks
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  25. This Week in DOW: Delivering ‘Shock and Awe’ to Iran, Defense Leaders’ Declaration, Updates on AI, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.war.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/4425242/this-week-in-dow-delivering-shock-and-awe-to-iran-defense-leaders-declaration-u/
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  27. Majority consensus reached on Iran’s next Supreme Leader, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/majority-consensus-reached-on-irans-next-supreme-leader/article70718461.ece
  28. Iran announces new Supreme Leader has been chosen, identity kept secret, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.muslimnetwork.tv/iran-announces-new-supreme-leader-has-been-chosen-identity-kept-secret/
  29. Israel hits Iran’s oil depots as clerics say consensus reached on Ayatollah successor, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.wypr.org/2026-03-08/israel-hits-irans-oil-depots-as-clerics-say-consensus-reached-on-ayatollah-successor
  30. Middle East Special Issue: March 2026 – ACLED, accessed March 8, 2026, https://acleddata.com/update/middle-east-special-issue-march-2026
  31. Statement by the Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on the Islamic Republic of Iran regarding Israeli-U.S. airstrikes against Iran, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.ohchr.org/en/statements-and-speeches/2026/03/statement-independent-international-fact-finding-mission-islamic
  32. The US-Israel campaign in Iran – The International Institute for Strategic Studies, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.iiss.org/online-analysis/online-analysis/2026/02/the-us-israel-campaign-in-iran/
  33. Israel-Iran war highlights: New wave of Israeli strikes hit Tehran’s oil facility, fire reported; Netanyahu says will carry on war ‘with all our force’ – The Hindu, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.thehindu.com/news/international/iran-israel-us-war-live-west-asia-conflict-march-7-2026-trump-middle-east-crisis-oil-prices-air-strikes-drone-attacks-lebanon-strikes-gulf-region/article70714560.ece
  34. ACLED Middle East Special Issue: March 2026, accessed March 8, 2026, https://reliefweb.int/report/iran-islamic-republic/acled-middle-east-special-issue-march-2026
  35. Live Updates: US denies claims Iran kidnapped US soldiers | The Jerusalem Post, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/iran-news/2026-03-08/live-updates-889180
  36. $3.7 Billion: Estimated Cost of Epic Fury’s First 100 Hours – CSIS, accessed March 8, 2026, https://www.csis.org/analysis/37-billion-estimated-cost-epic-furys-first-100-hours
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Operation Epic Fury Daily SITREP – March 07, 2026

1.0 Executive Summary

The preceding 36 hours of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East,defined by the United States’ Operation Epic Fury and Israel’s corresponding Operation Roaring Lion,have generated a profound strategic realignment across the region. As the joint military campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran enters its second week following the February 28 decapitation strikes that eliminated Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and senior military cadres, the operational environment has transitioned from sudden, high-intensity shock strikes into a grinding, multi-domain war of attrition.1 The analysis of the latest intelligence indicates three primary systemic shifts: the achievement of near-complete allied air superiority, the transition of Iranian retaliatory forces toward asymmetric economic warfare in the maritime domain, and a rapidly deepening constitutional and succession crisis within the Iranian political establishment.3

Militarily, the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have systematically dismantled the bulk of Iran’s Integrated Air Defense Systems (IADS) and its ballistic missile launch infrastructure. Western intelligence and defense officials assess that Iranian ballistic missile launches have decreased by 90%, and unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) attacks have fallen by 83% since the conflict’s inception.3 However, this degradation has not neutralized the Iranian threat; rather, it has forced the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) to adapt. Unable to penetrate layered Israeli and American missile defense screens with mass salvos, Iranian forces have increasingly targeted softer, closer installations in neighboring Gulf states and have initiated a de facto maritime blockade in the Strait of Hormuz. The deliberate drone strike on the commercial oil tanker Prima on March 7 signals Tehran’s strategic intent to weaponize global energy markets, applying macroeconomic pressure on the West to force an operational halt.4

Politically, the Iranian regime is attempting to manage an unprecedented internal crisis while executing a complex diplomatic maneuver aimed at fracturing the US-Gulf security architecture. The Interim Leadership Council, operating with expanded emergency powers, has faced severe difficulties in orchestrating a smooth succession. The Assembly of Experts, physically displaced by Israeli airstrikes, is reportedly deadlocked in virtual sessions over the proposed succession of Mojtaba Khamenei, facing internal revolts against the perception of a new “hereditary leadership”.5 Concurrently, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian issued a highly irregular public apology to the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states for collateral damage, conditionally offering to halt all strikes on neighboring sovereign territories if those states refuse to allow their US-operated military bases to be used for offensive sorties against Iran.7

In Washington and Tel Aviv, the policy posture has hardened into maximalist demands that preclude near-term diplomatic off-ramps. US President Donald Trump has publicly rejected any negotiated settlement short of Iran’s “unconditional surrender,” linking the military campaign to a broader regime-change and reconstruction doctrine stylized as “Make Iran Great Again” (MIGA).7 Israeli leadership mirrors this stance, explicitly stating that the objective is the permanent dismantling of Iran’s nuclear and proxy capabilities before any ceasefire can be considered.14

The cumulative effect of these developments is the severe destabilization of the US-aligned Gulf states. Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman are currently enduring daily airspace violations, infrastructural damage, and the looming threat of a global economic shock driven by a potential shutdown of regional energy exports.15 As the conflict expands to include Russian intelligence sharing with Iran and active IDF ground incursions into Lebanon to dismantle Hezbollah, the geopolitical containment of the war has decisively failed, plunging the broader Middle East into a protracted state of total conflict.17

2.0 Chronological Timeline of Key Events (Last 36 Hours)

Note: All chronological timestamps are documented in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) to ensure standardized tracking of multi-theater operations spanning the March 5 to March 7 reporting window.

  • March 5, 18:18 UTC: The Iranian Expediency Discernment Council formally approves the emergency transfer of key constitutional leadership powers to the three-member Interim Leadership Council, securing the authority required to make wartime command decisions following the death of the Supreme Leader.9
  • March 5, 22:22 UTC: Kuwaiti national air defense systems are activated as a wave of Iranian ballistic missiles and one-way attack drones breach sovereign airspace, specifically targeting the US staging areas at the Ali al Salem Airbase.19
  • March 5, 22:30 UTC: Saudi Arabian air and missile defense networks successfully intercept three inbound Iranian ballistic missiles over the Al-Kharj region, neutralizing threats directed at the US-operated Prince Sultan Air Base.20
  • March 6, 04:00 UTC: Iranian armed UAVs execute a strike on Nakhchivan International Airport in the Azerbaijani exclave. The attack injures four civilians and forces the Azerbaijani government to suspend all cross-border commercial traffic, formally expanding the conflict’s geographic footprint into the Caucasus.3
  • March 6, 06:30 UTC: Following localized evacuation warnings, Israeli Air Force (IAF) fighter jets strike the Shokouhiyeh Industrial Zone in Qom Province. The targeted facilities belong to the Oje Parvaz Mado Nafar Company (Mado), a heavily sanctioned entity responsible for reverse-engineering and producing propulsion systems for the Shahed-series drones.17
  • March 6, 09:37 UTC: Regional aviation authorities issue updated Notices to Air Missions (NOTAMs) confirming prolonged and severe airspace closures. The airspaces over Iran, Iraq, and Bahrain maintain absolute Level 1 (Moderate to High Risk) No-Fly status, with severe intermittent restrictions paralyzing commercial logistics across the broader GCC.22
  • March 6, 16:55 UTC: Expanding operations deep into the northern theater, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) execute a precision naval strike in Tripoli, Lebanon, resulting in the elimination of Wasim Attallah Ali, a senior Hamas commander responsible for military training operations in the Levant.25
  • March 6, 17:56 UTC: The IAF initiates the 13th distinct wave of Operation Roaring Lion, deploying a highly complex strike package of over 80 fighter jets. The operation targets heavily fortified regime-linked sites in Tehran and Isfahan, including Imam Hossein University (an IRGC officer training facility) and a subterranean command bunker in the Pastour neighborhood.25
  • March 7, 01:27 UTC: Undeterred by the degradation of their launch infrastructure, IRGC Aerospace Forces launch the 23rd wave of retaliatory strikes. The combined drone and ballistic missile barrage is directed at central population centers in Israel and major US military installations in the UAE, specifically the Al-Minhad and Al-Dhafra air bases.3
  • March 7, 03:45 UTC: Incoming international flights bound for Dubai International Airport (DXB) are forced to execute emergency go-arounds and enter prolonged holding patterns over neighboring Saudi Arabia. The disruption follows significant explosions and the descent of interceptor shrapnel in close proximity to the airfield, leading to a temporary suspension of all terminal operations.7
  • March 7, 05:00 UTC: United States President Donald Trump issues a definitive policy statement via social media, explicitly demanding the “unconditional surrender” of the Iranian regime. He publicly rejects any diplomatic off-ramps and announces intentions for the US and its allies to directly select Iran’s next leadership cadre.13
  • March 7, 07:25 UTC: The IRGC Navy conducts a direct kinetic strike utilizing an explosive UAV against the commercial oil tanker Prima transiting the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian state media claims the vessel ignored repeated warnings regarding the active maritime blockade and the “insecurity” of the strategic waterway.4
  • March 7, 10:00 UTC (approximate broadcast time): Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian delivers a prerecorded national television address. In an unprecedented diplomatic maneuver, he formally apologizes to neighboring GCC states for the collateral impacts of Iranian strikes and pledges a cessation of cross-border attacks, strictly contingent upon GCC states denying the US the use of their sovereign territory for offensive military operations.7

3.0 Situation by Primary Country

3.1 Iran

3.1.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Iranian military apparatus, predominantly commanded by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), has been forced into a significant strategic pivot over the past 36 hours. The sheer volume and precision of the combined US and Israeli air campaigns have severely degraded Iran’s Integrated Air Defense Systems (IADS) and its domestic military-industrial complex. Assessments from the White House and the IDF indicate that the joint allied forces have achieved “near-complete air superiority” over the Iranian landmass. Consequently, Iran’s capacity to launch centralized, mass-salvo ballistic missile barrages has collapsed; telemetry data indicates a 90% reduction in ballistic missile launches and an 83% reduction in drone swarm deployments since the first 72 hours of the conflict.3

In response to this systemic attrition, the IRGC has transitioned from conventional deterrence to highly asymmetric, localized strikes and maritime economic warfare. Recognizing that their remaining projectiles are easily intercepted by the dense, layered defense networks of Israel (Iron Dome, David’s Sling, Arrow 3), Iranian forces have increasingly targeted softer, geographically closer installations. Over the past 36 hours, the IRGC initiated its 23rd wave of retaliatory strikes, heavily focusing on Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states that host US personnel. This includes direct drone and missile attacks against the Al-Minhad and Al-Dhafra air bases in the UAE, the Ali al Salem Airbase in Kuwait, and the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia.3 Furthermore, Iran has demonstrated a willingness to expand the geographic scope of the conflict to inflict political costs on perceived US allies, evidenced by the unprecedented drone strike on Nakhchivan International Airport in Azerbaijan.3

The most critical evolution in Iranian military posture is the explicit weaponization of the maritime domain. Following the destruction of significant portions of the conventional Iranian Navy by US CENTCOM forces,including the sinking of the IRIS Dena,the IRGC Naval Forces have implemented a de facto blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.15 On March 7, the IRGC utilized a one-way attack drone to strike the commercial oil tanker Prima.4 The IRGC subsequently released statements confirming that the vessel was targeted for ignoring warnings regarding the “prohibition of traffic,” definitively signaling that Tehran intends to leverage the global economic reliance on the Strait (which facilitates approximately 20% of global oil consumption) as its primary asymmetric deterrent.4

To sustain its degraded command and control (C2) networks and improve targeting against US regional assets, intelligence reports indicate that Russian state actors are currently sharing actionable intelligence with Iran. This development highlights a deepening strategic alignment between Moscow and Tehran and severely complicates US force protection efforts across the Middle East.17

3.1.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The systemic shock generated by the February 28 decapitation strikes has triggered a profound and highly volatile succession crisis within the Iranian political and clerical establishment. Following the assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Iranian state is currently governed by a three-member Interim Leadership Council. This body comprises President Masoud Pezeshkian, Chief Justice Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i, and Ayatollah Alireza Arafi.31 On March 5, the Expediency Discernment Council formally approved the transfer of expanded wartime powers to this triumvirate, theoretically granting them full authority over the armed forces and strategic directives.9

However, the constitutional mechanism designed to permanently resolve the leadership vacuum,the 88-member Assembly of Experts,is operating under severe duress and internal division. Following an Israeli airstrike that destroyed the Assembly’s physical headquarters in Qom on March 3, the clerical body has been forced to conduct emergency virtual sessions.5 Intelligence sources indicate a fierce internal power struggle. The IRGC is reportedly exerting immense pressure on the Assembly to rapidly appoint Mojtaba Khamenei, the late Supreme Leader’s son, to ensure regime continuity and centralized wartime control.5 This maneuver has met significant resistance from an anti-hereditary faction within the Assembly. Clerics have warned that elevating Mojtaba would legitimize a “hereditary leadership” structure reminiscent of the pre-1979 monarchy, with at least eight members threatening to boycott the emergency voting sessions.5

Amidst this internal turmoil, the Interim Leadership Council is executing a complex external diplomatic strategy aimed at fracturing the coalition arrayed against it. In an unprecedented move on March 7, President Pezeshkian utilized a prerecorded television address to formally apologize to the neighboring GCC states for the collateral damage inflicted by Iranian strikes over the past week. He announced a new policy directive stipulating that Iran will cease firing upon Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman, strictly on the condition that these nations assert their sovereignty and deny the United States the use of their territory, airspace, and host bases to launch attacks against Iran.7

This diplomatic overture serves a dual strategic purpose. First, it aims to exploit the deep anxieties of the Gulf states, forcing Arab leaders to choose between the perceived security of the American defense umbrella and the immediate cessation of crippling economic and infrastructural damage inflicted by Iran. Second, it provides Tehran with a geopolitical and legal pretext; if GCC states fail to expel US forces, Iran can frame continued strikes on Gulf infrastructure as legitimate self-defense against active staging grounds.34 Simultaneously, Pezeshkian maintained a defiant posture toward Washington, flatly rejecting the US demand for “unconditional surrender” and warning that American leadership will “take their dreams to the grave”.35

3.1.3 Civilian Impact

The civilian toll within the Islamic Republic has escalated dramatically as the allied air campaign systematically dismantles dual-use infrastructure and operates within densely populated urban centers. Reports from the Iranian Red Crescent and international human rights organizations estimate total fatalities between 1,332 and 2,400 since the conflict commenced.3

March 6 was widely documented by Iranian officials, academics, and residents as the “bloodiest single day” for civilians in Tehran. Coordinated US-Israeli strikes rippled across multiple districts of the capital simultaneously. A specific strike targeting an alleged regime asset in the densely populated Niloofar Square in southern Tehran resulted in significant collateral damage, killing over twenty civilians, collapsing residential buildings, and overwhelming the city’s emergency response infrastructure.38

The systemic targeting of Iran’s defense industrial base has also severely impacted civilian employment centers and the broader economy. Strikes on the Esteghlal Industrial Zone in Tehran Province and the Shokouhiyeh Industrial Zone in Qom Province,intended to degrade drone production networks,have reduced major manufacturing hubs to rubble.17 Basic infrastructure is heavily degraded, with power outages and severe communication blackouts documented nationwide. The nation’s macroeconomic functions have effectively paralyzed; the Tehran Stock Exchange remains closed until further notice, and citizens are experiencing acute shortages of essential goods amid widespread panic.7

Key Iranian Institutional BodiesCurrent Status / Recent Developments (Last 36 Hours)Strategic Implication
Interim Leadership CouncilGranted expanded wartime powers by the Expediency Council. Led by Pezeshkian, Mohseni-Eje’i, and Arafi.Consolidates executive and military command during the succession crisis.
Assembly of ExpertsHQ in Qom destroyed by IDF strike. Attempting virtual emergency sessions.Paralyzed by internal factional disputes regarding the appointment of Mojtaba Khamenei.
IRGC Aerospace / NavyLaunch capacity severely degraded. Transitioned to asymmetric maritime interdiction (Strait of Hormuz).Shifts the Iranian threat from direct military confrontation to global economic sabotage.
Civilian InfrastructureTelecoms degraded to 1-4% connectivity. Major industrial zones in Tehran and Qom destroyed.Total socioeconomic paralysis; rising domestic pressure on the interim government.

3.2 Israel

3.2.1 Military Actions & Posture

Operating under the strategic framework of Operation Roaring Lion, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and the Israeli Air Force (IAF) have transitioned from initial decapitation strikes to the systematic, grinding dismantlement of Iran’s military-industrial complex and the neutralization of its proxy forces across the Levant.25 Within the last 36 hours, the IAF executed its 13th distinct wave of strikes into Iranian territory, a complex operation involving approximately 80 fighter jets. This wave struck over 400 targets heavily concentrated in western Iran, Tehran, and Isfahan.3 Specific targets included Imam Hossein University in Tehran,which Israeli intelligence identified as a primary training facility for IRGC officer cadres,and a heavily fortified subterranean command bunker located beneath the supreme leader’s compound in the Pastour neighborhood.26

Recognizing that Iran inherently relies on its “Ring of Fire” proxy network,the “Axis of Resistance”,to project power while its domestic capabilities are suppressed, Israel has aggressively escalated operations on its northern front. Following Hezbollah’s formal entry into the conflict on March 2, the IDF has battered southern Lebanon with over 500 airstrikes in a single week.3 To permanently alter the security reality in the north, the IDF has initiated limited ground operations. Infantry and armored units have advanced beyond the Blue Line, establishing forward positions in Khiam and Mays al Jabal to dismantle Hezbollah’s direct-fire capabilities.19 The operational tempo has also reached deep into sovereign Lebanese territory, evidenced by a precision naval strike in Tripoli that successfully eliminated Hamas commander Wasim Attallah Ali.25

3.2.2 Policy & Diplomacy

Israeli political and diplomatic leadership maintains an inflexible stance regarding war termination conditions, mirroring but remaining distinct from the posture of the United States. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his war cabinet view the current conflict as a historic, generational opportunity to permanently eliminate Iran’s nuclear program and its ballistic missile threat, framing the regime as an existential danger that cannot be managed through diplomacy.25

Israeli Ambassador to the United Nations Danny Danon explicitly stated that international calls for a ceasefire are premature. He asserted that Israel must “finish the job” and continue to “hammer, to dismantle” Iranian capabilities,including nuclear sites, ballistic networks, regional proxies, and naval threats,before any diplomatic off-ramps can be considered.14 The Israeli strategic calculus is heavily reliant on Washington’s military umbrella, but differences in long-term objectives remain. While Israel’s primary focus is the neutralization of the existential physical threat, US rhetoric has explicitly integrated regime change and internal Iranian uprisings into its end-state goals, a scenario Israeli planners view cautiously due to the potential for protracted regional chaos.44

3.2.3 Civilian Impact

The civilian impact within Israel remains significant, driven primarily by sustained rocket, drone, and ballistic missile attacks launched by Iran and Hezbollah. Over the past 36 hours, air raid sirens sounded across central Israel, the greater Tel Aviv metropolitan area, and Jerusalem.7 While the Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow defense systems have intercepted the vast majority of inbound projectiles, shrapnel from interceptions and direct impacts have caused localized damage to residential buildings.47

At least 11 civilian fatalities have been reported in Israel since the conflict’s inception.15 The psychological and societal impact is profound; the Iranian strategy of targeting densely populated urban centers is clearly designed to raise the domestic costs of the intervention for the Israeli public.37 Furthermore, due to the acute and ongoing security threats, civil authorities implemented emergency closures of all holy sites within Jerusalem’s Old City and canceled Friday prayers.3 In the north, the conflict has displaced significant populations as the IDF mandates the evacuation of communities near the Lebanese border to facilitate military operations.18

3.3 United States

3.3.1 Military Actions & Posture

Operation Epic Fury constitutes the largest regional concentration of American military firepower in a generation, designed to execute a rapid, overwhelming degradation of the Iranian state’s ability to wage war.29 Directed by US Central Command (CENTCOM), the operation has already struck over 1,700 targets utilizing a vast array of assets, including B-1, B-2 stealth, and B-52 bombers, F-22 and F-35 stealth fighters, and naval guided-missile destroyers firing Tomahawk land-attack missiles.49

The primary operational focus of the last 36 hours has been the complete annihilation of the Iranian Navy to secure freedom of navigation, and the systematic hunting of mobile ballistic missile launchers.29 US forces have achieved significant tactical success in the maritime domain; a US Navy submarine notably engaged and sank the Iranian warship IRIS Dena off the coast of Sri Lanka, while the IRIS Bushehr was forced to seek emergency harbor and request assistance, effectively neutralizing Iran’s blue-water naval projection.15

However, the human cost for US forces is mounting. The Department of Defense confirmed that the number of US Service Members Killed in Action (KIA) has risen to six.51 The Army identified four Reserve soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command who were killed by an Iranian drone strike at the Port of Shuaiba in Kuwait.52 Additionally, the remains of two unaccounted-for personnel were recovered from a facility struck earlier in the campaign.51 The financial burden of the conflict is also immense; the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) estimates the cost of the first 100 hours of Operation Epic Fury at $3.7 billion,averaging $891 million per day,the vast majority of which was not previously budgeted.3

3.3.2 Policy & Diplomacy

President Donald Trump’s administration has adopted an uncompromising, maximalist diplomatic posture. In statements issued on March 6 and 7, President Trump flatly ruled out any negotiated settlement short of the Iranian regime’s “unconditional surrender.”.7 Trump has explicitly linked the military campaign to a broader regime-change doctrine, announcing his intention to oversee the reconstruction of the Iranian state under the slogan “Make Iran Great Again” (MIGA).11 Furthermore, he has inserted the United States directly into the Iranian succession crisis, publicly declaring that any succession by Mojtaba Khamenei is “unacceptable” and that the US will have a role in selecting “acceptable” leaders.3

To sustain the operational tempo of its primary regional ally, the US State Department bypassed standard congressional review protocols to approve an emergency $151.8 million munitions sale to Israel.7 Secretary of War/Defense Pete Hegseth indicated that the conflict will escalate further, warning that the US is preparing a forthcoming bombing campaign that will be “the most intense of the weeklong conflict,” designed to irrevocably break the regime’s will to fight.7 Anticipating the severe economic fallout of the Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the administration has also ordered the US Development Finance Corporation to begin underwriting war-risk insurance for maritime shipping in the Persian Gulf, accompanied by promises of US Navy escorts for commercial vessels.54

3.3.3 Civilian Impact

Domestically, the conflict has polarized the American public and raised significant homeland security concerns. Early polling data indicates a deeply divided electorate; a YouGov poll found that 45% of respondents believe the administration made “the wrong decision” in attacking Iran, compared to 31% who support it, while Morning Consult showed a near-even split (42% prefer diplomacy, 41% support airstrikes).55

The homeland security apparatus is on heightened alert due to Iranian asymmetric retaliation strategies, which historical precedent suggests may target US soil or interests abroad. On March 6, a Pakistani national was convicted in the US for a plot to assassinate Donald Trump and other politicians,an operation orchestrated by Iranian intelligence in delayed retaliation for the 2020 killing of Qasem Soleimani.7 Simultaneously, British authorities arrested four men in London suspected of aiding Iranian intelligence by spying on the local Jewish community.53 Furthermore, the conflict has triggered a massive logistical crisis for American citizens abroad; an estimated 20,000 Americans have evacuated or are attempting to evacuate the Middle East, leading to severe bottlenecks at regional transit hubs as commercial aviation routes collapse.3

4.0 Regional and Gulf State Impacts

The geopolitical containment of the US-Israel-Iran war has decisively failed, transforming the Arabian Peninsula and the broader Gulf into an active, multi-domain combat theater. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, which host critical US military infrastructure, logistical hubs, and naval headquarters, have been violently drawn into the conflict. This reality shatters years of intense pre-war diplomatic lobbying by these states, which had sought to balance relations with Washington while pursuing détente with Tehran to prevent their territories from becoming a battleground.34 The regional security architecture is now under existential threat, characterized by daily airspace violations, targeted infrastructural damage, and the looming specter of a global economic crisis.

Saudi Arabia The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia finds itself in a highly precarious position, attempting to defend its sovereignty while desperately seeking a diplomatic off-ramp. Riyadh is utilizing urgent diplomatic backchannels to engage directly with Tehran, aiming to defuse tensions and prevent further military spillover.6 However, the military reality on the ground contradicts these diplomatic efforts. Over the last 36 hours, the Royal Saudi Air Defense Forces successfully intercepted an inbound Iranian ballistic missile near the capital, Riyadh, and intercepted an additional three ballistic missiles over Al-Kharj. The latter strikes were explicitly targeting the US military presence at the Prince Sultan Air Base.7 In response to these provocations, Saudi Defense Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman issued a stern public warning to Iran to “avoid miscalculation,” highlighting the fragility of the landmark 2023 Chinese-brokered normalization agreement between the two nations, which now appears functionally obsolete.7

United Arab Emirates (UAE) The UAE has sustained profound and lasting economic and infrastructural disruptions, bearing the brunt of Iran’s early retaliatory strategy. Over 120 Iranian attack drones and multiple ballistic missiles have breached Emirati airspace, specifically targeting the US assets stationed at the Al-Minhad and Al-Dhafra air bases.3 The civilian impact of these interceptions has been severe; explosions and falling interceptor shrapnel near Dubai International Airport (DXB),the world’s second-busiest international aviation hub,forced the immediate suspension of operations. Incoming commercial flights were forced to execute emergency go-arounds and enter prolonged holding patterns over neighboring Saudi airspace, causing minor civilian injuries on the ground.7 The economic shock to the UAE’s tourism, finance, and logistics-driven economy is critical, threatening the state’s foundational model of regional stability.

Qatar & Energy Markets Qatar, which houses the forward headquarters of US CENTCOM at the sprawling Al Udeid Air Base, has been subjected to missile and drone barrages directly targeting the capital, Doha.3 While the physical damage has been mitigated by air defenses, the macroeconomic impact originating from Qatar is unparalleled. QatarEnergy, the world’s largest producer of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), has officially halted production due to the extreme regional insecurity.54 Qatari Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi issued a dire warning that a prolonged shutdown of Gulf energy exports, coupled with the Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, could push global oil prices to $150 per barrel. Al-Kaabi stated unequivocally that the continuation of the conflict could “bring down the economies of the world”.15

Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman The northern Gulf states are absorbing direct kinetic damage and human losses. Kuwait has suffered the only confirmed US fatalities of the conflict thus far. Following the devastating drone strike at Port Shuaiba that killed four US Army Reserve soldiers, Iranian forces have repeatedly targeted the Ali al Salem Airbase. These strikes have successfully penetrated local defenses, severely damaging aircraft shelters, equipment warehouses, and critical logistics infrastructure.19 In response to the deteriorating security environment, the United States has suspended all operations at its embassy in Kuwait City, and the German government announced the withdrawal of its military personnel from both Kuwait and Bahrain.3

In Bahrain, home to the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet Headquarters, Iranian aggression resulted in a direct missile strike on a state-run oil refinery, causing significant fires and infrastructural damage.3 Oman, a nation that has traditionally maintained a strict posture of neutrality and served as the primary diplomatic mediator between Tehran and Washington, saw its vital Port of Duqm targeted. While Iranian sources unofficially claimed the strike was a “mistake” by the IRGC, the incident has shattered Muscat’s “friend to all” security posture, forcing the Sultanate to re-evaluate its strategic vulnerability.60

Airspace, Logistics, and Global Supply Chains The Middle East is currently experiencing an unprecedented, region-wide aviation and logistical lockdown. Commercial airspace over Iran, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, and Bahrain is classified as a Level 1 (Moderate to High Risk) No-Fly zone by the FAA, EASA, and other major international aviation authorities.22 The closure of these vital corridors has stranded hundreds of thousands of passengers globally and forced the cancellation of over 19,000 scheduled flights.56

Furthermore, the maritime logistics sector is facing near-total paralysis. Global shipping conglomerates, including Danish giant Maersk, have suspended all cargo booking acceptance in and out of the UAE, Oman, Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia.19 The combination of airspace closures, port strikes, and the active IRGC blockade of the Strait of Hormuz severely threatens global supply chains, presenting an imminent risk of global economic recession if the operational environment does not stabilize.

NationStrategic US Assets HostedRecent Kinetic Impact / Incident (Last 36 Hours)Stated Security Posture / Diplomatic Action
Saudi ArabiaPrince Sultan Air BaseIntercepted multiple ballistic missiles over Riyadh and Al-Kharj.Issued stern warnings to Iran; actively utilizing diplomatic backchannels to defuse tension.
UAEAl-Dhafra, Al-Minhad Air BasesDXB Airport suspended operations due to shrapnel; 120+ drones intercepted.Managing severe economic shock; directly targeted by continuous IRGC strikes.
QatarAl Udeid Air Base (CENTCOM HQ)Missile and drone barrage targeted Doha.Halting LNG production; warning international community of $150/barrel oil threat.
KuwaitAli al Salem Airbase, Camp ArifjanEmbassy closed; Airbase infrastructure damaged; US casualties confirmed.German troop withdrawal; recovering from the loss of US logistics personnel.
BahrainUS Fifth Fleet HeadquartersState-run oil refinery struck by missile; civilian areas targeted.Condemned Iranian aggression via the Arab League; managing German troop withdrawal.
OmanPort of Duqm / Logistics HubsPort targeted (claimed as a “mistake” by the IRGC).Re-evaluating historical neutral mediator status and vulnerability.

5.0 Appendices

Appendix A: Methodology

This Situation Report (SITREP) was generated through a comprehensive, real-time synthesis of global Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT), official state broadcasts, military press releases (e.g., CENTCOM, IDF), and geopolitical security monitors. The analytical window strictly covers the 36 hours from March 5, 18:00 UTC to March 7, 06:00 UTC, 2026. An intentional contextual overlap spanning the campaign’s initiation on February 28 was utilized to ensure narrative continuity regarding force degradation, casualty figures, and strategic intent.

Conflicting reports within the intelligence stream were evaluated based on source credibility and historical patterns of state media. For example, early claims that the Assembly of Experts formally elected Mojtaba Khamenei on March 4 were weighed against later, more granular intelligence indicating severe internal resistance, boycotts, and delayed virtual meetings extending into March 6 and 7. The latter, depicting a deadlocked succession crisis, was deemed highly credible and integrated into the report. Where casualty figures or battle damage assessments (BDA) diverged between belligerents, independent assessments,such as financial estimates by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and casualty reports from the Iranian Red Crescent,were prioritized to maintain absolute analytical neutrality and factual rigor.

Appendix B: Glossary of Acronyms

  • BDA: Battle Damage Assessment
  • C2: Command and Control
  • CENTCOM: United States Central Command (Geographic combatant command covering the Middle East, Egypt, and Central Asia)
  • CSIS: Center for Strategic and International Studies (Washington D.C.-based think tank)
  • DXB: Dubai International Airport
  • EASA: European Union Aviation Safety Agency
  • FAA: Federal Aviation Administration (United States)
  • GCC: Gulf Cooperation Council (Political and economic union of Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE)
  • IADS: Integrated Air Defense Systems (A networked array of radars, surface-to-air missiles, and C2 nodes)
  • IAF: Israeli Air Force
  • IDF: Israel Defense Forces
  • IRGC: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (A multi-service primary branch of the Iranian Armed Forces)
  • KIA: Killed in Action
  • LNG: Liquefied Natural Gas
  • MIGA: “Make Iran Great Again” (A political slogan utilized by US President Donald Trump regarding the post-war reconstruction of Iran)
  • NOTAM: Notice to Air Missions (Alerts filed with an aviation authority to alert aircraft pilots of potential hazards)
  • OSINT: Open-Source Intelligence
  • UAV: Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (Drone)

Appendix C: Glossary of Foreign Words

  • Ayatollah: A high-ranking title given to Usuli Twelver Shī‘ah clerics, denoting significant expertise in Islamic studies.
  • Dahiyeh: The predominantly Shia southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon; a known demographic stronghold and operational headquarters for Hezbollah.
  • Khamenei (Ali / Mojtaba): Ali Khamenei was the second Supreme Leader of Iran, assassinated by US-Israeli strikes on February 28, 2026. Mojtaba Khamenei is his son, a highly influential cleric, and a central, highly contested figure in the current succession crisis.
  • Majlis: The Islamic Consultative Assembly; the national legislative body (parliament) of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
  • Pezeshkian (Masoud): The incumbent President of Iran and a leading member of the wartime Interim Leadership Council.
  • Velayat-e-Faqih: “Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist,” the foundational political and religious doctrine of the Iranian state post-1979, which justifies the absolute temporal and spiritual rule of the Supreme Leader.

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Operation Epic Fury Daily SITREP – March 06, 2026

1.0 Executive Summary

During the preceding 36-hour operational window (covering approximately 1800Z on March 04 to 0600Z on March 06, 2026), the allied military campaign comprising United States Operation Epic Fury and Israeli Operation Roaring Lion transitioned decisively into its secondary phase. This transition is characterized by a systemic shift away from the initial suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD) and leadership decapitation, moving toward the systematic, theater-wide dismantlement of the Islamic Republic of Iran’s defense industrial base, naval power projection capabilities, and retaliatory infrastructure.1 The conflict has simultaneously undergone significant geographic internationalization, with kinetic spillover affecting the Caucasus, the wider Persian Gulf, and the deep waters of the Indian Ocean.3

The most critical escalations and systemic shifts over the last 36 hours encompass three primary domains: Naval Decimation and Maritime Expansion, Regional Spillover and Diplomatic Rupture, and Theocratic Succession Crisis and Internal Destabilization.

Firstly, within the maritime domain, the United States Navy and allied forces have severely degraded the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy (IRGCN) and the Islamic Republic of Iran Navy (IRIN). Notable engagements include the unprecedented sinking of an Iranian warship by a U.S. nuclear-powered submarine operating in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Sri Lanka, and the targeted destruction of the IRIS Shahid Bagheri, a converted commercial container ship utilized as a forward-deployed drone carrier.3 These actions effectively neutralize Iran’s blue-water asymmetric projection capabilities but have triggered soaring maritime war-risk insurance premiums and massive disruptions to global shipping logistics.6

Secondly, the Iranian retaliatory strategy has expanded from targeting specific U.S. and Israeli military assets to imposing systemic costs on Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) host nations and neighboring states. This is a deliberate “barrage-thy-neighbors” doctrine designed to leverage regional vulnerability to force an allied cessation of hostilities. In an unprecedented escalation of the theater of war, Iranian suicide drones breached the airspace of the Caucasus, striking the Nakhchivan exclave of Azerbaijan.7 This attack damaged an airport and a civilian school, prompting the government in Baku to completely withdraw its diplomatic personnel from Tehran and Tabriz.7 Simultaneously, heavy ballistic missile barrages targeted the Kingdom of Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates, and the State of Kuwait, aimed at maximizing geopolitical pressure on sovereign nations hosting U.S. military bases.4

Thirdly, inside the Islamic Republic, the structural integrity of the regime faces profound constitutional challenges following the elimination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Allied airstrikes intentionally targeted the Assembly of Experts compound in Qom,the 88-member clerical body constitutionally mandated to select the next Supreme Leader under the doctrine of Velayat-e Faqih.11 By physically disrupting the succession apparatus, the allied campaign seeks to induce severe command-and-control paralysis and permanently disrupt the enemy’s decision loop.12 Unconfirmed intelligence reports suggest the expedited elevation of Mojtaba Khamenei by surviving hardline factions, though this has been preemptively rejected by U.S. political leadership, signaling an uncompromising allied posture toward regime continuity.1

In summation, the conflict has moved beyond a localized punitive expedition into a theater-wide, multi-domain war of attrition. While allied forces maintain absolute air supremacy, Iran’s strategy relies heavily on instilling fear and artificially inflating the economic and diplomatic costs of the war. Tehran is banking on its deep civilizational resilience and the mounting threat of global energy shocks to fracture the allied coalition before its domestic security apparatus completely collapses.14

Map of potential strikes on Iran & retaliatory vectors, including Operation Epic Fury zones.

2.0 Chronological Timeline of Key Events (Last 36 Hours)

(Note: All times are approximated to Coordinated Universal Time based on synthesized regional reporting.)

  • March 04, 2026 | 15:30 UTC: Saudi Arabian air defense forces intercept hostile drones and cruise missiles directed toward the Prince Sultan Air Base and the King Khalid International Airport, marking a significant escalation in regional targeting.16
  • March 04, 2026 | 17:00 UTC: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) formally announce the completion of over 1,600 “strike sorties” against Iranian military targets since the initiation of Operation Roaring Lion, alongside confirmation of at least seven distinct waves of Iranian retaliatory ballistic missile launches.17
  • March 04, 2026 | 19:30 UTC: Allied aircraft execute heavy, localized airstrikes in southeastern Tehran, specifically targeting the headquarters of multiple Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) branches and the IRGC Ground Forces Research and Self-Sufficiency Jihad Organization.18
  • March 04, 2026 | 21:00 UTC: A United States nuclear-powered submarine successfully launches a torpedo strike in the Indian Ocean, sinking an Iranian warship. Sri Lankan maritime authorities mount a rescue operation, retrieving 32 of the 180 sailors aboard.3
  • March 05, 2026 | 02:15 UTC: The IDF issues formal evacuation warnings for civilian residents situated in the southern suburbs of Beirut (Dahiyeh) and several villages in the Bekaa Valley, signaling an imminent and aggressive expansion of the northern front against Hezbollah.1
  • March 05, 2026 | 04:00 UTC: Sustained Iranian ballistic missile barrages target the Kingdom of Bahrain. Bahraini air defense grids intercept 65 of 75 incoming missiles. Ten missiles impact the ground, inflicting structural damage on a hotel and residential structures in Manama, as well as an industrial facility in Maameer.10
  • March 05, 2026 | 06:30 UTC: The United Arab Emirates (UAE) Ministry of Defense publicly confirms the successful interception of six out of seven incoming ballistic missiles and 125 out of 131 suicide drones targeting Emirati sovereign territory.1
  • March 05, 2026 | 09:00 UTC: An unprecedented northern territorial spillover occurs as four Iranian suicide drones violate Azerbaijani airspace in the Nakhchivan exclave. The strikes damage the local airport terminal and detonate near a secondary school, resulting in traumatic brain injuries to four civilians.4
  • March 05, 2026 | 11:45 UTC: The IDF issues secondary, targeted evacuation warnings for the Abbas Abad Industrial Zone and the Shenzar Industrial Zone located in Pakdasht, Tehran Province, preceding precision kinetic strikes on critical Iranian missile production facilities.1
  • March 05, 2026 | 14:00 UTC: In Washington D.C., the United States House of Representatives rejects a bipartisan Iran War Powers Resolution in a tight 212-219 vote, maintaining the executive branch’s authority to prosecute the conflict.20
  • March 05, 2026 | 16:30 UTC: The Islamic Resistance in Iraq (IRI), acting as an Iranian proxy, claims responsibility for a series of drone strikes targeting U.S. forces stationed at Camp Buehring in Kuwait and military installations in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan.1
  • March 05, 2026 | 21:00 UTC: Israel initiates an intensive “broad-scale wave” of airstrikes (publicly designated as the 12th wave) on Tehran, focusing strictly on regime command and control (C2) centers, ballistic missile launchers, and remaining air defense perimeters.21
  • March 05, 2026 | 23:30 UTC: At least 11 synchronized Israeli airstrikes pound the Dahiyeh district in Beirut, targeting Hezbollah infrastructure, sparking widespread fires near gas stations, and causing mass civilian displacement across the Lebanese capital.23
  • March 06, 2026 | 02:00 UTC: U.S. forces locate, strike, and heavily damage the IRIS Shahid Bagheri, an Iranian drone-carrier vessel operating at sea, significantly degrading Iran’s offshore UAV launch and maritime surveillance capabilities.5
  • March 06, 2026 | 04:30 UTC: The Azerbaijani Ministry of Foreign Affairs officially announces the total evacuation of its diplomatic personnel from the embassy in Tehran and the consulate in Tabriz in direct response to the Nakhchivan drone strikes.9

3.0 Situation by Primary Country

3.1 Iran

3.1.1 Military Actions & Posture

The operational capacity of the Iranian armed forces,encompassing both the conventional Artesh and the ideologically driven Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),has been heavily degraded across multiple domains, though their asymmetric retaliatory capabilities remain functionally lethal. Intelligence assessments provided by U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) indicate that the frequency of Iranian ballistic missile launches has precipitously decreased by 86% since the campaign’s inception, while suicide drone deployment has seen a commensurate 73% reduction.25 This statistical collapse is not indicative of a lack of Iranian resolve, but rather reflects the profound success of allied forces in actively hunting, identifying, and neutralizing mobile truck-mounted launchers across the expansive Iranian plateau.26 During the initial 100 hours of the conflict, allied airpower methodically dismantled Iran’s Integrated Air Defense System (IADS), allowing coalition aircraft to operate with near impunity in Iranian airspace.27

Consequently, the Iranian military posture has been forced to adapt rapidly. Depleted of heavy ballistic interceptors and facing entirely uncontested skies, the IRGC has shifted its strategic focus toward overwhelming regional air defenses through swarm tactics. This involves the mass deployment of cheaper, loitering munitions and suicide drones designed to exhaust the interceptor stockpiles of Israel and the Gulf States.18 Furthermore, the Iranian Air Force suffered notable tactical losses, including the downing of at least one YAK-130 fighter jet by an Israeli F-35 over Tehran, alongside the destruction of legacy airframes including F-4Es, F-5Es, Su-22M4s, and Su-24MKs.13

The naval domain has proven particularly catastrophic for the Islamic Republic. The U.S. Navy and allied assets have executed a relentless campaign of maritime interdiction. The confirmed sinking of 18 warships, one submarine, and the critical drone-carrier vessel IRIS Shahid Bagheri has effectively neutralized Iran’s ability to project sea control beyond the immediate littoral waters of the Strait of Hormuz.5 The IRIS Shahid Bagheri is not a standard naval vessel; it is a converted commercial container ship featuring a 180-meter flight deck, capable of traveling 22,000 nautical miles without refueling, and described by CENTCOM as being roughly the size of a World War II aircraft carrier.5 Its destruction removes a vital offshore platform for launching drone swarms against commercial shipping. Furthermore, the loss of a major Iranian warship to a U.S. submarine torpedo in the deep waters of the Indian Ocean,resulting in 87 sailors killed in action and 61 missing off the coast of Sri Lanka,underscores the absolute maritime dominance of allied forces and demonstrates a zero-tolerance policy for Iranian naval presence globally.3

3.1.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The Iranian regime is currently navigating an unprecedented constitutional, political, and existential crisis following the assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28. In a textbook application of leadership decapitation strategy, the allied campaign has sought to get inside the enemy’s decision loop by systematically eliminating seasoned commanders, thereby forcing the system to become consumed by succession, suspicion, and internal coordination.12 To disrupt the physical reconstitution of centralized authority, allied strikes systematically targeted the infrastructure of the Assembly of Experts in Qom and Tehran.11 This 88-member clerical body is legally required under the Iranian constitution to ratify the next Supreme Leader. Striking this facility is a direct assault on the foundational principle of Velayat-e Faqih (Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist), designed to undermine the legitimacy of the regime’s continuity.11

Despite this physical and psychological dislocation, the regime’s underlying civilizational and bureaucratic resilience has engaged. Power has been heavily devolved to regional military and civil commanders to ensure the continuity of government operations and to maintain state functions despite the severe disruptions at the top.11 Persistent intelligence leaks and regional reporting suggest that Mojtaba Khamenei, the son of the late Supreme Leader, has been quietly elected or is being aggressively positioned for the role by surviving hardline factions within the IRGC.13 Diplomatically, Tehran has adopted an absolutist and uncompromising stance; senior officials, including interim leadership figure Ali Larijani, have publicly stated that negotiations with the United States are permanently off the table, arguing that any future diplomatic attempt would begin from a position of diminished Iranian credibility.14 Iran continues to leverage its historical narrative of civilizational continuity, claiming an institutional capacity to outlast military campaigns, a resilience it intends to utilize to endure the current bombardment.14

3.1.3 Civilian Impact

The humanitarian situation within the borders of the Islamic Republic is deteriorating at a rapid and alarming pace. The Iranian Red Crescent Society formally acknowledges a death toll of at least 787 individuals, while independent human rights organizations monitoring the situation within Iran estimate civilian casualties to be as high as 1,097 killed and over 5,402 injured.28 Allied targeting parameters have heavily focused on military, internal security, and nuclear infrastructure; however, the sheer volume of ordnance deployed in densely populated urban centers,particularly Tehran, Isfahan, Karaj, and Kermanshah,has inevitably resulted in severe collateral damage and civilian loss of life.28

Critical civilian infrastructure has been struck amidst the bombardment. The 12,000-seat Azadi indoor stadium in Tehran has sustained massive damage, and tragedy struck early in the conflict when the Minab primary school, located adjacent to an IRGC complex, was destroyed, reportedly killing nearly 170 children.29 The strikes have also impacted irreplaceable cultural heritage sites, including damage to the historic Golestan Palace.13 Public mourning ceremonies, including the highly anticipated state funeral for the late Supreme Leader,whose predecessor’s funeral in 1989 drew millions,have been indefinitely postponed due to the continuous and overwhelming threat of aerial bombardment.3 This disruption of the mourning process further traumatizes a civilian populace already grappling with mass internal displacement, widespread urban fires, severed communications, and a collapsing domestic economy.

3.2 Israel

3.2.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) are operating under a highly complex, dual-front, high-intensity warfare paradigm, leveraging their technological superiority to maximize impact. On the primary eastern front against Iran, the Israeli Air Force (IAF) has conducted an astonishing 1,600 strike sorties deep into Iranian territory over the course of the conflict.17 With the Iranian air defense network largely neutralized during the first 72 hours, Israeli F-35 stealth fighters and F-15 strike eagles are operating with near impunity.27 The tactical focus of Operation Roaring Lion has evolved significantly; having completed the initial decapitation and SEAD phases, the IDF is presently executing its 12th wave of strikes, explicitly shifting focus to the systematic destruction of the Iranian defense industrial base.1 This includes targeted evacuation warnings and subsequent strikes on the Abbas Abad and Shenzar Industrial Zones in Pakdasht, centers for Iranian missile production.1 Furthermore, Israeli forces successfully struck and dismantled a covert nuclear compound near Tehran, designated “Minzadehei,” aimed at permanently degrading Iran’s nuclear latency.17

Simultaneously, on the northern front, the IDF has aggressively escalated preemptive and retaliatory operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon to secure Israel’s northern border and prevent a coordinated Axis of Resistance counter-offensive. Between the late hours of March 5 and the early hours of March 6, the IDF launched at least 11 synchronized, high-yield airstrikes against Hezbollah command nodes embedded in the Dahiyeh district of southern Beirut.23 Ground operations remain limited but highly active, focused on dismantling forward-deployed Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon to prevent cross-border proxy incursions and secure northern Israeli communities.31

3.2.2 Policy & Diplomacy

Israeli political and military leadership project an aura of absolute resolve, operating under a clearly defined doctrine of “peace through strength”.32 The government views the current operational window as a historic, generational opportunity to permanently alter the balance of power in the Middle East by physically dismantling the capabilities of the Iranian regime and its proxy network. An Israeli official succinctly noted that the nation intends to make it “very expensive to touch us,” demonstrating a punitive deterrence strategy.32 Despite mounting international concern regarding the humanitarian impact in Lebanon and the potential for wider regional destabilization, Israel has shown no inclination whatsoever toward de-escalation. Diplomatic messaging remains tightly synchronized with Washington, reinforcing a unified front that will not accept an Iranian reconstitution of forces, the preservation of its nuclear program, or the appointment of a hostile successor to Khamenei.1

3.2.3 Civilian Impact

While the IDF has successfully exported the vast majority of kinetic destruction to foreign soil, the Israeli home front remains under sustained psychological and physical pressure. Over the course of the conflict, 12 Israelis have been killed, 11 are missing, and 1,274 have been injured.28 The country remains under near-constant air raid alerts. Coordinated Hezbollah rocket fire directed at northern communities and Iranian ballistic missiles targeting central Israel,including major population centers like Tel Aviv, Petah Tikva, Jerusalem, and Beit Shemesh,require the continuous, round-the-clock activation of the Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow defense systems.15 The economic activity of the nation is heavily restricted, educational institutions are operating under emergency protocols, and the civilian population remains in a high state of mobilization and anxiety, living in close proximity to fortified shelters as the war of attrition continues.

3.3 United States

3.3.1 Military Actions & Posture

United States Central Command (CENTCOM) is executing Operation Epic Fury with an overwhelming deployment of strategic, tactical, and naval assets. The U.S. has unleashed over 2,000 precision munitions utilizing a formidable triad of strategic bombers (B-1, B-2, and the venerable B-52 Stratofortresses, which have seen action in every major conflict since 1965), F-22 and F-35 stealth fighters, and submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles.34 The U.S. military posture is increasingly focused on dominating the maritime domain and the systematic hunting of mobile missile launchers on land. The torpedoing of deep-water Iranian warships and the aerial destruction of the drone carrier IRIS Shahid Bagheri demonstrate a comprehensive strategy to eliminate Iranian naval presence across the region.5

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, conducting briefings from CENTCOM headquarters at MacDill Air Force Base alongside Navy Adm. Brad Cooper, emphasized that American munitions stockpiles are vast, resilient, and fully capable of sustaining prolonged operations. Hegseth explicitly warned that the kinetic strikes against Tehran were “about to surge dramatically,” underscoring that the U.S. military has “only just begun to fight”.23 To date, the human cost to U.S. forces includes six service members killed in action and at least 18 injured, alongside the loss of three F-15E aircraft attributed to a friendly-fire incident over Kuwait airspace.28 Additionally, U.S. forces recently executed a complex operation to recover the remains of two previously unaccounted-for service members from a facility struck during the initial Iranian counter-attacks.39

3.3.2 Policy & Diplomacy

In Washington D.C., the executive branch maintains an aggressive, unyielding policy posture toward Tehran. President Donald Trump has publicly categorized the ongoing military operation’s performance as a “15 out of 10,” clearly articulating that the ultimate strategic objective is the total dismantlement of the Iranian security apparatus and the permanent prevention of nuclear weaponization.26 The President has also explicitly inserted the United States into the highly sensitive Iranian succession process, declaring to Western media that Washington must be involved in selecting a new leader and flatly refusing to accept the appointment of Mojtaba Khamenei or any figure who continues the anti-American policies of the previous regime.1

Domestically, the conflict has generated intense partisan friction and debate regarding the executive authority to wage war, though legislative attempts to curtail the conflict have failed. On March 5, the U.S. House of Representatives rejected a bipartisan Iran War Powers Resolution in a narrow 212-219 vote. This legislative outcome functionally provides the executive branch with continued political latitude and legal cover to prosecute the war without immediate Congressional interference, despite concerns raised by lawmakers over the lack of a defined exit strategy and the risks of “boots on the ground”.13

3.3.3 Civilian Impact

The immediate impact of the conflict on the U.S. civilian population is predominantly economic and logistical, rather than kinetic. Global energy markets have reacted violently to the instability in the Persian Gulf and the disruption of transit routes. Brent crude oil estimates have surged past $95 to $110 per barrel, leading to the largest single-day spike in domestic U.S. gasoline prices since 2005, exerting immediate inflationary pressure on American consumers.6 U.S. stock markets have also experienced high volatility, with the Dow Jones dropping over 1,000 points as the economic realities of a protracted Middle Eastern war set in.20

Logistically, the U.S. State Department has been forced into emergency footing, issuing urgent “DEPART NOW” advisories for over a dozen Middle Eastern nations.13 The department has initiated massive operations to extract citizens stranded by the widespread closure of regional airspace. While over 17,500 Americans have been successfully evacuated,largely via commercial means prior to the total airspace shutdown,the government is now actively securing military and charter aircraft to extract the remaining citizens as commercial options evaporate.41


Nation / ActorMilitary KIA (Estimated)Civilian KIA (Estimated)Total InjuredKey Infrastructure Losses
Iran1,000–1,500 28787–1,097 285,402+ 2818 Warships, 1 Submarine, Assembly of Experts, Minzadehei Nuclear Site 11
IsraelMinimal (2 injured) 2812 281,274 28Minor structural damage from missile debris (Tel Aviv, Petah Tikva) 15
United States6 28018+ 283 F-15E aircraft (friendly fire) 28
Lebanon / Hezbollah48 Leaders 2872–123 23437 28Dahiyeh Command Nodes, Al-Manar TV HQ 15

Table 1: Summary of Kinetic Impacts & Casualties (Data aggregated from allied military briefings, Iranian Red Crescent, and independent human rights observers).

4.0 Regional and Gulf State Impacts

The strategic geography of the Persian Gulf ensures that any high-intensity conflict involving the Islamic Republic of Iran inevitably bleeds into the sovereign territory and economic lifeblood of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states. Iran’s prevailing military doctrine,leveraging its geography to hold the global economy hostage,has resulted in the simultaneous targeting of every GCC state hosting U.S. military personnel, an unprecedented historical occurrence.6 This “barrage-thy-neighbors” strategy aims to instill fear and apply immense geopolitical pressure on U.S. allies, forcing them to demand a halt to the American campaign to save their own economies.15

4.1 Saudi Arabia

Despite early diplomatic efforts to distance itself from the U.S.-Israeli campaign and prioritize its 2023 rapprochement with Tehran, Riyadh has been drawn directly into the kinetic exchange. Iranian ballistic missiles and suicide drones have repeatedly targeted the Kingdom’s Eastern Province, a critical hub for global energy processing. Specifically, the massive Aramco refinery facility at Ras Tanura and the Prince Sultan Air Base have been subjected to incoming fire.44 The Royal Saudi Air Defense Forces have successfully intercepted the majority of these projectiles, claiming the destruction of at least 10 drones and 2 cruise missiles.46 However, the psychological and economic impact remains profound. Saudi Arabia has extended the suspension of its national carrier, Saudia, to eight major regional destinations, citing the unacceptable risk to civilian aviation, effectively isolating the Kingdom from key regional transit hubs.47

4.2 United Arab Emirates (UAE)

The UAE has experienced significant and highly visible aerial incursions, severely disrupting its status as a safe haven for international business. On March 5, Emirati air defenses were forced to engage a massive swarm, intercepting 125 out of 131 incoming suicide drones and six out of seven ballistic missiles.1 One missile successfully bypassed the defense grid, striking Emirati territory alongside six drones. The strikes have caused localized panic in civilian centers like Dubai, where mobile phones alerted residents to incoming fire, and have reportedly damaged offshore oil platforms.10 Diplomatically, the UAE has severed all remaining ties with Tehran, announcing the immediate closure of its embassy and the complete withdrawal of all diplomatic personnel.48 Furthermore, Abu Dhabi is reportedly exploring the implementation of severe economic countermeasures, including freezing all Iranian financial assets held within the Emirates, which would constitute a major blow to Iran’s ability to circumvent international sanctions and fund its proxy networks.50

4.3 Bahrain & Qatar

Bahrain, which serves as the critical headquarters for the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, has been subjected to some of the heaviest retaliatory barrages of the conflict. Early on March 5, Bahraini defense forces were overwhelmed as they intercepted 65 of 75 incoming Iranian ballistic missiles.10 Ten missiles successfully bypassed the defense grid, striking two residential buildings, a hotel in the capital city of Manama, and an industrial site in the crucial oil refining town of Maameer.10 Consequently, a state of emergency has been declared, and operations at the vital Khalifa bin Salman port have been suspended due to the threat environment. Notably, Qatari naval forces stationed inside a targeted Bahraini base survived the barrage unharmed, avoiding a direct intra-GCC diplomatic incident.19 Qatar itself has endured missile strikes targeting the Al Udeid Airbase, the largest U.S. military facility in the Middle East. While Qatari air defenses intercepted one missile and another caused no casualties, the threat previously forced Doha to temporarily shut down its liquid natural gas (LNG) exports. This closure briefly removed 20% of the global LNG supply from the market, causing European gas prices to aggressively spike by 50%.6

4.4 Kuwait, Oman, and Jordan

Kuwait has sustained tragic casualties among its military personnel due to Iranian proxy strikes aimed at U.S. installations. The Islamic Resistance in Iraq (IRI) claims to have launched dozens of drones at the U.S. Camp Buehring and Ali al Salem bases, resulting in the deaths of at least two Kuwaiti troops, prompting formal condolences from U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio.20 Oman, traditionally the most reliable and neutral mediator in the region, has seen its diplomatic efforts totally collapse. Iranian drones successfully struck Omani oil storage tanks, effectively ending Muscat’s neutrality and forcing its alignment with the unprecedented joint GCC-U.S. statement condemning Iranian aggression and asserting the right to self-defense.6 Jordan, while further removed, has also reported proxy drone incursions into its airspace, necessitating high states of military readiness.4

GCC NationKey Targets AttackedIntercepts / ImpactsDiplomatic / Economic Action Taken
Saudi ArabiaPrince Sultan Air Base, Ras Tanura Refinery10 Drones, 2 Cruise Missiles InterceptedCondemns attacks; Saudia airlines suspends flights to 8 destinations.
UAEDubai vicinity, Offshore Platforms125/131 Drones Intercepted; 6/7 Missiles InterceptedCloses Embassy in Tehran; Threatens total freeze of Iranian assets.
BahrainManama (Hotels/Residential), Maameer65/75 Missiles Intercepted; 10 ImpactsDeclares State of Emergency; Suspends Khalifa bin Salman port.
QatarAl Udeid Airbase1 Missile Intercepted; 1 Impact (No casualties)Condemns attacks; Naval forces in Bahrain survive strikes unharmed.
KuwaitCamp Buehring, Ali al SalemMultiple drone incursionsMourns 2 Kuwaiti troops KIA; aligns with joint GCC condemnation.

Table 2: Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Kinetic Impacts and Diplomatic Responses.

4.5 The Caucasus Spillover: Azerbaijan

In perhaps the most highly destabilizing regional development of the last 36 hours, the conflict violently breached the Middle East and entered the Caucasus. On March 5, at least four Iranian suicide drones crossed the northern border into the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan. The drones targeted civilian infrastructure, striking the local airport terminal and detonating near a secondary school, resulting in traumatic brain injuries to four Azerbaijani civilians.4

The geopolitical ramifications of this spillover are severe and threaten to ignite a secondary regional war. Iran has historically viewed Azerbaijan with deep suspicion due to Baku’s close military and intelligence ties with Israel, fearing that Azerbaijani airbases could be used as staging grounds for the IAF.7 The Iranian armed forces officially denied launching the attack, baselessly accusing Israel of staging a “false flag” provocation from within Azerbaijani territory to drag Baku into the war.7 In immediate and furious retaliation, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev accused Iran of state terrorism, placed the military on its highest alert level (mobilization level number one), and ordered the complete and immediate evacuation of all Azerbaijani diplomatic personnel from the embassy in Tehran and the consulate in Tabriz.7 This rupture shatters regional stability in the Caucasus and opens the distinct possibility of a secondary, northern front, forcing a beleaguered Iran to divert critically needed military resources to secure its borders with a well-armed neighbor.

4.6 Global Economic and Aviation Paralysis

The regional airspace across the Middle East has effectively ceased to function as a viable commercial transit corridor. The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has updated and extended its Conflict Zone Information Bulletin (CZIB), advising all operators to strictly avoid the airspace of Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, Oman, and Saudi Arabia due to the extreme risk from interceptors and ballistic missiles.51

The logistical fallout is staggering. Over 27,000 flights to Middle Eastern hubs have been canceled since the conflict began on February 28, representing over half of the 51,600 flights scheduled for the region, leaving hundreds of thousands of international travelers stranded in transit hubs.41 Major carriers including Air France, KLM, British Airways, Emirates, and Etihad have completely suspended or drastically modified their regional services.52 Maritime trade through the vital Strait of Hormuz has dropped to near zero. Following the targeting of commercial and naval vessels, major shipping conglomerates,including Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd, and CMA CGM,have suspended all transits due to the total withdrawal of war-risk insurance for the Persian Gulf, essentially severing the region’s hydrocarbon exports from the global market.6

5.0 Appendices

Appendix A: Methodology

This Situation Report (SITREP) was synthesized utilizing a comprehensive, real-time deep research sweep of global Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT). Sources prioritized in this analysis include official state broadcasts (e.g., United States Central Command press releases, UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs diplomatic statements, Azerbaijani state media outputs), established military monitor networks (e.g., The Institute for the Study of War, Critical Threats Project), international news syndicates (Reuters, Associated Press, Al Jazeera), and independent human rights monitors.

To ensure absolute continuity of events and avoid reporting gaps, an intentional 36-hour temporal overlap was utilized, capturing the highly fluid transition of events from the late evening of March 04, 2026, through the early morning of March 06, 2026. Conflicting data points,such as discrepancies between allied strike success rates, Iranian state media casualty reports, and independent ground observers,were weighed by defaulting to the most conservative overlapping estimates, or by presenting both claims with strict attribution to maintain absolute analytical neutrality and factual integrity.

Appendix B: Glossary of Acronyms

  • C2: Command and Control. The exercise of authority and direction by a properly designated commander over assigned and attached forces.
  • CENTCOM: United States Central Command. The unified combatant command responsible for U.S. military operations in the Middle East, Central Asia, and parts of South Asia.
  • CZIB: Conflict Zone Information Bulletin. Advisories issued by aviation authorities (like EASA) detailing risks to civilian flight paths.
  • EASA: European Union Aviation Safety Agency.
  • GCC: Gulf Cooperation Council. A regional intergovernmental political and economic union comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.
  • IADS: Integrated Air Defense System. A networked system of radars, anti-aircraft artillery, and surface-to-air missiles.
  • IAF: Israeli Air Force.
  • IDF: Israel Defense Forces.
  • IRGC: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. The primary branch of the Iranian Armed Forces, distinct from the conventional military, focused on regime survival, internal security, and asymmetric warfare.
  • IRGCN: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy.
  • IRI: Islamic Resistance in Iraq. An umbrella term for various Iran-backed Shia militias operating in Iraq and Syria.
  • KIA: Killed in Action.
  • LNG: Liquefied Natural Gas.
  • SEAD / DEAD: Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses / Destruction of Enemy Air Defenses. Military actions to neutralize ground-based air defenses.
  • UAV: Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (Drone).

Appendix C: Glossary of Foreign Words

  • Artesh: The conventional military forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran, operating parallel to the IRGC.
  • Assembly of Experts: An 88-member deliberative body of Islamic theologians in Iran, constitutionally charged with electing, supervising, and theoretically removing the Supreme Leader.
  • Basij: A paramilitary volunteer militia established in Iran, subordinate to the IRGC, utilized primarily for internal security, crowd control, and moral policing.
  • Dahiyeh: A predominantly Shia Muslim suburb located south of Beirut, Lebanon; historically serving as the central command hub, administrative center, and primary stronghold for Hezbollah.
  • Khamenei: Referring to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the second Supreme Leader of Iran (assassinated in the opening strikes on Feb 28, 2026), or Mojtaba Khamenei, his son and a highly controversial potential successor currently maneuvering for power.
  • Velayat-e Faqih: “Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist,” the foundational political and theological doctrine of the Islamic Republic of Iran, which grants absolute political and religious authority to a single, highly qualified religious scholar (the Supreme Leader).

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  10. The Latest: New Iranian attacks target Israel and US bases as more Israeli strikes hit Lebanon, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.click2houston.com/news/2026/03/05/the-latest-new-iranian-attacks-target-israel-and-us-bases-as-more-israeli-strikes-hit-lebanon/
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  12. The US and Israel are waging war on an Iran they think they know. The reality is very different, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/mar/05/us-israel-war-iran-islamic-republic-theocracy-dictatorship
  13. Situation Report: Epic Fury (US-Iranian Conflict) as of March 04 …, accessed March 6, 2026, https://roancp.com/situation-report-epic-fury-us-iranian-conflict-as-of-march-04-2026/
  14. Operation Epic Fury Fails To Break Iran As Civilisational Resilience Prevails, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.thefridaytimes.com/06-Mar-2026/operation-epic-fury-fails-break-iran-civilisational-resilience-prevails
  15. Chaos sown by Iran’s attacks across the Persian Gulf is key to its strategy, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.ksat.com/news/world/2026/03/05/irans-barrage-of-attacks-across-the-persian-gulf-shows-regional-chaos-is-key-to-its-strategy/
  16. Timeline of the 2026 Iran conflict – Wikipedia, accessed March 6, 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_2026_Iran_conflict
  17. Israel conducts 1,600 strikes on Iran in 4 days of war, weathers Iranian missile and drones, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.fdd.org/analysis/2026/03/04/israel-conducts-1600-strikes-on-iran-in-4-days-of-war-weathers-iranian-missile-and-drones/
  18. Iran Update Evening Special Report, March 4, 2026 | ISW, accessed March 6, 2026, https://understandingwar.org/research/middle-east/iran-update-evening-special-report-march-4-2026/
  19. US–Israel war on Iran enters day 7: Dubai Airports handles 1,140 flights in 84 hours, UAE warns against sensitive videos, accessed March 6, 2026, https://gulfnews.com/uae/usisrael-war-on-iran-enters-day-7-limited-gcc-flights-warning-over-sensitive-videos-1.500465016
  20. The Latest: House joins Senate in rejecting war powers resolution to halt Trump’s attacks on Iran, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.clickorlando.com/news/2026/03/05/the-latest-new-iranian-attacks-target-israel-and-us-bases-as-more-israeli-strikes-hit-lebanon/
  21. ILTV On The Hour – March 5, 2026 | US Military Releases New Strike Footage – YouTube, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4nD8LcYnh10
  22. Intense Israeli strikes hit Iran and Lebanon as US warns the bombardment will ‘surge dramatically’, accessed March 6, 2026, https://apnews.com/article/iran-israel-us-march-6-2026-6108249f19c4bc162eacd7847976c174
  23. Intense Israeli strikes hit Iran and Lebanon as US warns the bombardment will ‘surge dramatically’, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.5newsonline.com/article/news/nation-world/attack-on-iran/israeli-us-airstrikes-surge-in-iran/507-0dae406a-9c56-4c28-9417-1d37568846cf
  24. Azerbaijan recalls its diplomats from Iran, accessed March 6, 2026, https://aze.media/azerbaijan-recalls-its-diplomats-from-iran/
  25. Iran Update Morning Special Report, March 4, 2026, accessed March 6, 2026, https://understandingwar.org/research/middle-east/iran-update-morning-special-report-march-4-2026/
  26. Watch: U.S releases new ‘unclassified’ footage showing attacks on Iran’s mobile missile ‘threats’, accessed March 6, 2026, https://m.economictimes.com/news/new-updates/watch-u-s-releases-new-unclassified-footage-showing-attacks-on-irans-mobile-missile-threats/articleshow/129071895.cms
  27. The US-Israel campaign in Iran, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.iiss.org/online-analysis/online-analysis/2026/02/the-us-israel-campaign-in-iran/
  28. 2026 Iran war – Wikipedia, accessed March 6, 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran_conflict
  29. Middle East Special Issue: March 2026 – ACLED, accessed March 6, 2026, https://acleddata.com/update/middle-east-special-issue-march-2026
  30. Iran retaliates after Israel strikes Beirut and Tehran as war enters Day 7, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.wypr.org/2026-03-06/iran-retaliates-after-israel-strikes-beirut-and-tehran-as-war-enters-day-7
  31. Operation “Epic Fury:” SITREP (3 MAR 2026) – ICT, accessed March 6, 2026, https://ict.org.il/operation-epic-fury-sitrep-3-mar-2026/
  32. From Hamas attack to U.S. war with Iran, violence forges a new Middle East, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2026/03/04/iran-israel-middle-east-future/
  33. At least nine killed after Iranian strike on Israel’s Beit Shemesh – Al Jazeera, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/3/1/at-least-nine-killed-after-iranian-strike-on-israels-beit-shemesh
  34. America’s Unstoppable Momentum in Operation Epic Fury, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.whitehouse.gov/articles/2026/03/americas-unstoppable-momentum-in-operation-epic-fury/
  35. Operation Epic Fury Fact Sheet 260303, accessed March 6, 2026, https://media.defense.gov/2026/Mar/03/2003882557/-1/-1/1/OPERATION-EPIC-FURY-FACT-SHEET-260303.PDF
  36. The Latest: Israeli strikes pound Iran and Lebanon as US warns attacks will intensify, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.ksat.com/news/2026/03/06/the-latest-israeli-strikes-pound-iran-and-lebanon-as-us-warns-attacks-will-intensify/
  37. Hegseth Says There’s No Shortage of American Will, Resources in Operation Epic Fury, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.war.gov/News/News-Stories/Article/Article/4424786/hegseth-says-theres-no-shortage-of-american-will-resources-in-operation-epic-fu/
  38. Operation Epic Fury Update > U.S. Central Command > Statements View – Centcom, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.centcom.mil/MEDIA/STATEMENTS/Statements-View/Article/4418506/operation-epic-fury-update/
  39. Operation Epic Fury Update > U.S. Central Command > Statements View, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.centcom.mil/MEDIA/STATEMENTS/Statements-View/Article/4419315/operation-epic-fury-update/
  40. U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor Statement on Iran War Powers Resolution, accessed March 6, 2026, https://castor.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=405144
  41. Anxious travelers scramble as Iran war strands hundreds of thousands across the Middle East, accessed March 6, 2026, https://apnews.com/article/iran-war-middle-east-travel-7fa70acc92e8250c36b64d7809ef013c
  42. The Latest: US submarine sinks Iranian navy ship as war expands, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.ksat.com/news/2026/03/04/the-latest-explosions-heard-in-tehran-and-jerusalem-on-fifth-day-of-war/
  43. 6 American troops killed since launch of Operation Epic Fury, US military says, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.indiatoday.in/world/story/middle-east-crisis-6-american-troops-killed-since-launch-of-operation-epic-fury-against-iran-us-military-says-2876740-2026-03-03
  44. The Gulf Monarchies Are Caught Between Iran’s Desperation and the U.S.’s Recklessness, accessed March 6, 2026, https://carnegieendowment.org/emissary/2026/03/gulf-states-iran-war-security
  45. US-Israel-Iran war Day 6: Iran-Israel strikes continue; UAE extends limited flights – Gulf News, accessed March 6, 2026, https://gulfnews.com/world/americas/us-israel-iran-war-day-6-iran-israel-strikes-continue-uae-extends-limited-flights-1.500463753
  46. 2026 Iranian strikes on Saudi Arabia – Wikipedia, accessed March 6, 2026, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iranian_strikes_on_Saudi_Arabia
  47. Saudia extends flight suspensions until March 6: 8 destinations affected amid Iran-US–Israel conflict, accessed March 6, 2026, https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/world/middle-east/saudia-extends-flight-suspensions-until-march-6-8-destinations-affected-amid-iran-usisrael-conflict/articleshow/129048978.cms
  48. UAE Announces Closure of Embassy in Tehran and Withdrawal of Ambassador and Diplomatic Mission, Condemns Iranian Missile Attacks, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.mofa.gov.ae/en/mediahub/news/2026/3/1/uae-iran
  49. UAE Announces Closure of Embassy in Tehran and Withdrawal of Ambassador and Diplomatic Mission, Condemns Iranian Missile Attacks, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.uae-embassy.org/news/uae-announces-closure-embassy-tehran-and-withdrawal-ambassador-and-diplomatic-mission-condemns
  50. UAE explores freezing Iranian assets after attacks – WSJ | Iran International, accessed March 6, 2026, https://www.iranintl.com/en/202603060255
  51. Middle East Airspace – Current Operational Picture – International Ops 2025 – OpsGroup, accessed March 6, 2026, https://ops.group/blog/middle-east-airspace-current-operational-picture/
  52. Middle East flight update amid Iran war: Emirates, Etihad resume limited services; IndiGo, Air India add extra flights, accessed March 6, 2026, https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/business/international-business/middle-east-flight-update-amid-iran-war-emirates-etihad-resume-limited-services-indigo-air-india-add-extra-flights/articleshow/129138563.cms

Operation Epic Fury Daily SITREP – March 05, 2026

1.0 Executive Summary

As of 12:00 UTC on March 5, 2026, the coordinated military campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran,designated Operation Epic Fury by the United States and Operation Roaring Lion by Israel,has entered a highly volatile, transitional phase characterized by deep-penetration strikes and multi-domain regional spillover. The preceding 36-hour reporting window indicates a definitive shift from initial decapitation and air defense suppression efforts toward a systemic dismantling of Iran’s military-industrial complex and internal security apparatus.1 The geopolitical and military landscape of the Middle East is currently experiencing its most severe systemic shock since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, marked by compounding crises spanning kinetic warfare, global energy market disruptions, and a burgeoning constitutional crisis within Tehran.2

The strategic map of the conflict has expanded into a massive geographic theater. Geospatial analysis of the conflict’s current posture reveals primary strike vectors from the United States and Israel penetrating deep into Iranian territory, specifically targeting command nodes in Tehran, missile facilities in Isfahan, and defense infrastructure in Tabriz.3 In response, Iranian and proxy retaliatory strike vectors are radiating outward, targeting central Israel, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, and, in a significant escalation over the last 24 hours, the Republic of Azerbaijan.5 Compounding this regional instability is a maritime blockade zone at the Strait of Hormuz, where Iranian asymmetric naval tactics have effectively halted commercial transit.7

The most critical escalations over the last 36 hours center on three primary axes. First, the United States and Israel have reportedly established “localized air superiority” over Iranian skies, enabling continuous, uncontested bomber sorties,including the deployment of B-1 Lancer and B-2 Spirit stealth bombers,deep into Iranian airspace.9 The successful degradation of Iran’s integrated air defense systems (IADS) has fundamentally altered the tactical balance. Second, in response to the degradation of its strategic ballistic missile forces and the systematic destruction of its naval assets, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has pivoted to a strategy of asymmetric regional cost-imposition.1 Tehran has launched the 19th and 20th waves of “Operation True Promise 4,” utilizing massed loitering munitions to target civilian, economic, and military infrastructure across the region.13 Third, a nascent secondary ground front has materialized; the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) 91st Division has crossed into southern Lebanon to neutralize Hezbollah infrastructure, while credible intelligence indicates that heavily armed Iranian Kurdish opposition groups are executing cross-border incursions into northwestern Iran to exploit the regime’s weakened internal security posture.15

The systemic shifts observed indicate that the conflict’s center of gravity is moving from immediate military neutralization to regime destabilization. Inside Iran, the assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has triggered a chaotic and heavily coerced succession process.18 The IRGC has functionally superseded the civilian and clerical establishment, pressuring the Assembly of Experts to rapidly install Mojtaba Khamenei as the new Supreme Leader in an extra-constitutional emergency session.18 This militarization of the state apparatus is occurring concurrently with an escalating economic crisis, driven by Iran’s functional closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which has choked off approximately 20% of the global oil supply and triggered emergency interventions by the U.S. Navy to protect commercial shipping.2

2.0 Chronological Timeline of Key Events (Last 36 Hours)

The following timeline details the escalation cycle from the morning of March 4 to the midday hours of March 5, 2026. All times are recorded in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) and aligned with regional combat theater reports to ensure standardized tracking across multiple operational zones.

  • March 4, 05:26 UTC: Iran launches a heavily coordinated missile barrage targeting northern and southern Israel. Air raid sirens activate in the southern port city of Eilat for the first time since the outbreak of hostilities.20
  • March 4, 05:28 UTC: A suspected Iranian drone strike impacts the CIA station situated inside the U.S. Embassy compound in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, triggering localized fires but resulting in no confirmed casualties. Simultaneously, the IRGC claims it has targeted U.S. infantry personnel in Dubai and military infrastructure in Kuwait and Bahrain.20
  • March 4, 05:56 UTC: The IDF executes a targeted drone strike on the headquarters of the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Iran (KDPI) in Erbil, Iraq, amidst chaotic reports of Kurdish border mobilizations against Iranian forces.20
  • March 4, 07:17 UTC: The IDF officially announces the commencement of “large-scale operations across Iran,” marking a transition to deep-inland targeting. Concurrently, Hezbollah launches a barrage of rockets from southern Lebanon toward northern Israeli settlements.20
  • March 4, 14:09 UTC: The Pentagon confirms that U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) is rapidly burning through precision munitions and air defense interceptors. Field commanders report they are utilizing Anthropic’s “Claude” AI tool, integrated with Palantir’s “Maven Smart System,” to process satellite surveillance and automate real-time target prioritization.22
  • March 4, 15:02 UTC: Sri Lankan naval forces and local authorities report the recovery of over 80 bodies belonging to Iranian sailors after a U.S. submarine utilizes a Mark 48 torpedo to sink the Iranian Moudge-class frigate IRIS Dena in the Indian Ocean.20
  • March 4, 17:03 UTC: Omani naval vessels rescue the 24-person crew of the Palau-flagged cargo ship Skylight, which was struck and set ablaze by two Iranian projectiles near the Strait of Hormuz.22
  • March 4, 18:05 UTC: Israeli warplanes conduct intense bombing runs on the Laylaki area in Beirut’s southern suburbs. This is closely followed by a sweeping IDF evacuation order for all Lebanese territory south of the Litani River.20
  • March 4, 19:43 UTC: Qatar’s Foreign Ministry reports a massive incoming Iranian assault comprising 101 ballistic missiles, 98 drones, and 3 cruise missiles. While the vast majority are intercepted, localized strikes force the emergency shutdown of critical Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) facilities at Ras Laffan.22
  • March 4, 20:21 UTC: NATO air defense systems deployed in the Eastern Mediterranean intercept an Iranian ballistic missile over Hatay province, Turkey, highlighting the expanding geographic footprint of the conflict.20
  • March 4, 21:08 UTC: The Israeli Air Force (IAF) conducts concentrated bombing on Mehrabad Airport in Tehran, systematically destroying its surveillance capabilities and associated air defense radar arrays.20
  • March 5, 01:16 UTC: Hezbollah executes precision drone attacks on Israeli Iron Dome radar systems in Haifa and the Ein Shemer base, located approximately 75 kilometers from the Lebanese border.20
  • March 5, 06:07 UTC: The IRGC officially announces the initiation of the 19th wave of “Operation True Promise 4.” The operation is described as a combined hypersonic missile and drone assault specifically targeting the Israeli Ministry of Defense complex in Tel Aviv and Ben Gurion Airport.13
  • March 5, 07:10 UTC: The U.S. Senate definitively defeats a War Powers resolution (47-53) aimed at blocking President Trump from utilizing further military force in Iran, effectively securing legislative maneuvering room for sustained operations.5
  • March 5, 08:30 UTC: Iranian Arash-2 kamikaze drones strike the terminal at Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic Airport and a nearby school in Azerbaijan. This marks the first direct Iranian kinetic strike on Azerbaijani territory during the current conflict.5
  • March 5, 09:37 UTC: The U.S. Department of Defense officially identifies the fifth U.S. soldier killed in the March 1 Iranian drone attack on Port Shuaiba, Kuwait, as Maj. Jeffrey R. O’Brien. The remains of a sixth soldier, believed to be Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert Marzan, undergo final medical examiner verification.22

3.0 Situation by Primary Country

3.1 Iran

3.1.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Iranian military apparatus has suffered catastrophic kinetic degradation over the last 36 hours, yet it remains highly lethal through the deployment of asymmetric and unconventional warfare strategies.1 The combined U.S. and Israeli air campaigns have systematically dismantled Iran’s integrated air defense networks, allowing Western coalition forces to establish localized air superiority. According to CENTCOM assessments and statements by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dan Caine, Iranian ballistic missile launches have dropped by 86% since the opening day of the conflict.9 This reduction is directly attributable to the verified destruction of approximately 300 heavy ballistic missile launchers by IDF and U.S. forces.1

In the maritime domain, the Iranian Navy (IRIN) and the IRGC Navy (IRGCN) have been functionally neutralized. The U.S. military confirmed the sinking of the IRIS Dena via submarine-launched Mark 48 torpedo in the Indian Ocean,resulting in the deaths of over 80 Iranian sailors,and the destruction of at least 17 to 20 other vessels.22 Satellite imagery confirms that a Fateh-class coastal submarine was struck directly within its fortified pen at Bandar Abbas.29 The loss of these capital ships has forced Iran to abandon conventional naval posturing.

Stripped of its primary conventional deterrents, the IRGC has transitioned entirely to its “Operation True Promise 4” framework.30 This strategy relies on massed swarms of low-cost, one-way attack (OWA) drones to overwhelm regional air defenses. The 19th and 20th waves of this operation were launched in the early hours of March 5, utilizing Shahed and Arash-2 drones alongside residual short-range ballistic missiles (SRBMs).25 Furthermore, the IRGC has officially declared the Strait of Hormuz closed to international shipping. While lacking the naval surface vessels to enforce a traditional maritime blockade, Iran is successfully utilizing shore-based anti-ship missiles and drone harassment to deter commercial traffic, reducing tanker movement by 90% and effectively weaponizing global energy supply chains.7

Chart: Iranian retaliation shifts from ballistic missiles to drone swarms. Ballistic missile launches decrease while drone launches increase.

3.1.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The Iranian state is currently navigating an unprecedented constitutional and leadership crisis. Following the confirmed death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28, the country has nominally been operating under an Interim Leadership Council.33 However, intelligence assessments over the last 36 hours indicate that the succession process is being violently accelerated and commandeered by the IRGC.18

The Assembly of Experts, the 88-member clerical body constitutionally tasked with selecting the Supreme Leader, scheduled an emergency online session for Thursday, March 5.18 The meeting is being managed from a highly secure location near the Fatima Masumeh shrine in Qom, deliberately chosen to deter Israeli airstrikes due to its religious significance.18 Intelligence confirms that IRGC commanders have exerted immense psychological and political pressure on the clerics,including threats and coercive lobbying,to bypass standard constitutional debates and immediately appoint 56-year-old Mojtaba Khamenei, the late leader’s son.18 The IRGC views Mojtaba, who has served as a powerful, behind-the-scenes gatekeeper with deep ties to the security apparatus, as the only candidate capable of maintaining regime cohesion during a state of total war.34

This overt coercion has triggered severe backlash from traditionalist factions within the clerical establishment. At least eight members of the Assembly are actively boycotting the March 5 session.18 Dissenters argue that appointing Mojtaba effectively transitions the Islamic Republic into a hereditary monarchy,a direct violation of the 1979 revolutionary ethos.18 Furthermore, opponents cite Mojtaba’s lack of the requisite religious ranking (Ayatollah) as a fatal blow to the theological legitimacy of the Velayat-e Faqih (Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist).18 This internal fracturing suggests that the U.S. and Israeli strategy of regime disruption is forcing the IRGC to prioritize immediate security control over long-term institutional legitimacy.

3.1.3 Civilian Impact

The civilian toll inside Iran is mounting rapidly amidst the collapse of basic infrastructure. The Iranian Foundation of Martyrs and Veterans Affairs reported on March 5 that the confirmed death toll has reached 1,045, with over 6,186 wounded nationwide.22 Tragically, this figure includes at least 180 individuals under the age of 18, with women and girls accounting for 13% of the fatalities.22

The mass casualty event at the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab on February 28 remains a major domestic and international flashpoint. High-resolution satellite imagery analyzed on March 4 and 5 confirmed the school was located immediately adjacent to the Seyyed Al-Shohada Barracks, a highly fortified IRGC military compound.5 The imagery revealed multiple collapsed buildings and impact craters within the military site, indicating that the school suffered catastrophic collateral damage from strikes aimed at the IRGC facility. The U.S. Department of Defense has denied intentionally targeting civilians and has initiated an internal investigation into the strike.38

Civilian infrastructure is heavily degraded across the nation. Internet connectivity remains suppressed to approximately 1% of normal capacity due to sustained U.S. Cyber Command operations and internal regime throttling.3 Domestic commercial flights are entirely grounded. The state funeral for Ali Khamenei, originally intended to be a massive public rallying event in Tehran, was indefinitely postponed on March 4.22 Authorities cited the inability to secure the airspace and manage logistics for millions of attendees amidst continuous Israeli bombardment.40

3.2 Israel

3.2.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) are executing Operation Roaring Lion with unprecedented operational tempo, marking the largest, most sustained aerial campaign in the history of the Israeli Air Force (IAF).41 Operating in seamless, synchronized coordination with U.S. Central Command, over 200 IAF aircraft have deployed more than 4,000 precision munitions on Iranian targets.4 Over the last 36 hours, the IDF has transitioned to deep-penetration strikes, targeting critical regime infrastructure in the heart of Tehran.1

The tactical execution of this phase has focused heavily on neutralizing internal security nodes designed to suppress Iranian domestic dissent. The IDF successfully targeted and destroyed the headquarters of the IRGC Intelligence Organization (Unit 4000), multiple Basij paramilitary regional bases, and the headquarters of the 27th Mohammad Rasoul Ollah Provincial Unit (the primary internal security force for Tehran).1 By degrading the regime’s domestic enforcement mechanisms, Israel’s strategy aims to facilitate internal uprisings while simultaneously degrading Iran’s ability to coordinate its external proxy network. Additionally, the IAF achieved a notable milestone when an F-35I “Adir” shot down an Iranian Yak-130 fighter jet over Tehran,the first confirmed air-to-air combat kill by an F-35 against another manned aircraft.4

Simultaneously, Israel has violently escalated the northern front against Hezbollah to secure its borders. On March 4, the IDF 91st Division initiated localized ground incursions south of the Litani River in Lebanon to establish a physical security buffer.15 The IAF heavily bombarded the Dahiyeh suburb in Beirut, eliminating senior Hamas officials and IRGC-Quds Force operatives, including Daoud Alizadeh, the deputy commander of the Quds Force’s Lebanon Corps.4

3.2.2 Policy & Diplomacy

Israeli political and military leadership are projecting a posture of absolute resolve and maximalist objectives. Defense Minister Israel Katz confirmed to military intelligence officers on March 4 that Operation Roaring Lion was initially planned for mid-2026.43 However, the timeline was drastically accelerated due to aligned strategic objectives with the Trump administration and highly actionable intelligence regarding Iran’s nuclear breakout capacity. Israeli intelligence assessed that Iran was within two weeks of enriching uranium to 90% (weapons-grade purity), though Tehran still lacked a finalized, deployable weaponization mechanism.5

Katz issued a severe diplomatic and military warning regarding the ongoing Iranian succession crisis, stating unequivocally that whoever is chosen by the Assembly of Experts to succeed Ali Khamenei will be marked as an “unequivocal target for elimination,” irrespective of their title or geographic location.36 Domestically, the war effort enjoys overwhelming support; recent polling indicates that 82% of the general Israeli public, and 93% of Jewish Israelis, support the continuation of the military campaign until the Ayatollah regime is entirely overthrown and its nuclear capabilities dismantled.46

3.2.3 Civilian Impact

The Israeli home front remains under a legally declared “special emergency situation,” granting the IDF Home Front Command extensive authority over civilian movements and infrastructure.47 Since the conflict’s inception, 12 Israeli civilians have been killed, primarily due to the initial, dense ballistic missile barrages penetrating the Arrow and David’s Sling defense layers, most notably resulting in nine fatalities in Beit Shemesh.4 As of the morning of March 5, the Israeli Health Ministry reported that 1,473 individuals had been evacuated to hospitals, though officials noted a significant portion of these injuries were sustained organically while civilians rushed to bomb shelters rather than from direct shrapnel impacts.49

While the total volume of Iranian missile fire has drastically reduced, the psychological and economic toll remains severe. Air raid sirens sounded continuously over the Gush Dan (Tel Aviv) region, Haifa, and Jerusalem on March 4 and 5 due to coordinated, simultaneous drone and missile salvos launched from both Iran and Lebanon.11 The aviation sector is severely constrained; Ben Gurion Airport has reopened for highly restricted, incoming-only passenger flights,capped at approximately one flight per hour,to facilitate the gradual repatriation of an estimated 100,000 Israelis currently stranded abroad.5

3.3 United States

3.3.1 Military Actions & Posture

The U.S. Department of Defense has deployed the largest concentration of military firepower in the Middle East in a generation, encompassing over 50,000 troops, two carrier strike groups (including the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford), and dedicated strategic bomber wings.28 Operation Epic Fury has successfully struck over 2,000 targets in its first 100 hours of execution.53 U.S. kinetic operations have been characterized by a heavy reliance on strategic bombers; CENTCOM confirmed that B-1 Lancers and B-2 Spirit stealth bombers (utilizing 2,000-pound and 30,000-pound bunker-buster munitions) have been actively striking hardened, deeply buried underground ballistic missile and nuclear infrastructure sites.11

Technologically, the U.S. is leveraging advanced artificial intelligence to manage the battlespace. The integration of Palantir’s Maven Smart System with Anthropic’s “Claude” AI architecture has allowed CENTCOM to process vast amounts of satellite telemetry and signals intelligence.22 This AI integration has automated target prioritization, directly enabling the unprecedented pace of the air campaign. Furthermore, U.S. Cyber Command and Space Command initiated the conflict with extensive non-kinetic layering, crippling Iranian sensor networks, jamming satellite uplinks, and blinding early warning systems to facilitate the subsequent kinetic aerial blitz.55

However, the immense scale and operational tempo of the campaign are generating severe logistical friction. Pentagon officials warned on March 4 that CENTCOM is burning through its global reserves of precision-guided munitions and Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) interceptors at an unsustainable rate.22 Commanders indicated they are days away from being forced to strictly triage incoming threats to preserve interceptor stockpiles for the defense of high-value strategic assets.

Confirmed U.S. Casualties in Operation Epic Fury (As of March 5, 2026)
Location of Incident: Port Shuaiba, Kuwait (Tactical Operations Center)
Mechanism of Attack: Iranian Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) / Drone
Unit Affected: 103rd Sustainment Command (U.S. Army Reserve, Des Moines, Iowa)
Total Killed In Action (KIA): 6
Identified Personnel: Capt. Cody A. Khork (35), Sgt. 1st Class Noah L. Tietjens (42), Sgt. 1st Class Nicole M. Amor (39), Sgt. Declan J. Coady (20), Maj. Jeffrey R. O’Brien (45), Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert Marzan (54)
Total Wounded In Action (WIA): 18 (10 remaining in serious condition)
Data derived from official Pentagon casualty identification releases.22

3.3.2 Policy & Diplomacy

In Washington, the executive and legislative branches have clashed over the scope, timeline, and authorization of the war. On March 4, the U.S. Senate held a highly contentious vote on a War Powers resolution introduced by Democrats aiming to block President Trump from continuing military operations without formal, prior congressional authorization. The resolution was defeated 47-53, largely along party lines, effectively granting the administration a legislative mandate to continue the campaign indefinitely.5

President Trump has maintained an aggressive, unyielding public posture, rating the military’s performance a “15 out of 10” and indicating the campaign could stretch well beyond the initial four-to-five-week timeline.22 The administration’s stated strategic goals remain maximalist: the total destruction of Iran’s missile production capabilities, the complete annihilation of the Iranian Navy, the severance of regional proxy networks, and an absolute guarantee that Iran never achieves nuclear breakout.22 In response to the severe economic fallout of the Strait of Hormuz closure, President Trump issued an executive directive ordering the U.S. Navy to begin escorting commercial oil tankers through the strait and mandated the U.S. Development Finance Corporation (DFC) to immediately provide political risk insurance to international shipping lines to incentivize continued maritime trade.19

3.3.3 Civilian Impact

The domestic impact within the United States is currently dominated by mounting economic concerns and logistical challenges abroad. Global oil prices have surged, with international benchmark Brent crude jumping 10-13% to over $82-$85 per barrel.7 This spike is rapidly driving up prices at the pump for American consumers and threatening broader inflationary pressures.

Concurrently, the U.S. State Department is executing a massive logistical operation to extract American citizens from the conflict zone. As of March 4, 17,500 Americans had been successfully evacuated from the Middle East.22 However, the State Department has issued severe “Level 4: Do Not Travel / Depart Immediately” advisories for 14 nations across the region.62 Due to the near-total collapse of commercial aviation in the Gulf, U.S. embassies in Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain have explicitly warned citizens that government-sponsored evacuation flights cannot be guaranteed, advising Americans to shelter in place and seek alternative overland routes where possible, leaving thousands highly vulnerable.62

4.0 Regional and Gulf State Impacts

The strategic fallout of Operation Epic Fury has shattered the Gulf Cooperation Council’s (GCC) decades-long security doctrine, which relied on insulating themselves from direct U.S.-Iran military confrontation.65 Iran’s retaliatory doctrine treats the entire U.S. forward-basing network as a unified operational system, resulting in unprecedented, indiscriminate strikes across sovereign Arab territories.66

The Republic of Azerbaijan: In a significant geographic expansion of the conflict, hostilities reached the Caucasus on March 5. Iranian Arash-2 kamikaze drones struck the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic, an Azerbaijani exclave bordering northwestern Iran.5 Drones directly impacted the main terminal at Nakhchivan International Airport and detonated near a secondary school in the village of Shekarabad, injuring two civilians.5 Baku fiercely condemned the attack, summoned the Iranian ambassador to issue a formal protest, and publicly warned that it reserves the right to enact “retaliatory measures”.5 This development raises the severe risk of Azerbaijan,a key Israeli military ally and major weapons recipient,opening a northern front against Iran.26

The State of Qatar: Qatar, host to the massive Al Udeid Air Base (the forward headquarters of U.S. Central Command), has suffered intense bombardment. On March 4, Qatar intercepted the majority of a massive Iranian barrage comprising 101 ballistic missiles, 98 drones, and 3 cruise missiles, alongside the incursion of two Iranian Su-24 fighter jets.22 Despite successful interceptions, falling debris and localized strikes severely damaged civilian infrastructure and forced QatarEnergy to declare force majeure, halting liquid natural gas (LNG) production at the Ras Laffan industrial city.22 This emergency shutdown has effectively removed 20% of the global LNG supply from the market.69 Furthermore, Qatari state security announced the arrest of an active IRGC espionage cell operating within the country.30

The United Arab Emirates (UAE): The UAE has acted as the primary sponge for Iranian retaliatory fire, absorbing over 1,138 drone and missile attacks since February 28.1 On March 5, debris from intercepted drones injured six expatriate workers (Pakistani and Nepali nationals) in Abu Dhabi.5 The sustained attacks have paralyzed the UAE’s critical aviation hub model; major carriers including Emirates, Etihad, and FlyDubai have sustained massive flight cancellations, leaving tens of thousands of passengers stranded.50 Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport previously suffered a direct drone impact, forcing evacuations and extensive rerouting.70

GCC Infrastructure Risk & Disruption Matrix showing airspace, ports, energy facilities, and US bases status.

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province and the capital, Riyadh, have been repeatedly targeted by Iranian drones. On March 4, the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh was struck by two drones, prompting the emergency evacuation of non-essential personnel and their families.20 Saudi Aramco was forced to temporarily suspend operations at the massive Ras Tanura oil refinery due to fires caused by intercepted drone debris.72 While Riyadh has officially condemned the Iranian aggression and affirmed its right to self-defense, the Kingdom remains heavily reliant on U.S. Patriot and THAAD batteries to maintain the integrity of its airspace.73

The Kingdom of Bahrain & The State of Kuwait: Bahrain, which hosts the headquarters of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet, suffered direct ballistic missile strikes on the Naval Support Activity (NSA) base in Manama, as well as hits on the Arab Shipbuilding and Repair Yard (ASRY) in Al Hidd.75 In Kuwait, the Ali Al Salem Air Base and Camp Arifjan have sustained heavy structural damage to logistics warehouses and aircraft shelters.1 The deadly March 1 drone strike at Port Shuaiba claimed the lives of six U.S. soldiers. Consequently, Kuwait’s airspace remains entirely closed to commercial traffic, and the U.S. Embassy in Kuwait City has suspended all consular services, explicitly ordering personnel to shelter in place.63

The Sultanate of Oman & The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan: Oman, traditionally a strictly neutral diplomatic mediator between Washington and Tehran, has not been spared. Its strategic port at Duqm was hit by drones, and the Omani Navy was forced to conduct emergency rescue operations for the crew of the Palau-flagged Skylight tanker after it was struck by an Iranian projectile in the Strait of Hormuz.22 Jordan has been forced to continuously activate its air defense networks to intercept Iranian missiles violating its sovereign airspace en route to Israel. The Jordanian Armed Forces (JAF) have publicly warned that they will firmly shoot down any projectile,whether Iranian or Israeli,that breaches their territorial integrity, aiming to prevent the Kingdom from becoming a proxy battlefield.78

Kurdish Region (Iraq/Iran Border): A highly volatile sub-conflict is rapidly emerging in the Zagros Mountains along the Iran-Iraq border. U.S. and Israeli officials report that thousands of fighters from the Kurdistan Free Life Party (PJAK) and the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (KDPI) are massing for, or actively engaging in, a ground offensive into Iran’s West Azerbaijan and Kurdistan provinces.17 The strategic intent is to exploit the destruction of IRGC border posts by U.S. airstrikes to spark a broader ethno-nationalist uprising inside Iran. While the Iraqi Kurdistan Regional Government has officially denied these troop movements, the IRGC has preemptively launched drone and missile strikes against KDPI headquarters in Erbil to disrupt the mobilization.1 Should the CIA and U.S. military actively arm and provide close air support to these Kurdish militias,as reportedly under consideration in Washington,it would represent a definitive strategic shift from military containment to the active territorial balkanization of the Iranian state.21

5.0 Appendices

Appendix A: Methodology

This Situation Report (SITREP) was compiled using a comprehensive, multi-domain sweep of real-time open-source intelligence (OSINT), official state broadcasts, and military command updates generated between March 4, 2026, 00:00 UTC, and March 5, 2026, 12:00 UTC. The 36-hour operational window was utilized to capture preceding late-night events that directly informed morning strategic shifts, ensuring absolute continuity of the battlespace narrative. Data streams were weighted heavily toward primary sources, prioritizing U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) press releases, IDF operational updates, and IRGC Public Relations Office statements disseminated via Tasnim and Fars news agencies. In instances of conflicting information,such as the initial Iranian claim of sinking a U.S. oil tanker,reports were rigorously cross-verified against independent maritime tracking data (e.g., UKMTO, Vanguard), which conclusively identified the vessel as the Bahamas-flagged commercial ship Sonangol Namibe.5 Claims regarding Kurdish ground offensives remain categorized as highly credible but officially uncorroborated, based on diplomatic denials juxtaposed against verified troop movement indicators and preemptive IRGC strikes.

Appendix B: Glossary of Acronyms

  • CENTCOM: United States Central Command. The geographic combatant command of the U.S. Department of Defense responsible for military operations in the Middle East, Central Asia, and parts of South Asia.
  • DFC: U.S. International Development Finance Corporation. The federal agency tasked with providing political risk insurance to safeguard global energy supplies and maritime trade.
  • GCC: Gulf Cooperation Council. A political and economic union comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.
  • IADS: Integrated Air Defense System. A heavily networked system of early warning radars, command centers, and surface-to-air missiles utilized by Iran to protect its airspace.
  • IAF: Israeli Air Force.
  • IDF: Israel Defense Forces.
  • IRGC: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. A multi-service primary branch of the Iranian Armed Forces, distinct from the regular army, tasked specifically with protecting the Islamic Republic’s political system and overseeing its strategic missile and proxy forces.
  • KDPI: Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan. An armed Kurdish opposition group based in northern Iraq, currently involved in border mobilizations against the Iranian regime.
  • LNG: Liquefied Natural Gas. A critical global energy commodity, heavily disrupted by the shutdown of Qatari production facilities.
  • OSINT: Open-Source Intelligence. Intelligence gathered from publicly available sources, including satellite imagery, commercial maritime tracking, and social media.
  • OWA: One-Way Attack. A military designation for loitering munitions, commonly referred to as kamikaze or suicide drones (e.g., the Shahed or Arash-2 series).
  • PJAK: Kurdistan Free Life Party. A militant Kurdish nationalist group operating along the Iran-Iraq border.
  • THAAD: Terminal High Altitude Area Defense. An advanced American anti-ballistic missile defense system currently experiencing stockpile depletion due to high interception rates.

Appendix C: Glossary of Foreign Words

  • Basij: “The Mobilization.” A volunteer paramilitary militia operating directly under the command of the IRGC. The Basij are heavily utilized for internal security, moral policing, and the violent suppression of domestic protests. Their headquarters have been primary targets for IDF strikes.
  • Dahiyeh: The predominantly Shia southern suburbs of Beirut, Lebanon. This area serves as the primary headquarters, logistical hub, and stronghold for Hezbollah, currently subject to intense IAF bombardment.
  • Majlis: The Islamic Consultative Assembly, which serves as the national legislative body (parliament) of Iran.
  • Quds Force: The elite expeditionary and unconventional warfare branch of the IRGC. It is responsible for funding, training, and directing the “Axis of Resistance” proxy groups across the Middle East, including Hezbollah, Hamas, and the Houthis.
  • Velayat-e Faqih: “Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist.” The foundational political and theological doctrine of the Islamic Republic of Iran. It mandates that a high-ranking, qualified Islamic cleric (the Supreme Leader) holds ultimate political and religious authority over the state, a principle currently challenged by the proposed hereditary succession of Mojtaba Khamenei.

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  80. Thousands of Kurdish Fighters Launch Ground Offensive Inside Iran: Report, accessed March 5, 2026, https://caspianpost.com/iran/thousands-of-kurdish-fighters-launch-ground-offensive-inside-iran-report
  81. Airstrikes hit Iran-Iraq border as US and Israeli plan to mobilise Kurds gathers pace, accessed March 5, 2026, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/04/airstrikes-hit-iran-iraq-border-as-us-and-israeli-plan-to-mobilise-kurds-gathers-pace
  82. Kurdish fighters launch ground operation in Iran; Tehran announces attack on separatists in Iraq’s Kurdistan, accessed March 5, 2026, https://www.livemint.com/news/world/kurdish-armed-group-ground-operation-in-iran-tehran-strikes-separatists-in-iraqs-kurdistan-11772685452579.html
  83. A New Front In Iran War? US Considers Arming Iranian Kurdish Opposition Groups – Analysis – Eurasia Review, accessed March 5, 2026, https://www.eurasiareview.com/05032026-a-new-front-in-iran-war-us-considers-arming-iranian-kurdish-opposition-groups-analysis/

Geopolitical Shockwaves: Iran’s Proxy War Unleashed

Executive Summary

The geopolitical and security architecture of the broader Middle East has entered a period of unprecedented volatility and strategic realignment following the initiation of Operation Epic Fury and Operation Roaring Lion on the twenty-eighth of February, two thousand and twenty-six. These coordinated, massive-scale kinetic strikes, executed jointly by the military forces of the United States of America and the State of Israel, targeted the sovereign territory of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The primary objectives of this campaign were the severe degradation of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, the destruction of its ballistic missile production capabilities, and the decapitation of its senior political and military leadership. The confirmed death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, alongside dozens of high-ranking officials within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, represents the most significant systemic shock to the Iranian state apparatus since the Islamic Revolution of nineteen seventy-nine. However, the subsequent intelligence picture reveals a stark and highly dangerous strategic reality. While the central command apparatus in Tehran has sustained catastrophic physical and digital damage, the transnational proxy network commonly referred to as the Axis of Resistance remains functionally intact, highly resilient, and operationally lethal.

This intelligence assessment provides an exhaustive, theater-wide analysis of the current state, operational capabilities, and recent activities of Iranian proxy groups in the immediate fallout of the late February two thousand and twenty-six strikes. The aggregated data strongly indicates that the Axis of Resistance was specifically architected by the Quds Force to survive a catastrophic decapitation event. Following the degradation of communications in Tehran, regional proxies immediately activated pre-established wartime emergency protocols, shifting seamlessly to decentralized, autonomous command structures. This transition has enabled a widespread, highly coordinated campaign of kinetic and cyber retaliation targeting United States and coalition military assets, commercial shipping lanes, and critical energy and transportation infrastructure across the Gulf states.

The analysis detailed in this report meticulously evaluates the cascading effects of the decapitation strikes on proxy command and funding pipelines. It examines the clandestine shadow banking networks, cryptocurrency evasion tactics, and illicit oil smuggling operations utilized by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to maintain financial liquidity amidst intense international sanctions. Furthermore, the report provides a granular, region-by-region assessment of proxy survival strategies and operational shifts. In Lebanon, Hezbollah has drastically escalated its long-range rocket attacks against Israeli population centers, despite facing severe domestic political backlash and targeted Israeli strikes aimed at obliterating its financial institutions. In Yemen, the Houthi movement has abruptly terminated a months-long pause in maritime operations, re-engaging in aggressive asymmetric warfare in the Red Sea and the Strait of Hormuz, thereby paralyzing global shipping corridors and violently disrupting international energy markets. In Iraq, deeply entrenched Shia militias have launched highly lethal drone and missile strikes against coalition bases, exploiting their structural capture of the Iraqi state to maintain operational momentum and political cover. Conversely, in the post-Assad environment of Syria, isolated Iranian-backed militias face hostile local forces and are prioritizing defensive entrenchment, while exhausted Palestinian factions in the Gaza Strip have opted for strict strategic dormancy.

Finally, this assessment deeply analyzes the profound vulnerabilities exposed within the Gulf Cooperation Council states. Retaliatory strikes by Iranian proxies have forced the unprecedented simultaneous closure of the Middle East’s primary aviation hubs, damaged critical energy infrastructure, and introduced a new paradigm of blended kinetic and cyber warfare into the region. The findings underscore a critical strategic conclusion: the forceful removal of Iran’s conventional and nuclear deterrent has incentivized a distributed, asymmetric conflict that threatens to consume the broader regional theater in a protracted war of economic and military attrition.

1.0 Strategic Environment and the February Two Thousand and Twenty-Six Decapitation Strikes

1.1 Operation Epic Fury and the Kinetic Assault on Tehran

In the predawn hours of the twenty-eighth of February, two thousand and twenty-six, the strategic equilibrium of the Middle East was violently shattered by the commencement of Operation Epic Fury and its Israeli counterpart, Operation Roaring Lion.1 This joint military campaign represented the culmination of the maximum pressure strategy executed by the United States and Israel, designed to systematically dismantle the offensive capabilities of the Islamic Republic of Iran.1 Utilizing advanced stealth aircraft, cruise missiles, and bunker-buster munitions, the combined forces conducted nearly nine hundred precision strikes within the first twelve hours of the operation.4

The targeting matrix was exhaustive, focusing on the core pillars of Iranian hard power. Munitions struck highly fortified military installations, ballistic missile production facilities, and command centers across Tehran, Isfahan, Qom, Karaj, and Kermanshah.1 The campaign specifically targeted Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, marking the first direct assault on these facilities since the escalation began. Satellite imagery captured on the second of March confirmed severe structural damage to at least three main buildings at the Natanz Nuclear Facility in Isfahan Province, alongside significant destruction at nuclear weaponization research sites and the Prince Sultan Airbase.7 The operational design prioritized the rapid suppression of Iranian air defenses, enabling coalition aircraft to establish and maintain air superiority over western Iran and the capital city, thereby neutralizing Iran’s ability to defend its airspace.4

1.2 The Death of the Supreme Leader and the Decapitation of the Security Apparatus

The defining and most globally consequential event of the kinetic campaign was the successful decapitation of the highest echelons of the Iranian leadership. Precision strikes obliterated the fortified compound of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, resulting in his immediate death.4 This event triggered an unprecedented crisis of continuity within the theocratic regime. The strikes also resulted in the deaths of approximately forty senior Iranian officials, including key figures within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, members of the intelligence apparatus, and Ali Shamkhani, the former head of the Supreme National Security Council.6

The assault systematically targeted the institutional frameworks responsible for regime survival. The Israel Defense Forces struck the Assembly of Experts building in Tehran, attempting to disrupt the clerical body constitutionally mandated to select the next Supreme Leader.8 Furthermore, coalition forces targeted ten separate Intelligence Ministry command centers and numerous Internal Security sites, specifically those operated by the Basij paramilitary forces responsible for suppressing domestic dissent.5 The profound loss of senior leadership, combined with the destruction of central command nodes, fundamentally degraded the ability of the Iranian state to coordinate a unified, conventional military response, forcing a heavy reliance on pre-delegated authority and proxy networks.8

1.3 Cyber Warfare and the Paralysis of National Communications

The physical bombardment of Iranian territory was seamlessly integrated with a devastating cyber warfare campaign, creating a blended offensive that paralyzed the nation’s digital infrastructure. As fighter jets and cruise missiles struck physical targets, a parallel assault unfolded in cyberspace, plunging Iran into a near-total digital blackout.2 According to global internet monitoring organizations, nationwide internet traffic in Iran plummeted to merely four percent of its normal operational levels within hours of the initial strikes.2

This digital fog was characterized by the failure of government digital services, the offline status of official state media platforms such as the Islamic Republic News Agency, and the reported malfunction of highly secure military communication systems.2 Semi-official news outlets aligned with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were compromised to display subversive psychological operations targeting the regime.2 Western intelligence sources later indicated that this massive digital offensive was specifically engineered to sever the command and control links between the surviving elements of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and their regional proxy commanders, thereby limiting the coordination of immediate counterattacks.2 The complete degradation of connectivity severely hindered the ability of state-aligned threat actors within Iran to execute sophisticated retaliatory cyberattacks, shifting the burden of digital warfare to geographically dispersed hacktivist collectives operating outside the borders of the Islamic Republic.13

2.0 The Axis of Resistance: Command, Control, and the Decentralization Doctrine

2.1 Activation of Wartime Emergency Protocols

The strategic assumption guiding the decapitation strikes was that the removal of the central node in Tehran would result in the collapse of the broader proxy network. However, exhaustive intelligence analysis reveals that the Axis of Resistance was explicitly engineered over four decades to absorb and survive a catastrophic loss of central leadership.1 The network operates less as a rigid, hierarchical military organization and more as a distributed, ideological confederation glued together by personal relationships and shared strategic objectives.1

Following the communications blackout and the destruction of command centers in Tehran, regional proxy organizations immediately activated pre-established wartime emergency protocols.15 These protocols are designed to ensure continuity of operations in the event that directives from the Quds Force are severed. The activation of these measures allowed groups across Lebanon, Yemen, and Iraq to transition seamlessly from a centrally coordinated posture to one of localized tactical autonomy.1 This structural resilience demonstrates that the proxy network functions as Iran’s primary strategic center of gravity, capable of maintaining operational momentum and inflicting severe costs on adversaries even when the patron state is under existential duress.1

2.2 The Shift to Localized Tactical Autonomy

The shift to decentralized command protocols has manifested differently across the various theaters of operation, but a unifying theme of local autonomy is evident. By delegating authority downward to battlefield commanders, the Axis of Resistance mitigates the vulnerability inherent in centralized decision-making.8

In Yemen, the Houthi movement had previously consolidated the decentralization of its vast missile and drone stockpiles, reinforcing local command autonomy long before the February strikes.15 When the communication lines to Tehran were disrupted, Houthi commanders did not require authorization to initiate complex anti-shipping operations; their standing orders and autonomous structures permitted immediate, lethal engagement in the Red Sea.1 Similarly, in Iraq, factions of the Popular Mobilization Forces embedded within the state security apparatus possessed the localized command authority and pre-positioned intelligence required to launch immediate drone strikes against coalition bases.1 This node autonomy ensures that the coalition forces cannot neutralize the entire network simply by targeting the head, as the individual appendages are fully capable of independent, sustained warfare.

2.3 Iranian Succession Dynamics and the Consolidation of Military Influence

While the proxies operate with tactical autonomy, their long-term strategic posture remains inextricably linked to the political developments in Tehran. The death of Ayatollah Khamenei triggered an immediate constitutional process. Under Article one hundred and eleven of the Iranian Constitution, an Interim Leadership Council was formed, consisting of President Masoud Pezeshkian, Judiciary Chief Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i, and Ayatollah Alireza Arafi.16 Arafi, a deeply entrenched hardline cleric who heads the national seminary system, represents the continuity of the traditional religious establishment.16

However, intelligence reports indicate a fierce, covert power struggle unfolding amidst the bombardment. The Assembly of Experts, the clerical body tasked with choosing the permanent successor, reportedly convened under highly secure, remote conditions.19 Multiple sources indicate that the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps exerted immense coercive pressure on the Assembly to select Mojtaba Khamenei, the fifty-six-year-old son of the late Supreme Leader, as the new absolute authority.19 This reported selection, which defies traditional Shia clerical resistance to hereditary succession, signifies the total capture of the state’s political apparatus by the hardline military elite.19 For the Axis of Resistance, the consolidation of power by an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-dominated leadership guarantees that the state will continue to prioritize the resourcing and deployment of regional proxies over domestic economic stabilization or diplomatic normalization.

Decentralized proxy command topology post-decapitation, showing degraded communications between central command and regional proxies.

3.0 Disruption of Proxy Financial Networks and Logistics

3.1 Shadow Banking and Cryptocurrency Evasion Mechanisms

The operational endurance of the Axis of Resistance requires massive, continuous capital inflows to procure advanced munitions, compensate hundreds of thousands of fighters, and maintain vast social welfare networks that ensure civilian compliance. With the Iranian state budget crippled by years of international sanctions, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Quds Force has engineered a sophisticated, clandestine financial architecture.14 Following the February decapitation strikes, the United States Department of the Treasury dramatically escalated its financial warfare, sanctioning over thirty individuals and entities, including Ali Larijani, to dismantle these shadow banking networks.20

Cryptocurrency has emerged as the most vital evasion mechanism for the regime. Chainalysis and TRM Labs estimate that Iranian digital asset transaction volumes reached between eight billion and eleven billion dollars in two thousand and twenty-five, with up to half of that activity directly linked to the military apparatus.22 Nobitex, Iran’s largest domestic cryptocurrency exchange, processes tens of billions of dollars and serves as the primary conduit connecting domestic users to global, off-shore liquidity pools.22 In the immediate aftermath of the February twenty-eighth strikes, blockchain forensic analysts observed massive capital flight and defensive liquidity maneuvers. Over thirty-five million dollars in digital assets were rapidly transferred from hot wallets to secure cold storage facilities, reflecting a highly coordinated effort by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps to protect its financial reserves from Western seizure or digital disruption.22 Furthermore, these networks maintain deep ties with sanctioned Russian entities, such as the Garantex exchange, creating an impenetrable financial corridor that circumvents the Western banking system.25

3.2 Oil Smuggling Operations and Maritime Logistics Interdiction

The physical foundation of proxy funding rests entirely on the illicit sale and smuggling of Iranian petroleum products. The Quds Force commands an expansive shadow fleet of dark vessels that transport crude oil to willing buyers in Eastern Europe and East Asia, meticulously laundering the billions in proceeds through complex webs of front companies located in Hong Kong, the United Arab Emirates, and Turkey.20

Recent financial intelligence operations have exposed the specific mechanics of this global smuggling ring. Entities such as Sepehr Energy Jahan and Moon Line Plastics Trading have been sanctioned for utilizing deceptive shipping practices, specifically disguising the true origin of Iranian crude oil by fraudulently labeling it as Malaysian heavy crude.28 The revenue generated from these covert sales is subsequently routed to regional proxy commanders via Hawala networks and money exchange houses associated with Hezbollah facilitators.25 Recognizing the critical importance of this revenue stream, the combined United States and Israeli air campaign specifically targeted Iranian naval assets stationed at the Bandar Abbas Port and the Bandar Mahshahr naval district.5 By destroying the Artesh Navy vessels and degrading the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps coastal defense infrastructure, the coalition seeks to sever the maritime logistical routes that form the economic lifeblood of the Axis of Resistance.5

3.3 The Degradation of the Al-Qard Al-Hassan Financial Network in Lebanon

While the coalition targeted the macro-level funding pipelines in the Persian Gulf, the Israel Defense Forces executed a localized, highly destructive campaign against the micro-level financial infrastructure of Hezbollah in Lebanon. Recognizing that Hezbollah functions as a parallel state entity, the Israeli military initiated a dedicated wave of precision airstrikes targeting the branches of the Al-Qard Al-Hassan Association.29

Operating thirty-one branches across Lebanese territory, Al-Qard Al-Hassan serves as a quasi-bank and the central financial artery for the terrorist organization.30 The institution is utilized by Hezbollah leadership to store vast quantities of hard currency, manage the disbursement of salaries to tens of thousands of operatives, and facilitate the receipt of smuggled funds originating from Tehran.30 The systematic destruction of these physical financial nodes represents a severe blow to Hezbollah’s attempts at economic rehabilitation following the devastating conflicts of previous years.30 By obliterating the vaults and records of Al-Qard Al-Hassan, Israel has severely constrained Hezbollah’s ability to procure new weaponry and maintain the financial loyalty of its base, forcing the organization to rely on rapidly dwindling cash reserves amidst a broader national economic collapse.29

4.0 Lebanese Hezbollah: Escalation, Domestic Containment, and Vulnerability

4.1 The Resumption of Long-Range Kinetic Operations

Lebanese Hezbollah, long considered the most sophisticated and heavily armed node within Iran’s proxy network, entered the February two thousand and twenty-six conflict in a state of profound degradation. The organization had suffered catastrophic losses during the intense Israeli decapitation campaigns of two thousand and twenty-four, which culminated in the assassination of its long-serving Secretary-General, Hassan Nasrallah.1 Currently operating under the leadership of Naim Qassem, Hezbollah initially exhibited a strategy of strict self-preservation and restraint during the opening phases of Operation Epic Fury, actively avoiding actions that would invite further Israeli bombardment of its remaining infrastructure.32

However, the confirmed death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, who served as the ultimate religious authority and source of emulation for Hezbollah’s cadres, fundamentally altered the group’s strategic calculus.32 On the first and second of March, two thousand and twenty-six, Hezbollah abandoned its defensive posture and launched coordinated volleys of drones and long-range rockets targeting central and northern Israel.5 These strikes, which targeted the Mishmar al Karmel missile defense site in Haifa and areas surrounding Tel Aviv, marked the organization’s first long-range kinetic attacks since the commencement of the current war.5 Hezbollah official Mohamoud Komati publicly stated that if Israel desired an open war, the organization was prepared to deliver it, explicitly citing the assassination of the Supreme Leader as their casus belli.33

4.2 Domestic Political Backlash and State-Led Disarmament Mandates

Hezbollah’s unilateral decision to escalate hostilities and drag Lebanon into a broader regional war triggered an unprecedented and fiercely hostile reaction from the Lebanese state apparatus. On the second of March, the Lebanese government, convened under Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, held an emergency cabinet session characterized by intense anger and condemnation of the militant group.35

The resulting governmental decrees represented a historic shift in Lebanese internal politics. The cabinet officially prohibited all security and military activities conducted by Hezbollah, legally categorizing such actions as illegitimate threats to national security.35 Prime Minister Salam demanded that Hezbollah immediately surrender its heavy weaponry to the state and confine its existence strictly to the political sphere.36 Furthermore, the government issued direct orders to the Lebanese Armed Forces to forcefully implement a disarmament plan north of the Litani River and instructed the Justice Ministry to issue arrest warrants for any individuals found responsible for launching rockets into Israeli territory.36 This total repudiation by the sovereign government strips Hezbollah of its historical political cover, effectively labeling the organization as an outlaw militia rather than a legitimate resistance force.35

4.3 The Vulnerability of the Post-Nasrallah Command Structure

The convergence of external military pressure and internal political isolation has placed Hezbollah in its most vulnerable operational position in decades.34 The Israel Defense Forces capitalized on Hezbollah’s rocket launches by executing devastating retaliatory airstrikes across southern Lebanon and the Dahiyeh suburbs of Beirut.38 These strikes specifically targeted weapons depots, satellite communication nodes used by Hezbollah’s intelligence division, and remaining senior leadership figures, resulting in the deaths of commanders such as Hussein Mekeld and Mohammad Raad.5

The post-Nasrallah command structure, already struggling to assert authority over a fractured organization, now faces the impossible task of fighting a multi-front war against Israel while actively evading arrest by the Lebanese Armed Forces.15 The destruction of their financial institutions via the Al-Qard Al-Hassan strikes, combined with the severing of logistical resupply routes through Syria, indicates that Hezbollah’s capacity to sustain a prolonged, high-intensity conflict has been critically compromised.

5.0 The Houthi Movement: Maritime Chokepoints and Global Economic Warfare

5.1 The Termination of Strategic Dormancy and the Resumption of Hostilities

Unlike the politically constrained factions in the Levant, the Houthi movement operating out of northern Yemen has emerged as the most autonomous, resilient, and globally disruptive node within the Axis of Resistance.15 The Houthis possess a unique strategic advantage: they utilize external military conflicts to deflect intense domestic pressure regarding their failure to provide basic governance and pay civil servant salaries.15 Prior to the February two thousand and twenty-six strikes, the group had observed a fragile, three-and-a-half-month operational pause in their maritime campaigns, largely linked to broader regional de-escalation efforts.40

The decapitation strikes on Tehran violently shattered this truce. Upon the degradation of central communications, Houthi commanders immediately activated their decentralized wartime protocols.15 Senior Houthi officials announced the complete termination of their strategic dormancy, declaring their intent to resume unrestricted missile and drone operations against commercial and military maritime traffic.40 This rapid mobilization demonstrates a high level of operational readiness and a movable escalation threshold, proving that the Houthi movement requires no direct authorization from the Quds Force to initiate strategic economic warfare.1 In the days preceding the strikes, intelligence indicated that the Houthis had preemptively redeployed missile launchers, coastal radar systems, and long-range strike capabilities along the Red Sea coast in Hodeida and Hajjah, anticipating a regional conflagration.15

5.2 Lethal Strikes on Commercial Shipping and Naval Assets

The resumption of Houthi hostilities rapidly evolved into lethal kinetic action across the region’s most critical maritime chokepoints. On the first and second of March, two thousand and twenty-six, Houthi forces launched a barrage of anti-ship ballistic missiles, drones, and unmanned surface vessels targeting commercial shipping in the Red Sea, the Gulf of Aden, and the Gulf of Oman.42

These strikes resulted in significant damage and loss of life. A projectile impacted the Marshall Islands-flagged crude oil tanker MKD Vyom in the Gulf of Oman, causing a massive engine room explosion that resulted in one confirmed crew fatality.42 Additional strikes targeted the heavily sanctioned chemical tanker Skylight, sparking a fire that injured four crew members and forced the evacuation of twenty others near Khasab.42 The Gibraltar-flagged commercial tanker Hercules Star was also struck off the coast of the United Arab Emirates.44 Furthermore, Iranian and proxy forces reportedly fired ballistic missiles toward the United States Navy aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln operating in the Indian Ocean, though military officials confirmed the munitions fell short of their target.42

5.3 Macroeconomic Impacts and the Disruption of Global Energy Flows

The strategic objective of the Houthi maritime campaign is to impose unsustainable economic costs on the global community, thereby forcing political concessions. This strategy has proven devastatingly effective. Following the resumption of attacks and the formal declaration by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps that the Strait of Hormuz was closed to navigation, commercial tanker traffic through the corridor completely collapsed.44

The global macroeconomic impacts were immediate and severe. Major international shipping associations, including the Baltic and International Maritime Council, issued dire warnings, prompting leading container carriers to reverse their tentative return to the Red Sea routes.40 Vessels were forced to divert around the Cape of Good Hope, a massive detour that absorbs approximately two point five million TEU of global container shipping capacity, exponentially increasing transit times, insurance premiums, and overarching supply chain costs.43 The threat to the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway responsible for the transit of roughly twenty percent of the world’s total global oil supply, triggered intense volatility in energy markets.42 Brent crude futures surged by as much as thirteen percent in early trading, briefly surpassing eighty-two dollars a barrel, as Asian refiners and European markets panicked over the prospect of a prolonged disruption to Middle Eastern energy flows.45

6.0 Iraqi Militias: State Capture, Coalition Targeting, and Strategic Depth

6.1 The Islamic Resistance in Iraq and the Campaign Against Coalition Bases

The Iraqi theater represents a highly complex and uniquely dangerous operational environment due to the deep structural entrenchment of Iranian proxy forces within the host nation’s government. Operating under the umbrella moniker of the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, a coalition of heavily armed Shia militias, including Kata’ib Hezbollah and Harakat Hezbollah al-Nujaba, serves as the primary instrument for direct kinetic retaliation against United States military personnel and coalition assets in the region.48

Following the strikes on Tehran, these militia groups rapidly mobilized, leveraging their localized command autonomy and extensive pre-positioned weapons caches to execute a relentless campaign of asymmetric warfare.1 Between the first and third of March, two thousand and twenty-six, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq publicly claimed responsibility for twenty-seven distinct military operations.8 These operations utilized dozens of explosive-laden suicide drones and short-range ballistic missiles targeting what the group identified as enemy occupation bases across Iraq and the broader region.48

6.2 Lethal Outcomes and the Targeting of Diplomatic Facilities

The proxy strikes originating from Iraq have resulted in significant casualties and forced the evacuation of diplomatic personnel across the Gulf. On the first of March, Iranian-backed forces successfully struck Camp Arifjan, a massive United States military installation in Kuwait, resulting in the tragic deaths of six American servicemembers.8 Additional drone squadrons repeatedly targeted the Erbil International Airport in the Kurdistan Region of northern Iraq, a facility that hosts a substantial contingent of United States and coalition forces.48

The targeting matrix expanded aggressively to include civilian and diplomatic infrastructure. On the second of March, the United States Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, was targeted by two drone strikes, with intelligence sources reporting that one munition specifically impacted the Central Intelligence Agency station located within the embassy compound.8 A separate drone strike directly impacted the United States Embassy in Kuwait, causing structural damage to the building.8 The severity and precision of these attacks prompted the State Department to immediately close multiple embassies across the region and urge all American citizens to depart the theater.8

6.3 Structural Penetration and the Popular Mobilization Forces Legislative Effort

The enduring resilience of the Iraqi militias is intrinsically linked to their structural capture of the Iraqi state. Many of the most lethal factions operate under the official banner of the Popular Mobilization Forces, a state-sponsored paramilitary network that boasts an estimated two hundred and thirty-eight thousand active fighters and commands a massive annual budget of three point six billion dollars provided directly by the Iraqi government.49

This arrangement provides the militias with unparalleled strategic depth, legal cover, and access to state resources, while their operational loyalty remains entirely devoted to the Quds Force in Tehran.49 In recent months, aligned political parties within the Iraqi parliament have aggressively advanced the draft Popular Mobilization Forces Law, legislation designed to permanently enshrine these Iranian-backed terrorist groups as an immutable component of the Iraqi national security apparatus.49 This deep state penetration severely complicates the coalition’s ability to respond. Nonetheless, the United States and Israel conducted targeted retaliatory airstrikes against specific Popular Mobilization Forces installations, including a command base in Samawah in al Muthanna Province, in an effort to degrade the militias’ capacity to launch further cross-border attacks.7

7.0 Syrian Militias: Post-Assad Vulnerabilities and Defensive Entrenchment

7.1 The Collapse of the Ba’athist Regime and the Severing of the Logistical Bridge

The operational landscape for Iranian proxy forces in Syria underwent a catastrophic paradigm shift following the total collapse and overthrow of the Bashar al-Assad regime in December two thousand and twenty-four.52 For over a decade, Syria functioned as the vital logistical land bridge connecting Tehran to Hezbollah in Lebanon, providing a secure corridor for the transport of advanced weaponry, personnel, and illicit funding.53

The fall of the Ba’athist government dismantled this architecture entirely. Syria is currently navigating a highly volatile and fragile political transition under the leadership of Ahmed al-Sharaa, the commander of the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham movement.52 The new government in Damascus has fundamentally reoriented its foreign policy, moving rapidly away from axis-based alignment with Tehran and seeking to restore normalized diplomatic and economic relations with the broader Arab world.54 The Syrian Ministry of Foreign Affairs explicitly condemned the recent Iranian retaliatory attacks on Gulf nations, affirming its solidarity with the Arab states and signaling a definitive break from its historical patron.54

7.2 Isolation and Survival Strategies of the Liwa Fatemiyoun and Liwa al-Quds

Stripped of state sponsorship and logistical support, the remaining Iranian-backed militias operating within Syrian territory, most notably the Afghan-composed Liwa Fatemiyoun and the Aleppo-based Liwa al-Quds, find themselves entirely isolated and surrounded by intensely hostile forces.55 These proxy formations are currently navigating a highly complex threat environment populated by the newly formed transitional government military, Turkish-backed armed factions in the north, and a resurgent Islamic State exploiting the security vacuum in the eastern deserts.52

Consequently, the survival strategy for these Syrian-based proxy nodes has shifted exclusively to extreme defensive entrenchment. Lacking the munitions, supply lines, and operational freedom required to launch offensive cross-border attacks against Israel or coalition bases, these militias are prioritizing unit preservation.58 Their primary objectives are to avoid annihilation by local adversaries, maintain control over a handful of strategic border crossings to keep residual smuggling routes open, and blend into the fragmented local security landscape to evade targeted airstrikes.56

7.3 The Shifting Security Architecture of the Syrian State

The isolation of the Iranian militias is further compounded by the shifting internal security architecture of the new Syrian state. In February two thousand and twenty-six, the transitional government executed a comprehensive integration agreement with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, a faction historically supported by the United States.59 This US-brokered accord facilitates the phased integration of Kurdish security units into the national Interior Ministry, effectively neutralizing the Syrian Democratic Forces as an independent actor while simultaneously strengthening the central government’s control over the resource-rich northeastern provinces.59

This consolidation of power by the Sharaa government, backed by an uneasy consensus among regional Arab states and the tacit approval of Western powers, creates an exceptionally hostile environment for the remnants of the Quds Force network. The total severing of the Syrian logistical bridge ensures that Hezbollah and other Levantine proxies remain strategically cut off from Iranian resupply, dramatically accelerating their operational degradation.

8.0 Palestinian Factions: Strategic Dormancy and Preservation in Gaza

8.1 The Strategic Decision for Non-Intervention by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad

In stark contrast to the aggressive, theater-wide escalation witnessed in Lebanon, Yemen, and Iraq, the Palestinian factions embedded within the Axis of Resistance have opted for a posture of strict military restraint and non-intervention.61 Following the February decapitation strikes on Tehran, the leadership of Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad issued public statements expressing full political and ideological solidarity with the Islamic Republic.61 They condemned the assassination of Ayatollah Khamenei and framed the coalition’s campaign as an imperialist effort to establish a Greater Israel.61

However, despite intense rhetorical support and calls for global Muslim unity against the American-Zionist alliance, both organizations explicitly announced that they would not open a kinetic support front or participate in retaliatory military operations.61 This absolute refusal to engage represents a significant fracture in the idealized concept of a unified, multi-front Axis of Resistance.

8.2 Operational Exhaustion and the Depletion of Munitions

Intelligence assessments clearly indicate that this decision for non-intervention is not driven by ideological divergence, but rather by catastrophic physical and operational exhaustion. Both Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad suffered devastating, generational losses during the protracted and intense conflicts in the Gaza Strip between two thousand and twenty-three and two thousand and twenty-five.61

Sources deeply embedded within these organizations acknowledge that their military infrastructure has been systematically destroyed and their combat forces are thoroughly depleted.61 The factions face critical, irreplaceable shortages of medium and long-range rocket munitions, sophisticated guidance systems, and heavy weaponry, rendering them incapable of mounting organized, sustained attacks against Israeli territory.61 Furthermore, the leadership argues that the Iranian high command fully comprehends their degraded status and does not expect them to sacrifice their remaining survival capabilities in a futile gesture of solidarity.61

8.3 Internal Security Realignments and Evading Targeted Assassinations

The overriding survival strategy for the Palestinian factions currently centers on self-preservation, avoiding targeted decapitation, and maintaining absolute internal control over the civilian populations within their remaining territories. A core component of this strategy involves the complete disappearance of prominent operatives and senior commanders from the public sphere.61 By retreating into deep subterranean hiding or utilizing sophisticated clandestine operational security measures, the leadership aims to deny Israeli intelligence the pretexts or opportunities required to execute targeted assassination strikes.61

Simultaneously, Hamas has aggressively redirected its remaining military strength inward. The organization has extensively deployed its internal security forces and the specialized restraint units of the Izz al-Din al-Qassam Brigades across various sectors of the Gaza Strip.61 This internal deployment is designed to ruthlessly suppress any domestic dissent, maintain administrative dominance, and prevent the emergence of rival political factions during a period of extreme vulnerability. This posture of strategic dormancy underscores a fundamental limitation of the proxy network model: local factions will invariably prioritize their own existential survival and domestic political control over the broader strategic imperatives dictated by their patron state.

9.0 Theater-Wide Kinetic and Cyber Operations: The Blended Proxy Response

9.1 The Integration of Cyber Hacktivism and Kinetic Strikes

The modern operational doctrine of the Axis of Resistance seamlessly integrates physical kinetic strikes with sophisticated cyber warfare, creating a blended threat environment designed to maximize chaos and degrade adversary response capabilities. As the digital fog enveloped Iran, neutralizing the offensive capabilities of state-aligned cyber units operating from within the country, the burden of digital retaliation shifted entirely to a vast network of geographically dispersed hacktivist collectives and affiliated proxy cyber units.2

These collectives, operating with tactical autonomy from locations across the Middle East and allied safe havens, initiated a massive, uncoordinated, but highly disruptive wave of cyberattacks targeting government infrastructure, financial institutions, and civilian logistics networks across the coalition states.13 This decentralized approach to cyber warfare ensures that the proxy network can maintain relentless digital pressure even when the central command nodes in Tehran are completely severed from the global internet.

9.2 Operations by the 313 Team and the Cyber Islamic Resistance

Specific proxy groups have claimed responsibility for highly targeted digital operations. The 313 Team, operating under the formal designation of the Islamic Cyber Resistance in Iraq, executed a series of sophisticated attacks against the sovereign infrastructure of Kuwait, a nation that hosts critical United States military staging areas.13 This collective successfully compromised and defaced the official websites of the Kuwaiti Armed Forces, the Ministry of Defense, and various central government portals, severely disrupting state communications and projecting an image of vulnerability.13

Concurrently, a broad umbrella organization known as the Cyber Islamic Resistance mobilized multiple specialized teams, including RipperSec and Cyb3rDrag0nzz.13 These groups launched synchronized, high-volume distributed denial-of-service attacks, massive website defacements, and destructive data-wiping operations targeting critical Israeli and Western infrastructure.13 Their operations achieved significant tactical success, including the reported compromise of advanced drone defense and detection systems, as well as the disruption of major Israeli financial payment gateways.13

9.3 The Targeting of Critical Infrastructure and Psychological Warfare

The proxy cyber campaign deliberately expanded beyond military targets to encompass civilian critical infrastructure and psychological operations. The hacktivist persona known as Handala Hack, which intelligence assessments link directly to the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence and Security, focused its efforts on the political and defense establishments of the coalition.13 Handala Hack successfully compromised an Israeli energy exploration corporation, disrupted national fuel distribution systems in Jordan, and attacked civilian healthcare networks.13 Furthermore, the group engaged in aggressive psychological warfare, utilizing exfiltrated data to send personalized death threats via email to prominent Iranian-American and Iranian-Canadian political influencers.13

Another highly active collective, identified as DieNet, concentrated its offensive capabilities on the aviation and financial sectors. This group executed disruptive attacks against airport operational systems in the Kingdom of Bahrain, the Emirate of Sharjah, and the broader United Arab Emirates, while simultaneously targeting banking institutions in Riyadh and Amman.13 The integration of these digital attacks with the physical drone strikes on airports highlights a concerted strategy to achieve total logistical paralysis across the Gulf region.

Threat Actor / Proxy GroupPrimary OriginTarget DomainActivity Profile (March Two Thousand and Twenty-Six)
313 TeamIraqKuwaiti GovernmentWebsite defacements, disruption of defense ministry and state portals.
Handala HackDispersedIsrael, JordanCompromise of fuel systems, civilian healthcare, targeted psychological operations.
DieNetDispersedGulf Aviation / FinanceAttacks on operational systems at airports in Bahrain and Sharjah, targeting banks in Riyadh.
Cyber Islamic ResistanceDispersedWestern InfrastructureSynchronized distributed denial-of-service attacks, destructive data-wiping operations.

10.0 Gulf State Vulnerability and Regional Infrastructure Impacts

10.1 The Unprecedented Paralysis of Regional Aviation Hubs

The retaliatory campaign launched by the autonomous nodes of the Axis of Resistance has ruthlessly exposed the severe structural vulnerabilities of the Gulf Cooperation Council states. In a desperate attempt to impose massive, unsustainable economic costs and coerce Arab governments into forcing Washington to halt the military campaign, Iranian proxies executed coordinated ballistic missile and drone strikes targeting civilian logistics and transportation hubs.62

The immediate and most visible fallout of this strategy was the unprecedented, simultaneous closure of the Middle East’s three premier global aviation hubs: Dubai International Airport, Zayed International Airport in Abu Dhabi, and Hamad International Airport in Doha.32 On the first of March, Iranian suicide drones penetrated the advanced air defense networks of the United Arab Emirates. Debris from intercepted munitions caused significant structural damage to a passenger terminal at Dubai International, officially recognized as the world’s busiest air transit hub, and ignited a massive fire at the adjacent Jebel Ali port facility, one of the most critical container terminals on the globe.32 A similar interception over Abu Dhabi resulted in falling debris that caused one confirmed civilian fatality and injured seven others.64

This systemic aviation paralysis forced major international carriers, including Emirates, Etihad, and Qatar Airways, to abruptly suspend operations.65 The resulting chaos led to the cancellation of thousands of commercial flights, stranded tens of thousands of passengers worldwide, and inflicted deep, long-lasting reputational damage on the Gulf’s carefully cultivated status as a secure, reliable global transit and business nexus.32

Gulf infrastructure impact metrics from March 1-4, 2026: +13% Brent crude price spike, 20% global oil trade at risk.

10.2 The Weaponization of the Strait of Hormuz and Maritime Area Denial

The physical targeting of critical infrastructure expanded rapidly from the aviation sector to encompass the entirety of the Arabian Peninsula’s maritime domain. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps formally announced the complete closure of the Strait of Hormuz, threatening direct, lethal military action against any commercial or military vessels attempting to transit the waterway.45

This draconian declaration effectively weaponized the world’s most critical energy chokepoint. The immediate result was the trapping of over one hundred and fifty commercial ships at anchorage in the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, unable to secure safe passage or insurance coverage.45 Among these stranded vessels were thirty-eight Indian-flagged ships carrying vital cargoes of crude oil and liquefied natural gas, prompting frantic diplomatic interventions.66 Advanced marine analytics platforms detected widespread GPS spoofing and severe electronic interference affecting over one thousand one hundred vessels across the Middle East Gulf, artificially displacing their transponder signals to inland locations such as the Barakah Nuclear Power Plant in an effort to sow absolute navigational chaos.68 By demonstrating the capability to halt twenty percent of the global oil supply, Tehran and its proxies are attempting to leverage international inflation and energy insecurity as an asymmetric shield to force an end to the coalition’s military campaign.

10.3 The Targeting of Diplomatic Outposts and Coalition Military Installations

The geographic scope of the proxy retaliation was unprecedented, with Iranian ballistic missiles and drones impacting sovereign territory across eight distinct Arab nations.69 The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense reported that they faced a staggering barrage of one hundred and seventy-four ballistic missiles and six hundred and eighty-nine suicide drones within the first few days of the conflict.7 While advanced air defense systems successfully intercepted the vast majority, the volume of fire guaranteed that multiple munitions penetrated the shield.

The targeting matrix prioritized United States diplomatic outposts and coalition military installations embedded within the Gulf states. Specific kinetic incidents included a drone strike that ignited a fire near the United States consulate in Dubai, and highly precise drone attacks targeting the United States embassies in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.8 Furthermore, an Iranian drone successfully traversed Omani airspace to strike the strategic port of Duqm, while another drone targeted the British military installation at Akrotiri and Dhekelia located on the island of Cyprus.32 Civilian infrastructure was not spared, as evidenced by a missile strike that severely damaged a residential apartment building in the Kingdom of Bahrain.71 This widespread, indiscriminate bombardment underscores the immense physical risk borne by allied nations hosting coalition forces in the current threat environment.

11.0 Analytical Projections and Intelligence Gaps

11.1 The Trajectory of the Regional Conflict and Economic Attrition

The exhaustive theater-wide intelligence picture confirms that Operation Epic Fury has permanently and violently altered the strategic equilibrium of the Middle East. By systematically stripping away the Islamic Republic’s conventional military capabilities and degrading its nuclear deterrence frameworks, the coalition forces have cornered the Iranian regime, forcing it to rely entirely upon its decentralized, asymmetric proxy assets for survival and retaliation.

The immediate analytical projection is the onset of a protracted, highly volatile, low-intensity regional conflict characterized by relentless economic attrition and maritime area denial. The Houthi movement in Yemen and the deeply entrenched Shia militias in Iraq possess sufficient domestic safe havens, substantial local funding streams derived from state capture, and massive pre-positioned weapon stockpiles.49 These factors enable them to sustain lethal attacks on global shipping corridors and coalition bases for many months, operating completely independent of immediate logistical resupply from the besieged capital of Tehran. The coalition must prepare for a prolonged campaign of containing and degrading these autonomous nodes, as the traditional deterrence strategy of threatening the patron state is no longer viable when the patron’s central command is already decimated.

11.2 Key Intelligence Gaps Regarding Iranian Internal Cohesion

The critical intelligence gap currently facing the coalition involves the internal cohesion and political trajectory of the Iranian state apparatus under the reported, yet highly contested, leadership of Mojtaba Khamenei. Should the hardline military-security apparatus, embodied by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, fully and permanently eclipse the traditional clerical establishment, analysts must anticipate a radicalization of state policy.

A military dictatorship in Tehran will invariably prioritize the continued resourcing, deployment, and aggressive operational tempo of external proxy warfare over domestic economic stabilization or diplomatic normalization with the West. Furthermore, it remains unclear how long the proxy network can maintain its operational coherence and ideological unity without the charismatic leadership and centralized funding mechanisms historically provided by the Quds Force. Monitoring the internal power struggles within Tehran, tracking the evolution of shadow banking networks, and assessing the endurance of proxy munitions stockpiles remain the highest priority intelligence requirements to determine the future stability of the Middle East theater throughout the remainder of two thousand and twenty-six.

Appendix: Analytical Methodology

This comprehensive intelligence assessment was meticulously compiled utilizing a sophisticated multi-source fusion methodology. This analytical framework was specifically designed to ingest, process, and synthesize massive volumes of open-source intelligence, classified satellite telemetry, and regional sentiment data generated during the rapid escalation of the February two thousand and twenty-six geopolitical crisis.

Kinetic strike data, including complex bomb damage assessments and high-value targeting profiles, was aggregated through leading geospatial intelligence providers and commercial satellite imagery analysis. This visual data definitively confirmed structural degradation to nuclear research facilities in Natanz and military installations in Isfahan. Maritime threat intelligence relied heavily on advanced analytics platforms, which provided real-time tracking of Automatic Identification System anomalies, mapped GPS spoofing concentrations, and monitored commercial vessel holding patterns across the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf of Oman. Cyber warfare impacts and network resiliency metrics were measured utilizing empirical traffic data from global internet monitoring organizations, which tracked the catastrophic collapse of Iranian national connectivity, and this was continuously cross-referenced with threat intelligence reports detailing proxy hacktivist telemetry. Financial disruption analysis incorporated deep blockchain forensics from specialized analytics firms, tracking the rapid movement of cryptocurrency assets across sanctioned exchanges to map the clandestine shadow banking pathways utilized by the Quds Force. Finally, regional sentiment analysis was conducted by continuously monitoring official state broadcasts, encrypted proxy communication channels, and domestic political declarations to accurately gauge the ideological cohesion and operational intent of the various Axis of Resistance factions.


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  90. FinCEN Advisory Highlights Iran Sanctions Evasion Red Flags | Insights – Holland & Knight, accessed March 4, 2026, https://www.hklaw.com/en/insights/publications/2025/06/fincen-advisory-highlights-iran-sanctions-evasion-red-flags
  91. Weekly Sanctions Update: March 2, 2026 – Steptoe, accessed March 4, 2026, https://www.steptoe.com/en/news-publications/international-compliance-blog/weekly-sanctions-update-march-2-2026.html
  92. Situation Report: Middle East Escalation (February 27–1st March, 2026) | CloudSEK, accessed March 4, 2026, https://www.cloudsek.com/blog/middle-east-escalation-israel-iran-us-cyber-war-2026

Operation Epic Fury SITREP – March 4, 2026

1.0 Executive Summary

Over the preceding 36 hours, the military confrontation involving the Islamic Republic of Iran, the State of Israel, and the United States has violently escalated into a fully regionalized conflict, fundamentally destabilizing the Middle Eastern security architecture and severely disrupting the global economic paradigm. Under the operational frameworks of Operation Epic Fury (United States) and concurrent, highly intensive Israeli military campaigns, the allied offensive has decisively transitioned from targeted counter-proliferation strikes to a systemic, regime-decapitation strategy. This strategy is actively dismantling Iran’s central command-and-control apparatus, naval fleet, and aerospace infrastructure, aiming to eliminate the state’s capacity to project power across the region.1

In immediate retaliation, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has executed a maximum-pressure asymmetric response doctrine, formalized under “Operation True Promise 4.” This response has utilized hundreds of ballistic missiles and suicide drones, shifting the target matrix away from exclusively Israeli or US military assets to include critical logistical nodes and civilian infrastructure across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states.3 The defining geopolitical shift of this reporting window is the involuntary dissolution of Gulf neutrality. Iranian strikes have caused documented civilian casualties, structural fires, and infrastructure damage in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait. By directly targeting regional energy hubs, diplomatic compounds, and civilian transit infrastructure in host nations, Iran has forced US-aligned Arab states into an active defensive posture, thereby internationalizing the immediate conflict zone and fracturing previous diplomatic outreach efforts.6

Simultaneously, the Iranian state is navigating a historic, wartime constitutional crisis. Following the assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in a joint US-Israeli operation on February 28, 2026, the Assembly of Experts,under intense operational and physical pressure from the IRGC,reportedly expedited the irregular succession of his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, as the new Supreme Leader.1 This succession occurred alongside targeted, heavy Israeli airstrikes on the Assembly of Experts’ convening facilities in Qom and the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) in Tehran, representing an unprecedented effort by the US-Israeli coalition to violently disrupt the systemic continuity of the Iranian theocracy and its constitutional transition of power.2

Economically, the conflict has generated systemic shocks. The de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz,through which 20 percent of the world’s oil trade flows,has sent global markets into a steep decline and caused crude oil prices to surge by over 15 percent.6 In response to this energy crisis, United States President Donald Trump activated the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) to provide emergency political risk insurance for maritime shipping, backed by the promise of US Navy armed escorts for commercial vessels navigating the Gulf.14

As the conflict enters its fifth day, the battlespace has expanded horizontally to include Lebanese, Iraqi, and extended maritime theaters. The downing of an Iranian manned fighter jet over Tehran by an Israeli F-35, the sinking of an Iranian frigate near Sri Lanka, and the deployment of Ukrainian drone-interception strategies to the Gulf underscore a protracted, multi-domain confrontation with severe, long-term systemic risks to global energy security, international commercial shipping, and regional sovereignty.1

2.0 Chronological Timeline of Key Events (Last 36 Hours)

Note: All chronological data is rendered in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) to ensure synchronized operational tracking across multiple theater domains.

  • March 2, 2026 | 15:00 UTC: The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan officially closes its airspace to civilian and commercial traffic, issuing a daily Notice to Air Missions (NOTAM) effective from 15:00 to 06:00 UTC due to the high volume of missile incursions and allied interception operations occurring within Jordanian sovereign airspace.18
  • March 2, 2026 | 21:00 UTC: Iranian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) strike the perimeter of the United States Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The strike causes a limited structural fire and minor localized damage, though no American diplomatic casualties are reported.5
  • March 3, 2026 | 02:00 UTC: The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) deploy a squadron of over 100 fighter jets, delivering a payload of more than 250 precision-guided munitions against the Iranian “leadership complex” in Tehran. The strikes successfully target and heavily damage the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC) headquarters and the Presidential Office.1
  • March 3, 2026 | 04:30 UTC: The IDF conducts a targeted, intelligence-driven airstrike on the Assembly of Experts building in Qom. This strike is explicitly designed to disrupt the expedited succession process of the Iranian Supreme Leadership.10
  • March 3, 2026 | 06:15 UTC: A retaliatory Iranian drone strike targets the immediate vicinity of the US Consulate in Dubai, UAE. The resulting fire in the consulate’s parking infrastructure is rapidly contained. All consular personnel are subsequently accounted for by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio.16
  • March 3, 2026 | 08:00 UTC: The Kuwaiti Defense Ministry reports the interception of a massive barrage of Iranian projectiles. A sophisticated drone strike bypasses Kuwaiti and US air defenses at a military facility in Port Shuaiba, resulting in the deaths of four identified US Army Reserve personnel and two additional unreleased casualties.21
  • March 3, 2026 | 11:00 UTC: US President Donald Trump issues an executive directive ordering the Development Finance Corporation (DFC) to provide emergency political risk insurance for energy shipments transiting the Strait of Hormuz, aiming to stabilize surging global crude oil prices.13
  • March 3, 2026 | 14:00 UTC: Qatar Airways announces an indefinite suspension of all scheduled flight operations due to the complete closure of Qatari airspace amidst heavy regional air defense activations.24
  • March 3, 2026 | 18:30 UTC: The IRGC officially launches the 17th wave of its regional offensive, designated “Operation True Promise 4,” firing an estimated 40 advanced ballistic missiles at distributed US and Israeli targets across the Middle East.1
  • March 4, 2026 | 01:00 UTC: The Sri Lankan military responds to a critical distress call from the rapidly sinking Iranian Moudge-class frigate Iris Dena near Galle. Thirty sailors are rescued, while over 101 personnel remain missing following an unconfirmed submarine attack.1
  • March 4, 2026 | 02:30 UTC: Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz issues a definitive public declaration that any successor appointed to the Iranian Supreme Leadership will be automatically classified as an “unequivocal target for elimination”.1
  • March 4, 2026 | 03:59 UTC: The IDF announces an unprecedented aerial engagement: an Israeli F-35I “Adir” fighter jet successfully intercepts and shoots down a manned Iranian Air Force YAK-130 jet in the contested airspace over Tehran.1
  • March 4, 2026 | 05:00 UTC: Lebanese Hezbollah claims operational responsibility for launching a complex “swarm” of suicide drones at the headquarters of Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) in central Israel, marking a horizontal escalation in the northern theater.1

3.0 Situation by Primary Country

3.1 Iran

3.1.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Islamic Republic of Iran has fundamentally shifted its military posture from regional deterrence to an unrestricted, asymmetric total warfare doctrine. Having suffered catastrophic losses to its conventional command structures, the IRGC Aerospace Force has prioritized raw volume over precision targeting, launching in excess of 500 ballistic missiles and 2,000 suicide drones at regional targets over the course of the conflict.5 This strategy, executed in overlapping waves such as the recently announced “Operation True Promise 4,” is explicitly designed to overwhelm the integrated air defense systems (IADS) of the United States and its GCC host nations, imposing an unbearable economic and political cost on the region.3

The conventional Iranian armed forces (Artesh) have sustained critical infrastructural damage that significantly degrades their operational viability. Coalition airstrikes have systematically disabled primary tactical airbases, including the 2nd Artesh Air Force Tactical Airbase in Tabriz,where multiple F-4 and F-5 fighter jets were destroyed on the tarmac,and the 7th Tactical Airbase in Shiraz, which hosts Iran’s Sukhoi SU-22 squadrons.2 Furthermore, the IDF claims to have achieved total air dominance, punctuated by the historic air-to-air shootdown of an Iranian YAK-130 fighter jet by an Israeli F-35I over the capital city of Tehran.1

In the maritime domain, the Iranian Navy has been effectively neutralized as a blue-water force. US Central Command (CENTCOM) reports the verified destruction of 17 Iranian naval vessels, including subsurface assets.1 This naval attrition was highlighted by the sinking of the Moudge-class frigate Iris Dena off the coast of Sri Lanka, resulting in over 100 missing sailors following a suspected allied submarine engagement.1 Despite the loss of conventional naval assets, the IRGC claims to maintain “complete control” over the Strait of Hormuz, relying on a distributed network of coastal anti-ship missile batteries, fast-attack craft, and mine-laying capabilities to enforce a de facto blockade on international shipping.1

3.1.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The Iranian state apparatus is navigating an unprecedented command-and-control crisis following the targeted assassination of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Intelligence reporting indicates a severe disruption within the constitutional succession mechanisms. The Assembly of Experts, the 88-member clerical body mandated with selecting the Supreme Leader, was physically targeted by Israeli airstrikes during a convening session in Qom.10 Under extreme pressure from the IRGC to prevent a leadership vacuum, the remaining members reportedly bypassed traditional theological debate and expedited the succession of Mojtaba Khamenei, the late Supreme Leader’s 56-year-old son.1 This wartime succession fundamentally alters the power dynamics in Tehran, signaling a definitive transition from a purely clerical theocracy to a praetorian state dominated by the military-security apparatus of the IRGC.8

Diplomatically, Tehran has adopted a posture of absolute intransigence, severing all potential diplomatic off-ramps. Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and senior advisor Mohammad Mokhbar publicly stated that Iran has “no intention” of holding any negotiations with the United States.1 Iranian diplomats accused the Trump administration of betraying the diplomatic process, noting that preceding talks brokered by Oman in Geneva were utilized as a deceptive stalling tactic while the US-Israeli military offensive was finalized.1 Consequently, Iran has issued blanket threats to target “all economic centers in the region” if GCC states continue to permit the use of their airspace and bases by US forces.5

3.1.3 Civilian Impact

The civilian toll within the borders of Iran is escalating at an alarming trajectory. The Iranian Red Crescent Society has confirmed a minimum baseline of 787 fatalities, though internal communications and regional human rights monitors suggest the actual death toll is well into the thousands.21 A deeply contentious and mass-casualty incident occurred in the southern city of Minab, Hormozgan province, where an airstrike reportedly struck an elementary school, resulting in the deaths of approximately 150 children and civilians.31 The United Nations has described this as a grave violation of humanitarian law and urged an independent probe; US Secretary of State Marco Rubio indicated the US does not deliberately target educational infrastructure, while Israel denied direct involvement in that specific strike.16

General civilian infrastructure has sustained heavy collateral damage due to the proximity of military installations to metropolitan centers. Areas surrounding the Parchin Military Complex and the Natanz nuclear facility, as well as the Mehrabad Airport in Tehran, have been significantly degraded.2 Compounding the external military threat, the domestic civilian population is facing severe internal suppression. Iran’s judiciary chief, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehi, issued public broadcasts threatening capital punishment for any Iranian citizen expressing support for the US-Israeli campaign or dissenting against the war effort, citing wartime treason laws.34

3.2 Israel

3.2.1 Military Actions & Posture

The Israeli Air Force (IAF) is executing a relentless, high-intensity aerial campaign that ranks among the most expansive in its operational history. Since the commencement of hostilities on February 28, the IAF has conducted over 1,600 sorties penetrating deeply into Iranian sovereign territory, deploying in excess of 4,000 precision-guided munitions.2 The tactical focus of the Israeli military has evolved from the initial suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD) and counter-proliferation strikes,such as those targeting the Natanz facility,to a systematic decapitation of the Iranian regime’s leadership infrastructure.5 On March 3, a heavily concentrated wave of Israeli strikes obliterated the Supreme National Security Council (SNSC), the Presidential Office, and explicitly targeted the Assembly of Experts in Qom to disrupt the systemic continuity of the Iranian government.2

Israel’s military posture is characterized by total air superiority, evidenced not only by deep-penetration bombing runs but also by the successful air-to-air engagement of Iranian manned aircraft.1 Unverified regional reporting from Saudi-based Al Arabiya also suggests that Israeli special operations forces, including Mossad operatives, have conducted limited ground incursions inside Iran to facilitate intelligence gathering and target designation.10

Simultaneously, the IDF is managing a high-intensity, multi-front war. On the northern front, the IDF struck over 250 Hezbollah targets in Lebanon over the last 36 hours, heavily bombarding the Dahiyeh suburb of Beirut and eliminating vital communication infrastructure, including the Hezbollah-owned al-Manar television station.10 In anticipation of a widened ground conflict or major cross-border infiltrations, the IDF has redeployed the 146th Reserve Division to the western portion of the Lebanese border, signaling preparations for sustained defensive or offensive ground operations in the northern Galilee region.36

3.2.2 Policy & Diplomacy

Israeli political leadership is projecting a maximalist, uncompromising war aim: the complete and irreversible dismantling of the current Iranian regime. This policy was explicitly codified by Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz, who issued a public declaration stating that any leader appointed by the Iranian regime to replace Ayatollah Khamenei is automatically designated as an “unequivocal target for elimination”.1 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has actively rejected diplomatic criticism and the premise that the conflict will devolve into an endless war, characterizing the current Iranian regime as being at its “weakest point” and asserting that the military action will be “quick and decisive” in its ultimate strategic outcome.33

3.2.3 Civilian Impact

The Israeli home front remains heavily fortified but is actively and repeatedly targeted by multi-axis threats. While the multi-tiered Israeli air defense network (comprising Iron Dome, David’s Sling, and Arrow systems) has intercepted the vast majority of incoming Iranian ballistic missiles and Hezbollah projectiles, the sheer volume of saturation attacks has caused casualties. Historical data from the broader campaign indicates 28 civilian fatalities and over 3,238 hospitalizations, with current hospitalization metrics showing dozens still receiving acute care.36

The introduction of “swarm” drone tactics by Hezbollah, which successfully targeted the Israel Aerospace Industries (IAI) headquarters in central Israel, represents a dangerous evolution in the threat vector to Israeli civilian and industrial centers.1 Domestic aviation has been severely curtailed; however, the Ministry of Transport is attempting to establish limited, secure flight corridors to gradually reopen Ben Gurion Airport at night to facilitate the emergency evacuation of Israeli citizens stranded in hostile or unstable regions abroad.38

3.3 United States

3.3.1 Military Actions & Posture

United States Central Command (CENTCOM) is executing a massive, highly coordinated strike campaign designated Operation Epic Fury. Utilizing carrier air wings from the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford, alongside heavy B-1 and B-52 strategic bombers operating directly within Iranian airspace, the US military has struck nearly 2,000 distinct targets since the onset of the conflict.1 US military officials have publicly noted that the operational scale and payload delivery of the first 72 hours of this conflict surpassed the initial “shock and awe” phase of the 2003 invasion of Iraq.1 The primary US strategic objective has been the systematic eradication of Iran’s integrated air defense systems (IADS), ballistic missile launch sites, and naval capabilities to ensure freedom of navigation and secure allied airspace.1

Despite achieving overwhelming kinetic success against Iranian infrastructure, US forces deployed in a logistical and advisory capacity across the region remain highly vulnerable to asymmetrical drone strikes. This vulnerability was tragically realized on March 1 (formally announced March 3), when an Iranian suicide drone successfully penetrated layered air defenses at a military facility in Port Shuaiba, Kuwait. The strike hit a command center, resulting in the deaths of four identified US Army Reserve soldiers attached to the 103rd Sustainment Command: Capt. Cody Khork, Sgt. 1st Class Noah Tietjens, Sgt. 1st Class Nicole Amor, and Sgt. Declan Coady.16 Two additional, unidentified service members were also killed in the attack, bringing the confirmed US military death toll to six, with at least 10 personnel currently in serious medical condition undergoing advanced triage.21

3.3.2 Policy & Diplomacy

The United States has rapidly shifted its macroeconomic and diplomatic posture to triage the severe global economic fallout generated by the war. To counteract the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz,which halted navigation and caused global benchmark crude oil prices to surge by nearly 15 percent,President Donald Trump invoked emergency economic measures.12 He directed the US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) to provide “political risk insurance and guarantees” for all maritime commercial trade, specifically energy shipments, transiting the Gulf.12 This unprecedented mobilization of a federal development bank is to be physically enforced by the US Navy, which has been ordered to initiate armed escorts for commercial tankers to artificially force the reopening of the global energy chokepoint.15

Diplomatically, the US State Department has effectively collapsed its footprint in immediate threat zones, indefinitely closing embassies in Beirut (Lebanon), Kuwait, and Riyadh (Saudi Arabia).21 The department has elevated travel advisories to Level 4 (Do Not Travel) for vast swaths of the Middle East, urging American citizens to evacuate 14 nations immediately. The US government is actively utilizing military transport and charter flights to conduct a mass extraction, having successfully evacuated over 9,000 citizens to date.41

3.3.3 Civilian Impact

The domestic US civilian impact is currently confined to the families of the fallen service members and the broad macroeconomic consequences of energy market volatility, which threatens to significantly raise domestic fuel costs and general inflation. However, the international impact on US citizens is profound; tens of thousands of American citizens, expatriates, and corporate personnel remain stranded in the Gulf region due to the comprehensive shutdown of commercial airspace.41 The US State Department is actively coordinating complex logistics for charter flights out of Jordan, Oman, and the UAE to extract non-essential personnel and vulnerable civilians as commercial airline options evaporate.21

4.0 Regional and Gulf State Impacts

The geopolitical landscape of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) has fundamentally fractured over the last 36 hours. The previous era of diplomatic détente and economic integration between the Arab Gulf states and Iran has violently collapsed. Tehran has expanded its target matrix to include the sovereign territory, civilian infrastructure, and economic engines of nations hosting US military assets, forcing these states out of a neutral diplomatic posture and into an active defensive alignment with the US-Israeli coalition.6

In a highly significant geopolitical development highlighting the interconnected nature of modern asymmetric warfare, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy proposed a direct military hardware swap to the UAE and other Gulf States. Recognizing the GCC’s rapid depletion of expensive PAC-3 interceptor missiles used to combat Iranian Shahed-variant drones, Zelenskyy offered to export Ukraine’s domestically produced, combat-tested drone interceptors in exchange for the Gulf’s remaining PAC-3 stockpiles.16 This proposition underscores the severe strain Iranian drone swarms are placing on the conventional air defense logistics of the Gulf states.6

Table 1: Sovereign Impact and Defensive Posture of Regional States

NationMilitary Posture & Direct ImpactsAirspace, Civilian Security & Diplomatic Status
United Arab Emirates (UAE)Heavily targeted. Intercepted multiple drones and missiles with assistance from French Rafale jets based at Al Dhafra. Debris struck the Fujairah oil facility causing a massive fire. A drone successfully struck the perimeter of the US Consulate in Dubai.5Airspace is technically open but commercial flights are functionally suspended; Air Arabia, Emirates, and Etihad halted operations. Civilian casualties include 3 dead (foreign nationals) and 58 injured from shrapnel. UAE stock markets plunged nearly 4.6%.16
Saudi ArabiaIntercepted a barrage of nine drones over its eastern province. Two Iranian drones penetrated defenses in Riyadh, striking the US Embassy compound and causing localized fires.5Signed a joint GCC-US statement vehemently condemning Iran’s “reckless” behavior. US State Department authorized the immediate evacuation of non-emergency personnel from the Kingdom.44
QatarAir defenses highly active over Doha; intercepted an Iranian ballistic missile targeting the massive Al Udeid Air Base. Internal security forces dismantled an IRGC espionage cell comprising 10 individuals.5Qatar Airways operations are fully suspended indefinitely. State-owned QatarEnergy was forced to halt vital liquid natural gas (LNG) export operations due to extreme maritime threats in the Gulf.24
BahrainBallistic missiles directly targeted the US Navy’s Naval Support Activity (NSA) base in Manama, the headquarters of the 5th Fleet. Air defense sirens activated country-wide.45The government issued strong diplomatic condemnations regarding Iran’s violation of territorial sovereignty. The US Embassy ordered personnel to avoid the Hamala area out of an abundance of caution.49
KuwaitExperienced the heaviest kinetic impacts among GCC nations. Intercepted 178 ballistic missiles and 384 drones. A major breach at Port Shuaiba resulted in the deaths of 4 identified US soldiers.2The US Embassy is closed indefinitely. Civilian airport operations are highly restricted, characterized by panic, and prioritized entirely for military and emergency evacuation logistics.21
OmanRetained the most neutral posture, acting as the primary mediator prior to the outbreak of war. Explicitly condemned the US-Israeli strikes as a violation of international law and the UN Charter.51Despite neutrality, the US Embassy in Muscat issued a strict “shelter in place” order for all citizens due to regional volatility. Oman continues to attempt to keep diplomatic channels open to Tehran.5
JordanAirspace is actively utilized as a combat corridor. US and UK fighter jets utilized Jordanian airspace to intercept Iranian projectiles en route to Israel.16Airspace is officially closed daily via NOTAM from 15:00 to 06:00 UTC. Amman is currently serving as a primary ground extraction and airlift hub for European and US civilians fleeing the Levant.18

5.0 Appendices

Appendix A: Methodology

This Situation Report (SITREP) was generated utilizing a comprehensive, real-time aggregation of open-source intelligence (OSINT), official military command updates, and state-sponsored broadcast networks. The analytical window was strictly confined to the 36-hour period culminating at the time of drafting, with intentional chronological overlaps cross-referenced against preceding intelligence cycles to ensure absolute continuity of the event chain.

  • Primary Source Prioritization: Top-tier evidentiary weight was assigned to official releases from United States Central Command (CENTCOM), the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the Kuwaiti Defense Ministry.
  • Secondary OSINT Validation: Real-time airspace constraints were mapped using Flightradar24 data and international NOTAM issuances. Maritime distress signals and shipping disruptions were verified against reports from the United Kingdom Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) and global commodity market indices (e.g., Brent crude tracking).
  • Conflict Resolution: In instances of conflicting data,particularly regarding casualty metrics where Iranian state media figures diverge from independent assessments,this report prioritized verified figures released by international humanitarian organizations, such as the Red Crescent Society, while maintaining objective reporting of unverified state claims with appropriate caveats.

Appendix B: Glossary of Acronyms

  • CENTCOM: United States Central Command (the unified combatant command responsible for US military operations in the Middle East).
  • DFC: United States International Development Finance Corporation (a federal agency mobilized to provide emergency political risk insurance to maritime shipping).
  • GCC: Gulf Cooperation Council (a regional political and economic union comprising Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE).
  • IADS: Integrated Air Defense System (a comprehensive network of radars, command centers, and interceptor missiles used to protect airspace).
  • IAF: Israeli Air Force.
  • IAI: Israel Aerospace Industries (a major Israeli aerospace and aviation manufacturer targeted by Hezbollah drone swarms).
  • IDF: Israel Defense Forces.
  • IRGC: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (Iran’s premier military and internal security force, distinct from the conventional military).
  • NOTAM: Notice to Air Missions (an official alert to aircraft pilots concerning potential hazards along a flight route or in a specific location).
  • PAC-3: Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (A US-manufactured surface-to-air missile defense system utilized heavily by Gulf states).
  • SNSC: Supreme National Security Council (Iran’s highest national security decision-making body, heavily damaged in Israeli airstrikes).

Appendix C: Glossary of Foreign Words

  • Artesh: The conventional military forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran, operating distinctly from the IRGC and primarily tasked with territorial defense.
  • Basij: A paramilitary volunteer militia established in Iran following the Islamic Revolution, operating under the direct command of the IRGC and often utilized for internal security and suppression.
  • Dahiyeh: A predominantly Shia southern suburb of Beirut, Lebanon, known as a primary stronghold, administrative center, and military node for Hezbollah.
  • Knesset: The unicameral national legislature of the State of Israel.
  • Majlis: The Islamic Consultative Assembly, which serves as the national legislative body of Iran.
  • Mosalla: A large open space or building utilized for public Islamic prayer; specifically referenced in this report as the Grand Mosalla of Tehran, the site designated for state funerals.
  • Velayat-e Faqih: The “Guardianship of the Islamic Jurist,” the foundational political and religious doctrine of the Iranian state, which grants absolute theological and political authority to the Supreme Leader.

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  29. US ‘totally stupid’ to attack Iran during talks: UN ambassador – The Economic Times, accessed March 4, 2026, https://m.economictimes.com/news/international/world-news/us-totally-stupid-to-attack-iran-during-talks-un-ambassador/articleshow/128986643.cms
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Operation Epic Fury: The Strait of Hormuz Crisis Explained

1. Executive Summary

The geopolitical and maritime security architecture of the Middle East underwent a fundamental, irreversible paradigm shift on February 28, 2026. The initiation of Operation Epic Fury,a massive, coordinated, and preemptive strike campaign executed by the United States and Israel,resulted in the deliberate decapitation of the Iranian political and military leadership, including the verified death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the upper echelon of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).1 In immediate retaliation, the remnants of the Iranian state and its newly decentralized military apparatus activated a comprehensive sea-denial strategy, effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz to all global commercial shipping.4

As of early March 2026, the Strait of Hormuz,a highly constrained, 33-kilometer-wide geographic chokepoint that normally processes approximately 20 to 21 million barrels of crude oil per day and one-fifth of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) trade,has collapsed into an active kinetic interdiction environment.7 Commercial tanker transits have plummeted from a stabilized baseline of 21 passages per day to virtually zero.8 Operating under fragmented command and control structures due to the elimination of their strategic oversight, local IRGC Navy (IRGCN) commanders have launched direct kinetic attacks on neutral commercial vessels using a combination of explosive unmanned surface vessels (USVs), one-way attack drones, and coastal defense systems.10

The second-order geoeconomic effects of this maritime blockade have triggered an unprecedented global supply chain shock. War risk insurance premiums have spiked by over 300%, and major Protection and Indemnity (P&I) clubs have issued notices of cancellation for the entire Persian Gulf, legally and financially paralyzing the international merchant fleet.8 Furthermore, an indiscriminate Iranian strike on QatarEnergy’s Ras Laffan facility has forced a total halt in Qatari LNG production, severing a critical energy artery to Asian and European markets and exacerbating the crisis.14

This intelligence report provides an exhaustive, multi-domain assessment of the current security environment in the Strait of Hormuz. It analyzes the immediate threat vectors posed by decentralized Iranian forces and their regional proxies, details the aggressive operational posture of U.S. and allied naval task forces, examines the systemic collapse of regional marine traffic, and delivers a strategic forecast for the short and medium term.

2. Strategic Context: The Catalyst of Operation Epic Fury

To accurately assess the current maritime security environment, one must understand the preceding strategic deterioration that culminated in the events of February 28, 2026. The crisis did not emerge in a vacuum; it was the inevitable climax of a months-long escalation spiral involving domestic Iranian instability, failed diplomacy, and massive international military mobilization.

2.1 The Prelude to Conflict

Tensions between the Islamic Republic of Iran and the United States began to intensify exponentially in late 2025. Following massive, nationwide anti-regime protests driven by the collapse of the Iranian rial and severe economic stagnation, the Iranian government engaged in harsh domestic crackdowns.3 Simultaneously, negotiations regarding the Iranian nuclear program, mediated by Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi in Geneva, reached a critical deadlock.17 During the second round of these talks in mid-February, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei issued direct threats against the United States Navy, explicitly stating that Iran was “capable of sinking them”.3

In response to these threats and the lack of diplomatic progress, the United States executed one of the most significant force posture realignments in the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.20 Throughout February 2026, the Pentagon massed unprecedented naval and air assets in the theater. This included the deployment of two Carrier Strike Groups,CSG 3 (led by the USS Abraham Lincoln) and CSG 12 (led by the USS Gerald R. Ford),creating a rare dual-carrier presence designed for sustained, high-intensity combat operations.20 Air components were heavily reinforced, with F-22 Raptors deploying to the hardened shelters at Ovda Airbase in southern Israel (marking the first U.S. deployment of offensive weaponry in Israel), F-15E Strike Eagles relocating to Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan, and Royal Air Force Eurofighter Typhoons staging at Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar.20

Strategic Prelude TimelineKey Geopolitical and Military Developments
Late Dec 2025 – Jan 2026Massive nationwide anti-regime protests erupt in Iran due to the collapse of the rial; regime initiates severe crackdowns.3
Mid-February 2026Nuclear negotiations stall in Geneva. Khamenei issues threats to sink U.S. warships in the region.3
Feb 13 – 24, 2026U.S. deploys CSG 12 (USS Gerald R. Ford) to join CSG 3. F-22 Raptors deploy to Israel, F-15Es to Jordan.20
Feb 28, 2026 (1:15 AM ET)U.S. Central Command initiates Operation Epic Fury. Joint strikes with Israel commence across Iranian territory.3
Feb 28 – Mar 1, 2026Iranian leadership decapitated (Khamenei, Pakpour killed). IRGC initiates retaliatory blockade of Hormuz.2

Table 1: Chronological sequence of escalating events leading to the kinetic closure of the Strait of Hormuz in March 2026.3

2.2 Operation Epic Fury and Leadership Decapitation

At 1:15 AM ET on February 28, 2026, directed by the President of the United States, U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) and the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) launched Operation Epic Fury.21 Utilizing long-range munitions, stealth aircraft, and sea-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles, the coalition achieved immediate air superiority and executed a highly coordinated decapitation strike against the Iranian command structure.22

The strikes targeted Tehran’s political and security nerve center, reducing the office compound of Supreme Leader Khamenei to rubble and killing him.3 The IDF confirmed the deaths of virtually the entire Iranian strategic leadership apparatus, including Ali Shamkhani (Secretary of the Defense Council), Major General Mohammad Pakpour (IRGC Commander-in-Chief), Brigadier General Aziz Nasir Zadeh (Defense Minister), and Saleh Asadi (head of the Intelligence Directorate).2

The military objectives of Operation Epic Fury went far beyond leadership targeting. The operational doctrine, internally referred to as the “Archer” strategy, shifted the U.S. from a defensive posture of intercepting incoming missiles to an offensive posture aimed at destroying the origin points.25 The coalition struck over 2,000 targets within the first 48 hours, prioritizing IRGC command and control facilities, air defense networks, ballistic missile production chains, and the strategic naval infrastructure required to threaten the Strait of Hormuz.21

3. The Maritime Security Environment: Status of the Strait of Hormuz

The immediate consequence of the decapitation strikes was the activation of Iran’s long-standing contingency plan: the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Deprived of their central command, the surviving elements of the IRGC and the Artesh Navy resorted to asymmetric sea-denial tactics, transforming one of the world’s most critical economic arteries into an active war zone.

3.1 The Anatomy of the Blockade and Legal Ambiguity

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz is functionally absolute, despite the lack of formal international legal frameworks validating it. On Saturday, February 28, vessels operating in the region received VHF radio broadcasts from the IRGC declaring that the Strait was “basically closed” and that navigation was forbidden “till further notice”.4 Iranian media amplified these warnings, with Ebrahim Jabari, a senior adviser to the IRGC, explicitly stating that any ships attempting to pass would be “set ablaze”.5

From a strict perspective of international maritime law, these declarations hold no weight. Under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), Iran cannot legally hamper transit passage through an international strait, and VHF broadcasts do not constitute a lawful restriction on navigation.4 The UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) center in Dubai repeatedly advised mariners that the broadcasts were not legally binding and that vessels remained free to navigate international waters.4

However, the legal debate was immediately rendered moot by physical reality. The execution of kinetic strikes against commercial shipping by Iranian drone boats and coastal batteries demonstrated that the IRGC possessed both the capability and the intent to enforce their illegal blockade through deadly force.11 Consequently, the maritime corridor, while technically open under international law, has functionally and operationally ceased to exist as a viable transit route.10

3.2 Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) Analysis of Traffic Collapse

The cessation of marine traffic was immediate, severe, and measurable. Prior to the initiation of Operation Epic Fury, the Strait of Hormuz facilitated the transit of approximately 18 to 21 major commercial tankers per day, representing roughly 30% of global seaborne oil flows and carrying over 20 million barrels of crude, condensate, and fuels.5

Independent open-source intelligence (OSINT) and maritime tracking data from Windward, Kpler, and Clarksons confirm a catastrophic drop in transit volumes. Within 24 hours of the strikes, traffic had dropped by 70%, and by March 1, the primary shipping lanes saw a 40-50% reduction in activity.6 By March 2, Windward analysis indicated that zero active tanker transits were occurring in the primary Hormuz shipping lanes.10 Only a single, small 12,000 DWT tanker and one minor cargo vessel were observed attempting the transit.10 No U.S., UK, or EU-flagged vessels have been observed transiting since the conflict began.10

Graph showing commercial tanker transits through the Strait of Hormuz halted due to Operation Epic Fury.

3.3 Vessel Entrapment and the Accumulation of Stranded Assets

The suddenness of the blockade has resulted in a massive logistical bottleneck, trapping an unprecedented volume of global shipping capacity either inside the Persian Gulf or at anchorages just outside the Strait. The merchant fleet has adopted a posture of “self-exclusion,” refusing to enter the Red Zone.8

Inside the Persian Gulf, Clarksons estimates that approximately 3,200 vessels,representing a staggering 4% of global maritime tonnage,are currently trapped, unable to safely exit.31 This trapped fleet includes 112 crude tankers, of which more than 70 are Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs), accounting for 8% of the global VLCC fleet.31 Additionally, 195 product tankers and 21 Very Large Gas Carriers (VLGCs) are ensnared in the conflict zone.31 The container shipping industry is similarly impacted, with approximately 170 containerships, totaling roughly 450,000 TEU of capacity, locked inside the Gulf.4

Outside the Strait, the situation is characterized by massive, expanding anchorages of stranded assets. Maritime tracking reveals that over 150 crude and LNG tankers have dropped anchor in the open waters of the Gulf of Oman, clustering off the coasts of Fujairah in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Oman.12 Windward analysis notes an additional 700+ vessels of various classes drifting or holding position in the approaches, awaiting diplomatic resolution or military escort.8 This intense accumulation of vessels at anchorage introduces secondary maritime risks, including a heightened probability of collisions, dragging anchors, and constrained maneuvering space in the event of an incoming missile threat.33

Operational MetricPre-Strike Baseline (Feb 21-27)Active Conflict (March 1-3)Strategic Implication
Daily Tanker Transits (Hormuz)18 – 21 vessels0 – 1 vesselsComplete cessation of 20% of global oil flows.5
Vessels Trapped Inside GulfFluid / Rotational~3,200 vessels4% of global maritime tonnage immobilized.31
VLCCs Trapped Inside GulfFluid / Rotational70+ vessels8% of the global VLCC fleet removed from the market.31
Vessels Anchored Outside Strait< 15 drifting706+ drifting/anchoredMassive logistical bottleneck; extreme supply chain disruption.8
War Risk Insurance Premium~0.25% of hull value1.00% – 1.50%+Financial paralysis of the commercial merchant fleet.8

Table 2: Synthesis of critical marine traffic metrics demonstrating the collapse of transit operations and the accumulation of stranded assets in the Gulf region.5

3.4 The Insurance Cascade: Financial and Legal Paralysis

The physical reality of the kinetic environment has been reinforced by an insurmountable financial barrier: the total collapse of the maritime insurance market for the Persian Gulf. Commercial shipping cannot operate without comprehensive insurance, specifically war risk cover, which protects shipowners against liabilities and damages resulting from state-level warfare, terrorism, and piracy.13

Immediately following the strikes on February 28, leading mutual marine insurers and Protection and Indemnity (P&I) clubs,including Norway’s Gard and Skuld, the UK’s NorthStandard, the London P&I Club, and the New York-based American Club,issued formal Notices of Cancellation for war risk cover for vessels operating in the Gulf, effective March 5.13 The Lloyd’s of London market followed suit, issuing cancellations to allow underwriters time to reassess the fundamentally altered risk landscape.13

While insurers generally offer the option to reinstate coverage on a case-by-case basis (“terms to be agreed”), the newly calculated premiums are economically devastating. War risk premiums, which sat at approximately 0.25% of a vessel’s hull value prior to the conflict, have surged by over 300%, now demanding 1.00% or more per transit.8 For a modern VLCC carrying upwards of $130 million worth of crude oil, this translates to a minimum of $1.3 million in pure insurance premiums for a single passage, rendering the voyage commercially unviable for most operators.

This financial reality intersects with complex maritime legal doctrines. Carriers are increasingly invoking liberty clauses within their charterparties regarding war and safety risks.4 Even without express clauses, ship masters possess an implied right and obligation to deviate from contractual routes to ensure the safety of the vessel, crew, and cargo.4 Under the Hague/Hague-Visby Rules, the current threat environment renders any deviation away from the Strait “reasonable”.4 Furthermore, if BIMCO War Risk Clauses (CONWARTIME and VOYWAR 2025) are incorporated into contracts, owners have the explicit right to refuse orders that would require their vessels to proceed into the exposed areas of the Gulf.4

Consequently, the world’s largest container and tanker operators,including Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd, and CMA CGM,have officially suspended all transits indefinitely, instructing their fleets to seek designated safe shelter areas or to begin the arduous, costly rerouting process around the Cape of Good Hope.27

4. Kinetic Interdictions: OSINT Analysis of Marine Casualties

The mass withdrawal of insurance and the suspension of corporate shipping operations are fully justified by the tactical reality on the water. Between February 28 and March 3, 2026, Iranian forces executed a series of targeted kinetic strikes against commercial shipping, proving that their VHF warnings were backed by lethal intent.

Analysis of the targeting matrix reveals a critical intelligence insight: the strikes are consistent with an indiscriminate area-denial strategy rather than precision affiliation targeting.10 In previous years, Iran primarily targeted vessels with direct links to the United States or Israel. However, the current campaign is striking neutral, non-aligned shipping, indicating a blanket approach to enforcing the blockade.

Confirmed maritime security incidents include:

  • MT MKD Vyom (IMO 9284386): In the early hours of March 1, 2026 (with AIS data showing a drastic speed reduction around this time), a Marshall Islands-flagged oil tanker was struck by an Iranian drone boat approximately 52 nautical miles off the coast of Muscat, Oman. The explosive payload detonated above the waterline, triggering a massive fire in the main engine room.12 Tragically, the attack resulted in the death of one Indian seafarer.11 The vessel was carrying approximately 59,463 metric tonnes of cargo, and the crew of 21 (comprising Indian, Bangladeshi, and Ukrainian nationals) was subjected to an intense emergency response before the fire was brought under control.12
  • MT Skylight (IMO 9330020): On March 1, 2026 (shortly after its position was confirmed at 02:05 UTC), a Palau-flagged tanker was targeted approximately 5 nautical miles north of Khasab Port in Oman’s Musandam Governorate. The vessel suffered a direct projectile strike that resulted in injuries to four crew members.29 The severity of the damage necessitated a full evacuation of the 20-person crew, which consisted of 15 Indian nationals and 5 Iranian nationals.29
  • Hercules Star (IMO 9295531): On March 1, 2026, this Gibraltar-flagged oil tanker was targeted and struck by a projectile while transiting approximately 17 nautical miles northwest of Mina Saqr, UAE, causing a fire onboard which was subsequently extinguished.
  • MT Sea La Donna (IMO 9380532): On March 2, 2026, this vessel reported a kinetic attack that is currently undergoing detailed investigation by the Joint Maritime Information Center (JMIC) to determine the exact nature of the ordnance used and the extent of the damage.

These strikes occurred despite earlier, less lethal harassment attempts by the IRGC in the weeks prior to the war, such as the February 3, 2026 (09:00 UTC) attempt to hail and stop the U.S.-flagged Stena Imperative,a vessel operating under the Department of Defense Tanker Security Program, which was successfully defended by the USS McFaul. The transition from VHF harassment to lethal drone boat strikes underscores the extreme escalation in Iranian rules of engagement.

In response to these casualties, the Indian government,whose nationals comprise a significant portion of the global seafaring workforce and were directly impacted by the MKD Vyom and Skylight attacks,has issued severe shipping advisories.36 Concurrently, the Nautilus International maritime union successfully lobbied for the designation of the Strait of Hormuz as a “High-Risk Area” under the Warlike Operations Area Committee, activating enhanced protections for seafarers and granting them the explicit contractual right to refuse deployment into the Gulf without fear of penalty or termination.37

Targeted VesselIMO NumberFlag StateDate & TimeIncident LocationWeapon EmployedCasualties / Status
MT MKD Vyom9284386Marshall IslandsMarch 1, 2026 (Early hours)52 nm off Muscat, OmanExplosive Drone Boat (USV)1 killed (Indian national); Engine room fire.
MT Skylight9330020PalauMarch 1, 2026 (Post-02:05 UTC)5 nm north of Khasab, OmanUnspecified Projectile4 injured; Full crew evacuated.
Hercules Star9295531GibraltarMarch 1, 202617 nm NW of Mina Saqr, UAEUnspecified ProjectileFire extinguished; continued voyage.40
MT Sea La Donna9380532UnspecifiedMarch 2, 2026Approaches to HormuzUnder InvestigationAttack confirmed; details pending JMIC review.

Table 3: Confirmed kinetic interdictions of commercial shipping by Iranian forces in the Strait of Hormuz and Gulf of Oman (March 1 – 2, 2026).

5. Threat Assessment: Iranian Naval Doctrine and Proxy Activation

The maritime threat environment is currently defined by a dangerous paradox: the operational success of the U.S. decapitation strikes has inadvertently created a more volatile and unpredictable tactical situation on the water.

5.1 The Paradox of Decapitation: Decentralized IRGC Command

Operation Epic Fury successfully eliminated the strategic apex of the Iranian military, including Supreme Leader Khamenei and IRGC Commander-in-Chief Pakpour.2 While this dismantled the regime’s ability to coordinate a unified, national-level conventional response, it severely compromised the command-and-control (C2) architecture governing the IRGC Navy.

The IRGCN has historically operated under a “mosaic defense” doctrine, which relies on thousands of decentralized, highly mobile fast attack craft (FAC), coastal missile batteries, and asymmetric platforms spread across the coastline.8 With the central command structure annihilated, local IRGCN commanders have seemingly been granted,or have autonomously assumed,total operational freedom.38 This power vacuum renders the maritime domain deeply unpredictable; traditional deterrence models are ineffective against disjointed, hyper-local units operating without strategic oversight, diplomatic restraints, or sophisticated target identification capabilities.8 The indiscriminate strikes on the MKD Vyom and Skylight,vessels with no U.S. or Israeli affiliation,are direct manifestations of this uncoordinated, localized execution of the area-denial mandate.

5.2 Asymmetric Capabilities: Stealth Undersea Killers and Drone Swarms

Iran’s surviving naval capabilities remain uniquely tailored for the highly constrained bathymetry of the Strait of Hormuz. The geography of the waterway,which compresses massive shipping lanes into a navigable 2-mile corridor within a 33-kilometer-wide strait,allows even rudimentary, low-signature systems to achieve disproportionate strategic effects.5

Intelligence assessments highlight the deployment of advanced unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs), specifically the domestically produced Nazir-series. Described in defense analyses as “stealth undersea killers,” these platforms represent a significant evolution in Iranian asymmetric warfare.39 The UUVs reportedly possess a 24-hour endurance capability and can dive to depths of 200 meters.39 In the shallow, acoustically complex littoral environment of the Persian Gulf, these UUVs can lurk well below typical sonar and patrol thresholds.39 They operate as hybrid threat nodes, capable of reconnaissance, acting as smart loitering mines, or functioning as direct-strike torpedo delivery systems.39 This capability introduces a submerged dimension to the conflict that fundamentally complicates U.S. anti-submarine warfare (ASW) efforts, which are traditionally optimized for deep-water engagements.

Above the surface, the IRGCN continues to deploy explosive one-way unmanned surface vessels (USVs), commonly referred to as “drone boats,” which have proven highly lethal, as evidenced by the fatal strike on the MKD Vyom.11 Furthermore, U.S. intelligence notes the presence of surviving stockpiles of Shahed-136 and Shahed-129 one-way attack drones.26 Compounding these physical threats is an aggressive electronic warfare campaign; marine authorities have reported severe, widespread GNSS/GPS spoofing, AIS disruptions, and VHF communications interference across the Gulf.8 This electronic fog of war drastically increases the risk of misidentification, friendly fire incidents, and navigational disasters in the congested anchorages.

Strait of Hormuz map showing Iranian asymmetric threats, including UUVs and surface vessels in the transit lane.

5.3 The Activation of the Axis of Resistance

The death of the Iranian Supreme Leader has triggered the full, uncoordinated mobilization of Iran’s regional proxy network,the Axis of Resistance,compounding the threat to the maritime environment and surrounding logistics nodes across multiple theaters.

In Iraq, powerful Iranian-aligned Shiite militias, notably Kataib Hezbollah and Saraya Awliya al-Dam, have launched a barrage of drone and rocket attacks targeting U.S. outposts and critical infrastructure.1 These strikes have hit the Baghdad airport, a U.S. air base in northern Iraq, the U.S. embassy compound in Kuwait, and facilities in Jordan, prompting the State Department to urge the departure of diplomatic staff from Amman.41 This northern proxy activation threatens the broader Gulf logistics corridors and forces the U.S. to disperse its defensive assets.

In the Levant, Lebanese Hezbollah has engaged in intense missile exchanges with Israel, prompting Israeli retaliatory strikes in Beirut that killed a senior Hezbollah official and resulted in mass casualties.42 The IDF has explicitly stated its intent to eliminate the threat from Lebanon, vowing to target Hezbollah chief Naim Kassem.42

Crucially for maritime security, European intelligence agencies and maritime security firms warn of a highly credible risk of a “dual-theatre disruption.” It is assessed as highly likely that Houthi forces in Yemen will capitalize on the regional chaos to resume full-scale kinetic operations in the Red Sea and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait.33 A synchronized, dual-chokepoint blockade would be devastating, neutralizing both the Suez Canal route and the Strait of Hormuz simultaneously.

6. Coalition Force Posture and Maritime Protection Initiatives

In response to the multi-axis threat environment, the United States and its regional allies have adopted an aggressive, preemptive military posture designed to annihilate Iran’s capacity to sustain the blockade, while simultaneously issuing strict navigational directives to protect the merchant fleet from the ensuing crossfire.

6.1 Defensive Posture: MARAD Directives and the 30-Nautical-Mile Buffer

To manage the chaotic maritime environment and prevent miscalculation or collateral damage, the U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) issued a critical emergency directive: Maritime Alert 2026-001A.45 This alert explicitly mandates that any commercial vessels that are U.S.-flagged, owned, or crewed operating within the Strait of Hormuz, Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, or Arabian Sea must maintain a strict, minimum standoff distance of 30 nautical miles from any U.S. military vessel.33

This massive buffer zone is a direct reflection of the extreme “Red Zone” kinetic environment. U.S. warships,including the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers attached to the Carrier Strike Groups,are actively engaged in continuous ballistic missile defense (BMD) and offensive strike operations.48 In an environment plagued by GPS spoofing and explosive drone boats, any unidentified radar track that breaches this 30nm perimeter risks being classified as an asymmetric threat and engaged with lethal force.4 Commercial vessels are instructed to maintain constant contact with the Naval Cooperation and Guidance for Shipping (NCAGS) under Naval Forces Central Command (NAVCENT) to verify their identity and intentions.4

6.2 The “Archer” Strategy: Systemic Degradation of Iranian Naval Assets

While defensive measures protect the fleet, CENTCOM’s offensive operations are focused on permanently breaking the blockade. Under Operation Epic Fury, U.S. forces have shifted their strategic logic from a defensive, reactive posture to an offensive doctrine internally described as the “Archer” strategy.25 Rather than expending multi-million-dollar Patriot and THAAD interceptors to shoot down incoming Iranian drones and missiles (the “arrows”), U.S. and Israeli forces are systematically annihilating the production facilities, storage depots, and launch platforms (the “archers”).25

In the maritime domain, this strategy has been ruthlessly executed against both the regular Iranian Navy (Artesh) and the IRGCN to degrade their capacity to coordinate and sustain the Hormuz closure.22 Early battle damage assessments (BDA) indicate that U.S. naval and air forces have sunk at least 11 major Iranian naval vessels since the commencement of hostilities.1

Confirmed high-value targets neutralized by coalition strikes include:

  • The IRIS Jamaran: A formidable Moudge-class frigate belonging to the IRGCN, sunk near the Imam Ali Base in Chabahar.26 The Jamaran was a seasoned asset, having previously operated in the Red Sea and famously seized two U.S. unmanned surface vessels in 2022.26
  • The Shahid Bagheri: The IRGCN’s dedicated drone carrier, a highly strategic asset capable of launching swarms of UAVs while underway at sea, was located and sunk in the Gulf of Oman, neutralizing a massive mobile threat projection node.49
  • IRIS Bayandor and IRIS Naghdi: Iran’s two remaining Bayandor-class patrol corvettes, equipped with modern radar, 76mm guns, and anti-ship missiles, were destroyed at the Artesh Navy 3rd Naval District base in Konarak.26 Satellite imagery suggests the coalition utilized heavy bunker-buster munitions to penetrate the fortified concrete hangars at the facility.26
  • IRIS Kurdistan: A Makran-class forward base ship utilized by the Artesh Navy, its destruction significantly degrades Iran’s ability to project sustained logistical support to its smaller, decentralized patrol craft.49

By systematically targeting these capital ships, floating forward operating bases, and coastal radar installations (such as the radar struck on Kish Island), the U.S. coalition aims to blind the IRGC and deny them the infrastructure necessary to coordinate their swarms of fast attack craft.50 Furthermore, CENTCOM’s Task Force Scorpion Strike has innovated tactically by employing low-cost, one-way attack drones in combat for the first time, effectively turning Iran’s preferred asymmetric tactic against its own coastal defense infrastructure.21

Iranian Naval Asset DestroyedClass / TypeStrategic FunctionLocation of Destruction
Shahid BagheriDrone Carrier (IRGCN)Mobile UAV swarm launch platformGulf of Oman.49
IRIS JamaranMoudge-class FrigateRegional force projection; anti-surface warfareChabahar (Imam Ali Base).26
IRIS BayandorBayandor-class CorvetteCoastal patrol; anti-ship missile platformKonarak (3rd Naval District).26
IRIS NaghdiBayandor-class CorvetteCoastal patrol; anti-ship missile platformKonarak (3rd Naval District).26
IRIS KurdistanMakran-class Base ShipForward logistical support nodeSouthern Fleet operating area.49

Table 4: Confirmed battle damage assessment (BDA) detailing the destruction of high-value Iranian naval assets by U.S. and allied forces during Operation Epic Fury.26

7. Geoeconomic Shock: Energy Markets and Global Supply Chains

The strategic importance of the Strait of Hormuz extends far beyond regional geopolitics; it is the central cardiovascular system of the global carbon economy. The operational closure of the waterway, combined with targeted strikes on energy infrastructure, has induced an immediate, violent repricing across global energy markets, driven by inelastic demand and the sudden, catastrophic removal of immense supply volumes.

7.1 The Crude Oil Shock and Infrastructure Vulnerability

Within hours of the blockade’s enforcement and the subsequent kinetic strikes, global oil markets reacted with intense volatility. Brent crude oil futures spiked by 13% during intraday trading, testing the $100-per-barrel threshold and reaching baseline levels of over $82 per barrel,the highest recorded since early 2025.6

The math of the disruption is unforgiving. The Strait of Hormuz facilitates the transit of over 20 million barrels of crude, condensate, and fuels daily, representing 30% of global seaborne oil flows.5 While alternative pipeline routes exist, they are entirely insufficient to cover the deficit. Saudi Arabia can theoretically divert up to 5 million barrels per day via its East-West Pipeline to the Red Sea, and the UAE can route 1.5 million barrels per day through the Habshan-Fujairah line.53 However, these pipelines are already operating near capacity, and they offer zero relief for the massive export volumes generated by Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar, and Bahrain.54 Consequently, millions of barrels of crude are trapped in the Gulf, forcing immediate, severe drawdowns of strategic petroleum reserves globally.

Furthermore, the physical infrastructure of the Gulf energy sector is under direct attack. Reports indicate that Iranian forces targeted the Ras Tanura refinery in Saudi Arabia, one of the region’s most critical crude export hubs.10 This strike elevates the risk profile for Saudi export infrastructure, forcing tankers to abandon loading operations and flee the immediate vicinity.10

7.2 The Qatari LNG Crisis and the Gas Market Explosion

While the oil shock was anticipated, the most profound and immediate macroeconomic damage occurred in the natural gas sector. The Iranian strike campaign intentionally targeted critical, non-combatant Gulf infrastructure, including a verified drone strike on QatarEnergy’s facilities at Ras Laffan Industrial City and a water tank at a power plant in Mesaieed Industrial City.14

Ras Laffan is the largest single liquefied natural gas (LNG) facility on the planet, responsible for the vast majority of Qatar’s exports, which constitute roughly 20% of the entire global LNG supply.14 Citing the military strikes and invoking force majeure clauses, QatarEnergy completely ceased the production of all LNG and associated products on March 2.14

The combination of the Ras Laffan shutdown and the inability of existing LNG carriers to transit the Strait of Hormuz triggered a cataclysmic reaction in global gas pricing. The Dutch TTF natural gas contract,the European benchmark,surged by an astonishing 46% to 54% in a single day, reaching €130/MWh.8 Asian LNG spot prices followed suit, spiking by 39%.14

The ripple effects of this supply chain collapse are ravaging Asian economies. India, which relies heavily on the Middle East and receives 42% of its LNG requirements from Qatar, has been forced into immediate gas rationing.14 Downstream state distributors like Gail and Petronet have informed customers of immediate supply curtailments, as their chartered LNG carriers remain trapped at anchorage outside Ras Laffan, unable to load or depart.15 If QatarEnergy remains offline for merely a week, it will result in a global shortage of at least 21 massive LNG cargoes, fundamentally destabilizing the energy security of Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and India.15

Additionally, the blockade has quietly triggered a crisis in the global agricultural sector. Roughly one-third of the world’s urea fertilizer trade, including sulfur and ammonia, transits the Strait from producers in Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE.32 A prolonged blockage risks severely tightening the supply of agricultural inputs, guaranteeing a secondary wave of inflation in global food prices.32

8. The Trilateral Paradox: China, Russia, and Diplomatic Fractures

The crisis in the Strait of Hormuz has brutally exposed the deep, underlying strategic contradictions in the emerging Eurasian geopolitical alignment between Russia, China, and Iran.

In mid-February 2026, mere weeks before the outbreak of hostilities, the three nations proudly announced the execution of the “Maritime Security Belt 2026” joint naval exercises directly in the Strait of Hormuz.18 This trilateral drill, involving Russian warships, Chinese destroyers, and IRGCN vessels, was intended to project a unified, anti-Western front, challenge U.S. naval hegemony, and demonstrate cooperation in securing international shipping lanes.57

However, the reality of the Iranian blockade has shattered this diplomatic narrative, revealing a severe misalignment of vital interests. China is dangerously exposed to the Hormuz closure; it purchases over 90% of Iran’s oil (serving as Tehran’s primary economic lifeline) and relies on Qatar for 30% of its critical LNG imports.55 The Iranian drone strikes on Qatar’s Ras Laffan facility were, in effect, a direct kinetic attack on Beijing’s core energy security architecture.55

Consequently, Beijing has abandoned the rhetoric of the Maritime Security Belt and engaged in urgent, high-level diplomatic backchanneling.55 Senior executives at Chinese state-owned gas firms, backed by government officials, are forcefully pressing their Iranian counterparts to immediately halt attacks on Qatari export hubs and to guarantee safe passage for Chinese-destined tankers traversing the Strait.55

This dynamic reveals a critical strategic vulnerability for Iran: its most vital economic and political patron is fundamentally opposed to its primary military tactic. While Russian analysts and state media attempt to frame the crisis as an opportunity for China and Russia to broker a trilateral “safety corridor” exclusively for non-Western tonnage, the reality of the maritime domain makes this impossible.8 The global war risk insurance market does not differentiate based on a vessel’s flag of convenience; it evaluates the geographic risk of the entire zone.8 Furthermore, the decentralized, autonomous IRGC drone boats executing the attacks do not possess the sophisticated Identify Friend or Foe (IFF) systems required to distinguish a Chinese-owned tanker from a Western-aligned vessel in the fog of war. Beijing is learning in real-time that its strategic partnership with a revolutionary, decentralized state actor carries severe, uncontrollable risks to its own supply chains.

9. Strategic Forecast: Short and Medium-Term Horizons

The trajectory of the conflict indicates a prolonged period of severe maritime disruption, transitioning from acute shock to a grinding war of attrition across multiple domains.

9.1 Short-Term Forecast (0 – 30 Days): Sustained Kinetic Interdiction

In the immediate 30-day horizon, the Strait of Hormuz will remain a highly restrictive, legally perilous “Red Zone” combat environment.38 U.S. President Donald Trump and senior military leadership have explicitly stated that the military campaign is designed to last “several weeks,” indicating no immediate intent to de-escalate.42

The U.S. and Israeli strike matrix will likely transition from capital-centric shock effects (leadership decapitation) toward system-wide disruption, moving progressively eastward into Iran to destroy inland missile production facilities and inland IRGC bases.64 As long as the coalition continues to dismantle Iranian infrastructure, the decentralized remnants of the IRGCN will maintain their asymmetric area-denial operations in the Gulf as their sole mechanism for imposing costs on the international community.

Consequently, the commercial maritime blockade will persist. Shipping companies will not risk $130+ million assets without comprehensive war risk insurance, and P&I clubs will not reinstate coverage at commercially viable rates until there is a verified, sustained cessation of kinetic activity.8

Key Intelligence Indicators for the Resumption of Traffic:

  1. Insurance Premium Contraction: A verifiable reduction in war risk premiums back below the 0.5% threshold, signaling that maritime actuaries assess the immediate threat of arbitrary strikes has passed.65
  2. Implementation of Sovereign Convoys: The establishment of a formalized, multi-national naval escort system (similar to the Operation Earnest Will convoys of the 1980s) specifically tasked with shielding flagged commercial vessels through the chokepoint.
  3. Vessel Tracking Data Reversal: A sustained 48-to-72-hour period where the 150+ vessels anchored in the Gulf of Oman begin crossing the threshold into the Strait without incident.65

9.2 Medium-Term Forecast (1 – 6 Months): Dual-Theatre Disruption and Systemic Fatigue

Looking toward the medium term, the primary strategic risk is the normalization of a “dual-theatre” maritime crisis. If the conflict in Lebanon continues to escalate, and if Houthi forces in Yemen capitalize on the regional chaos to resume full-scale interdiction operations in the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, the global shipping industry will face an unprecedented bifurcated crisis.33

Rerouting vessels around the Cape of Good Hope,currently the default mitigation strategy,adds immense fuel costs, extends transit times from Asia to Europe by up to two weeks, and severely limits global tonnage availability.4 A prolonged diversion of this magnitude will inevitably lead to severe berth congestion at key load and discharge ports, massive delays in port clearance, and intense short-term volatility in freight rates as global tonnage availability tightens.66

Furthermore, prolonged U.S. military operations face significant logistical and diplomatic headwinds. While the U.S. currently enjoys absolute air superiority, sustained dual-carrier operations require massive logistical tails. The political friction generated by the U.S. utilizing airspace and bases in Gulf nations (such as the UAE and Qatar) to strike Iran may lead to severe host-nation fatigue, particularly as these nations suffer retaliatory strikes on their own civilian and economic infrastructure, including luxury hotels in Dubai and energy terminals in Doha.1

Finally, the regime transition in Iran remains the ultimate geopolitical wildcard. With Khamenei, Pakpour, and the top IRGC brass dead, a brutal internal power struggle for control of the Iranian state is inevitable.2 If a hardline, apocalyptic faction successfully consolidates control over the fractured military apparatus, the Hormuz blockade will be maintained indefinitely as a point of leverage, dragging the global economy into a protracted recession. Conversely, if the internal chaos leads to state collapse, or if a pragmatic interim leadership emerges that prioritizes economic survival over ideological resistance, a swift de-escalation heavily mediated by China is a plausible off-ramp.55

10. Strategic Conclusions

The March 2026 crisis in the Strait of Hormuz represents a systemic fracture in the global maritime security architecture. The U.S.-Israeli Operation Epic Fury achieved its primary kinetic objectives with devastating efficiency, successfully decapitating the Iranian leadership and neutralizing massive swaths of the Iranian regular navy and strategic air defense network.2 However, this overwhelming conventional military victory has catalyzed an asymmetric maritime nightmare.

The destruction of Iran’s centralized command apparatus has empowered autonomous, localized IRGC units equipped with sophisticated, low-cost asymmetric weaponry,including deep-diving UUVs and explosive drone boats.12 This localized, fragmented command structure cannot be easily deterred through traditional state-on-state diplomacy or threats of massive retaliation, as the tactical operators on the water lack strategic oversight. Consequently, the Strait of Hormuz has devolved from a peaceful international shipping lane into a deadly, unpredictable littoral combat zone.

The subsequent withdrawal of the global maritime insurance market has formalized the blockade, proving definitively that kinetic threats do not need to physically sink every ship to close a waterway; they merely need to raise the financial risk beyond the threshold of commercial viability.8 As a result, 20% of the world’s oil supply and 20% of the world’s LNG supply are entirely severed from the global market, triggering energy price spikes that threaten to deeply destabilize the global macroeconomic environment.14

Moving forward, the restoration of freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz cannot be achieved solely through the application of U.S. air and naval firepower. It will require the total exhaustion of Iran’s localized asymmetric arsenals, the reconstitution of a responsible governing authority in Tehran capable of reigning in rogue IRGC units, and immense, sustained diplomatic pressure from Beijing, which finds its own economic survival directly threatened by the actions of its nominal ally. Until these conditions are met, the Strait of Hormuz will remain closed, and the global economy will bear the escalating cost of the blockade.


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  61. Strait of Hormuz LNG Disruption: Global Price Cascade, China’s Energy Chokepoint Exposure and the Northern Corridor Imperative, accessed March 3, 2026, https://debuglies.com/2026/03/01/strait-of-hormuz-lng-disruption-global-price-cascade-chinas-energy-chokepoint-exposure-and-the-northern-corridor-imperative/
  62. EU guidelines on trials of Marine Autonomous Surface Ships – ESC, accessed March 3, 2026, https://europeanshippers.eu/eu-guidelines-on-trials-of-marine-autonomous-surface-ships/
  63. As conflict widens, US says attacks on Iran will last weeks, accessed March 3, 2026, https://www.ironmountaindailynews.com/news/local-news/2026/03/as-conflict-widens-us-says-attacks-on-iran-will-last-weeks/
  64. The US and Israel Strike on Iran: Day 2 – Leadership Vacuum and the Regionalization of Conflict – SETA, accessed March 3, 2026, https://www.setav.org/en/the-us-and-israel-strike-on-iran-day-2
  65. Tanker Traffic Disruption Strait of Hormuz Energy Impact, accessed March 3, 2026, https://discoveryalert.com.au/tanker-traffic-disruption-hormuz-energy-2026/
  66. Strait of Hormuz escalation rattles global shipping with war levies and insurance cover cuts, accessed March 3, 2026, https://www.thenationalnews.com/business/economy/2026/03/02/hormuz-iran-us-shipping-war/
  67. Ex-CIA director says Iran erred by expanding attacks to Persian Gulf states, accessed March 3, 2026, https://www.iranintl.com/en/202603038843

United States Military Order of Battle (ORBAT) and Force Posture in the CENTCOM AOR – March 3, 2026

Executive Summary

The strategic environment within the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) Area of Responsibility (AOR) has undergone a fundamental and violent transformation following the initiation of Operation Epic Fury on February 28, 2026. Executed in tight operational synchronization with Israeli forces operating under the parallel designation of Operation Roaring Lion, this campaign represents the largest and most dense concentration of American military firepower assembled in the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.1 The rapid transition from a posture of coercive diplomacy and deterrence to one of active, high-intensity major combat operations has mobilized a vast, multi-domain array of naval, aerospace, and cyber assets. The primary strategic objective is the systematic dismantling of the Iranian regime’s security apparatus, prioritizing the neutralization of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) command structures, integrated air defense systems, and ballistic missile production facilities, culminating in unprecedented leadership decapitation strikes.4

The current United States Order of Battle (ORBAT) is anchored by a formidable dual-carrier maritime presence. This naval architecture spans the Arabian Sea and the Eastern Mediterranean, establishing overlapping, multi-axis zones of air superiority and long-range conventional strike capability.7 This maritime power projection is augmented by an unprecedented “aerial tsunami” of forward-deployed land-based aviation.8 Fifth-generation stealth fighters, heavy strategic bombers, and specialized electronic warfare platforms have surged into partner nations, notably Israel and Jordan, overcoming significant diplomatic friction and airspace access denials from several Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states fearful of Iranian reprisal.1

Furthermore, the operational integration of artificial intelligence into the targeting kill chain marks a watershed moment in automated, algorithmic warfare. Utilizing advanced ontological models to synthesize vast intelligence data streams, the coalition has directed low-cost uncrewed combat attack systems (LUCAS) alongside traditional precision-guided munitions, radically compressing the sensor-to-shooter timeline.10

However, this rapid kinetic escalation has triggered a severe attritional crisis within the coalition’s Air and Missile Defense (AMD) architecture. Iranian retaliatory barrages,employing a “Mosaic Defense” doctrine consisting of synchronized ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and one-way attack drones,have stressed regional defense magazines to critical breaking points.13 This has exposed acute vulnerabilities in interceptor replenishment cycles, forcing strategic rationing of defensive fires across the theater.14 Concurrently, the kinetic expansion into maritime chokepoints has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz to commercial transit, generating cascading disruptions across global energy markets and logistics supply chains.15 This intelligence estimate provides an exhaustive, granular mapping of the verified United States force posture, asset locations, logistical vulnerabilities, and operational integration as of early March 2026.

1.0 Strategic Context and the Operational Environment

The operational environment is currently defined by continuous, high-intensity, multi-domain combat operations encompassing the Persian Gulf, the Gulf of Oman, the Levant, and the Eastern Mediterranean. Following the collapse of nuclear negotiations in Geneva in mid-February 2026, the United States executed a rapid, massive surge of military assets to the region, culminating in the launch of Operation Epic Fury.1 The stated objective of this campaign extends far beyond punitive counter-proliferation strikes,such as those witnessed during the June 2025 Operation Midnight Hammer,aiming instead for the systemic degradation of the Iranian state’s ability to project power and maintain internal security.18

The opening salvos of the campaign were characterized by deep-penetrating strikes against hardened facilities and complex leadership decapitation operations. These strikes successfully targeted supreme leadership, including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, alongside senior IRGC commanders such as Major General Mohammad Pakpour and Defense Minister Brigadier General Aziz Nasir Zadeh.5 The geographical disposition of United States naval and air assets establishes overlapping zones of strike capability. By positioning forces in the Eastern Mediterranean, the Arabian Sea, and allied airbases in the Levant, coalition planners have created a multi-directional strike geometry that effectively stretches Iranian early warning and air defense networks across multiple axes of advance.

1.1 The Weaponization of the Maritime Domain and the Hormuz Blockade

The immediate and most globally destabilizing consequence of this kinetic escalation has been the weaponization of the maritime domain. In response to the decapitation strikes, Iranian forces and their regional proxies have initiated a strict area-denial strategy in the Strait of Hormuz and the Gulf of Oman. This chokepoint is historically responsible for the daily transit of approximately twenty percent of the world’s petroleum liquids and a significant portion of global liquefied natural gas (LNG).15

The operationalization of this blockade was violently demonstrated by the kinetic strike against the Palau-flagged commercial tanker Skylight.17 Occurring approximately five nautical miles north of the Khasab Port off Oman’s Musandam peninsula, the strike caused a significant fire, injured four mariners, and necessitated an evacuation by Omani naval forces.17 Forensic analysis reveals a complex layer of “Shadow Fleet” operations; the Skylight had been designated by the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) just days prior, on February 25, 2026, for facilitating illicit Iranian petroleum sales.17 Iran’s decision to target its own logistical asset,justified by Tehran as a penalty for the vessel defying orders to halt transit,demonstrates a strategic willingness to transcend immediate economic logic in favor of enforcing a total, indiscriminate interdiction zone.17

Simultaneously, the Sultanate of Oman,traditionally the primary diplomatic mediator between Washington and Tehran,found its own infrastructure targeted. Duqm Port suffered drone strikes, marking the first kinetic involvement of Omani territory in the conflict.17 In response to this indiscriminate targeting, the commercial maritime system has effectively collapsed in the region. Major maritime logistics providers, including Maersk, MSC, Hapag-Lloyd, and CMA CGM, have halted all Gulf transits and suspended routing through the Suez Canal.24 Vessels currently operating in the Gulf have been instructed to seek designated safe shelter areas, resulting in hundreds of ships drifting or holding position in the Gulf of Oman, while war-risk maritime insurance premiums have spiked by fifty percent, with many providers issuing cancellation notices.15 This environment necessitates a robust, continuously operating U.S. naval and air umbrella to maintain localized sea control, defend expeditionary staging bases, and attempt to re-establish secure sea lines of communication (SLOCs).

2.0 Current Naval Order of Battle (ORBAT)

The foundation of the United States power projection in the CENTCOM theater relies on an immense concentration of naval surface and subsurface combatants. Operating under a refined doctrine of distributed lethality, the Navy has amassed roughly forty-one percent of its global ready-for-operations fleet in the Middle East and Eastern Mediterranean, comprising at least sixteen major surface warships alongside critical support vessels.21 This armada is engineered to deliver sustained, high-volume standoff precision fires while simultaneously providing an integrated air and missile defense umbrella over localized maritime transit routes and expeditionary forces.

2.1 Dual-Carrier Strike Group Operations

The centerpiece of the naval ORBAT is the rare and highly complex deployment of two supercarriers within striking distance of the Iranian landmass. This dual-carrier geometry allows for continuous, twenty-four-hour cyclic flight operations, mitigating the traditional limitations of carrier deck resetting, maintenance cycles, and pilot fatigue, thereby applying relentless, uninterrupted pressure on hostile air defenses.7

The USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) Carrier Strike Group, designated CSG 3, is currently operating in the Arabian Sea.7 Having redeployed from the Indo-Pacific theater under expedited orders in late January 2026 to counter rising tensions, the Lincoln hosts Carrier Air Wing 9.1 This air wing provides a highly versatile, integrated mix of strike and electronic warfare capabilities, notably featuring squadrons of F-35C Lightning II stealth fighters, F/A-18E/F Super Hornets, EA-18G Growler electronic attack aircraft, and E-2D Hawkeye airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) platforms.1 The presence of the F-35C is a critical enabler for penetrating contested airspace, utilizing its low-observable characteristics and advanced sensor fusion to locate targets for follow-on strikes. Crucially, the EA-18Gs fulfill the essential suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD) mission, utilizing their jamming pods to blind Iranian early warning radars and disrupt surface-to-air missile (SAM) targeting capabilities, paving the way for the Super Hornets to deliver their payloads. The strike group is heavily escorted by Arleigh Burke-class destroyers and Ticonderoga-class cruisers, providing a dense Aegis Combat System shield against inbound anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) and unmanned aerial vehicles.1

Operating on the western axis is the USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) Carrier Strike Group, designated CSG 12. Having been redirected from operations in the Caribbean and transiting the Strait of Gibraltar in late February, the Ford is currently moored near Souda Bay, Greece, in the Eastern Mediterranean.7 As the lead ship of her class, the Ford represents a generational leap in naval aviation capabilities. It utilizes Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch Systems (EMALS) and Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG) to achieve sortie generation rates significantly higher than legacy Nimitz-class vessels.28 The Ford brings an additional seventy-five plus tactical aircraft to the operational envelope.7 Its strategic position in the Mediterranean creates a highly complex targeting dilemma for Iranian defense planners. Strike packages originating from the Mediterranean force Iranian early warning networks to scan multiple, disparate vectors simultaneously, stretching their defensive resources thin and complicating their interception calculus.

2.2 Surface Combatants and Independent Deployers

The carrier strike groups are augmented by a flotilla of independent deployers heavily engaged in both offensive land-attack operations and defensive interception missions. The U.S. Navy has positioned a ring of guided-missile destroyers (DDGs) capable of launching massive salvos of Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles (TLAMs). Analysis indicates that if all thirteen destroyers currently in the theater move into optimal firing positions, they possess the combined vertical launch system (VLS) capacity to deliver between 150 and 250 Tomahawk missiles, forming the critical backbone of the initial decapitation and infrastructure strikes.21

Specific vessels actively participating in Operation Epic Fury have been identified through official disclosures and visual evidence. The USS Spruance (DDG-111) and the USS Thomas Hudner (DDG-116) have been confirmed launching TLAMs from undisclosed locations within the CENTCOM AOR during the opening hours of the campaign.3 Furthermore, the USS Delbert D. Black (DDG-119) has actively engaged in strike operations following its recent departure from a port visit in Israel.32 The USS John Finn (DDG-113) was previously reported gathering near the Iranian coast just prior to the commencement of hostilities, likely acting as a forward picket and strike node.1 Additionally, the USS Mahan (DDG-72) is currently operating as a primary escort for the Ford in the Mediterranean.7

These surface combatants are operating under extreme threat conditions. Iran has demonstrated its reach and intent by deploying anti-ship ballistic missiles and drone swarms targeting naval assets across the Gulf of Oman, the Persian Gulf, and the Red Sea.4 The Aegis-equipped destroyers are required to operate in a dual-mission profile: executing offensive TLAM strikes while simultaneously tracking and intercepting inbound asymmetric threats to protect themselves, the carriers, and the remaining commercial shipping in the area. The successful sinking of multiple Iranian naval vessels, including the confirmed destruction of an Iranian Jamaran-class corvette at a pier in Chah Bahar by U.S. forces, highlights the intensity of the maritime engagements.23

2.3 Subsurface Posture and Covert Strike Capacity

The subsurface ORBAT remains largely classified under strict Operational Security (OPSEC) protocols; however, the Pentagon has utilized strategic declassification of specific submarine movements to signal deterrence and bolster its visible strike capacity. An Ohio-class guided-missile submarine (SSGN), confirmed to be the USS Georgia (SSGN-729), was ordered by Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to accelerate its deployment to the region.37

These converted SSGNs represent the absolute apex of covert conventional strike capability. Originally designed to carry nuclear ballistic missiles, four Ohio-class boats were converted to carry up to 154 Tomahawk cruise missiles each, distributed across twenty-two multiple-all-up-round canisters.39 The deployment of an SSGN provides theater commanders with a massive, survivable magazine that can initiate high-volume precision strikes without revealing its launch vector or presence until the moment the missiles break the surface. This presents a severe, virtually undetectable threat to Iranian coastal and inland targets. The USS Georgia was recently observed transiting the Suez Canal, placing it within optimal, highly secure strike range in the Red Sea or the Arabian Sea.40

Naval Domain AssetPlatform Class / Air WingVerified Location / Operating AreaPrimary Operational Role
USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72)Nimitz-Class SupercarrierArabian SeaForce projection, carrier aviation strike (Carrier Air Wing 9); SEAD operations
USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78)Ford-Class SupercarrierEastern Mediterranean (Souda Bay, Greece)Force projection, rapid sortie generation via EMALS
USS Georgia (SSGN-729)Ohio-Class SSGNLocation undisclosed but operating in the AOR (Recent Suez Transit)Covert, high-volume Tomahawk strike delivery
USS Spruance (DDG-111)Arleigh Burke-Class DestroyerLocation undisclosed but operating in the AORTLAM delivery, Aegis fleet defense
USS Thomas Hudner (DDG-116)Arleigh Burke-Class DestroyerLocation undisclosed but operating in the AORTLAM delivery, Aegis fleet defense
USS Delbert D. Black (DDG-119)Arleigh Burke-Class DestroyerLocation undisclosed but operating in the AORTLAM delivery, Aegis fleet defense
USS Mahan (DDG-72)Arleigh Burke-Class DestroyerEastern MediterraneanEscort operations and defense for CSG 12
USS John Finn (DDG-113)Arleigh Burke-Class DestroyerLocation undisclosed but operating in the AORForward picket, strike capability

3.0 Current Air Order of Battle (ORBAT)

The mobilization and forward deployment of land-based air power for Operation Epic Fury has been accurately described by defense analysts as an “aerial tsunami”.8 Over 330 United States military aircraft are currently positioned across the Middle East, representing a highly complex, diverse ecosystem of fifth-generation air dominance fighters, heavy strategic bombers, close air support platforms, and critical logistical and intelligence enablers.41

The strategic placement of these assets reflects a delicate and complex diplomatic negotiation. Several Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states, fearing immediate and devastating Iranian retaliation against their vulnerable energy infrastructure, have restricted U.S. access to their airspace and airbases for offensive strike missions.1 Consequently, the United States has been forced to heavily utilize, and rapidly expand, bases in the Levant,specifically in Israel and Jordan,to launch and sustain operations.1

3.1 Fifth-Generation Fighters and Multi-Role Strike Aircraft

The vanguard of the air campaign, responsible for dismantling the adversary’s anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) capabilities, relies on low-observable, fifth-generation platforms capable of surviving deep inside the engagement envelopes of advanced integrated air defense systems. A squadron of at least eleven F-22 Raptors has deployed to Ovda Air Base in the southern Negev Desert of Israel.1

The F-22s, redeployed from RAF Lakenheath in the United Kingdom, provide unparalleled air superiority.43 They are tasked with the critical offensive counter-air mission: clearing the skies of hostile aircraft and neutralizing early warning radars to open secure corridors for follow-on, non-stealthy strike packages. The choice of Ovda Air Base is highly strategic; located far from civilian population centers in the south, it has a history of hosting aggressor squadrons and is heavily defended by Israel’s Arrow anti-ballistic missile systems, providing a secure sanctuary for these high-value assets.43 The unprecedented basing of America’s premier air-dominance fighter directly in Israel underscores the depth of the joint operation and circumvents the severe basing restrictions encountered elsewhere in the region.9 (It is noted that twelve F-22s initially departed the UK, but one airframe returned due to a technical anomaly, leaving eleven on station).42

Complementing the stealth fighter force is a massive deployment of F-15E Strike Eagles, universally recognized as the U.S. Air Force’s premier deep-interdiction and all-weather strike platform. Upward of twenty-four to thirty-six F-15Es, drawing from units including the 494th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron, the 391st Fighter Squadron, and a squadron from Seymour Johnson AFB, are heavily concentrated at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan.7 These dual-role fighters possess the exceptional range and heavy payload capacity necessary to deliver precision bunker-busting munitions deep into Iranian territory.

Jordan’s Muwaffaq Salti Air Base has rapidly evolved into the Pentagon’s most critical deployment hub for this conflict. Recent satellite imagery confirms it is hosting not only the F-15Es but also A-10C Thunderbolt II attack aircraft,utilized for close air support, forward air control, and potentially maritime interdiction against Iranian fast attack craft swarms,alongside multi-role F-16C/CM/CJ Fighting Falcons.8 An element of F-35A Lightning II aircraft is also confirmed to be operating from Muwaffaq Salti, bringing the total fifth-generation presence in Jordan to an estimated thirty airframes.48 To secure strategic logistical nodes located outside the immediate high-threat zone, additional F-16s have been forward-deployed to the remote Indian Ocean outpost of Diego Garcia, defending the facility against potential long-range Iranian drone or cruise missile attacks.49

3.2 Strategic Bomber Task Forces

To engage deeply buried, heavily fortified, or geographically dispersed targets,specifically Iran’s ballistic missile production infrastructure, hardened command bunkers, and nuclear program remnants,the United States has activated its strategic bomber fleet. B-2 Spirit stealth bombers, operating directly from bases in the continental United States (CONUS), have conducted ultra-long-range, unacknowledged penetrations into highly contested Iranian airspace. Official releases from CENTCOM confirm the B-2s were utilized to strike hardened ballistic missile facilities overnight during the opening phases of the campaign. The strikes employed 2,000-pound precision-guided munitions, highly likely to be the GBU-31(V)3 Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAM) equipped with BLU-109 penetrator warheads, designed specifically to destroy subterranean infrastructure.4

Operating in tandem with the stealth fleet, B-1B Lancer supersonic heavy bombers have also been actively employed in the theater. Launching from Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota, the B-1Bs executed nighttime, low-altitude penetration missions, dropping massive conventional payloads on ground-based ballistic missile bases and command and control facilities.51 The operational use of the non-stealthy B-1B,which relies on speed, low-altitude terrain masking, and electronic countermeasures rather than radar cross-section reduction,strongly indicates that initial SEAD operations by EA-18Gs and cyber units successfully degraded the Iranian radar network. This suppression created permissive environments, allowing conventional heavy bombers to operate with relative impunity and deliver massive volumes of ordnance.51

3.3 Tactical Unmanned Systems: Task Force Scorpion Strike

A significant and highly innovative evolution in United States tactical doctrine observed during Operation Epic Fury is the operational debut of Task Force Scorpion Strike (TFSS). Established in December 2025 and operating from an undisclosed location within the CENTCOM AOR, TFSS is the military’s first operational squadron dedicated exclusively to the deployment of one-way attack drones (loitering munitions).52 The unit operates the Low-cost Uncrewed Combat Attack System (LUCAS), designed and manufactured by Spektreworks, based in Phoenix, Arizona.52

The LUCAS platform represents a calculated strategic asymmetry and a direct adaptation of adversary tactics. The drones are effectively reverse-engineered, American-manufactured variants of Iran’s own highly successful Shahed-136 loitering munitions, which have seen extensive use by Russia in the Ukrainian theater.3 Costing approximately thirty-five thousand dollars per unit, the LUCAS drones are dramatically cheaper than traditional standoff weapons like the 1.3 million dollar Tomahawk cruise missile. This low cost point enables high-volume swarm attacks.12

Deployed for the first time in combat during the opening hours of Operation Epic Fury, the LUCAS drones are utilized to overwhelm Iranian point defenses, strike soft targets such as radar arrays and exposed missile erector launchers, and critically exhaust enemy interceptor inventories. By employing a weapon system modeled on the adversary’s primary asymmetric tool, the U.S. military is effectively turning Iran’s own attritional doctrine against it, forcing Tehran to expend expensive surface-to-air missiles on expendable drones.20

3.4 Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance (ISR) and Critical Enablers

The entire kinetic architecture of Operation Epic Fury is entirely dependent on a vast, continuous constellation of support aircraft. The sheer scale and geographic breadth of the strike operations require massive aerial refueling capabilities to sustain the tempo. An estimated eighty-six KC-46 Pegasus and KC-135 Stratotanker aircraft are currently deployed to the theater. These vital assets are heavily concentrated at Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, which serves as a primary logistical hub, with additional tankers staging out of Ben Gurion Airport in Israel to support the Levant-based fighter wings.1 These tankers bridge the vast distances required for deep strikes, enabling the F-15Es and F-22s to loiter over target areas, and providing the critical gas required for the CONUS-based bombers to complete their global sorties.

High-altitude Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) is provided by MQ-9 Reaper drones operating primarily from Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates. These platforms have been visually confirmed circling over major Iranian cities, including Tehran and Shiraz, to provide real-time battle damage assessment, track mobile missile launchers, and provide laser designation for time-sensitive, high-value targets.3

Electronic intelligence, signals interception, and maritime patrol are conducted by specialized RC-135V Rivet Joint and P-8A Poseidon aircraft. Notably, to ensure platform survivability amid the threat of Iranian ballistic missile counter-strikes against regional bases, RC-135 operations have been relocated from the highly vulnerable Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar to the Greek island of Crete in the Mediterranean.56 Similarly, E-3 Sentry Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft and E-11A Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) platforms are deployed to provide the overarching command, control, and communications relay network required to synchronize the massive air armada.8

Air Domain AssetUnit / SquadronVerified Location / Staging BasePrimary Operational Role
F-22 RaptorUnspecified SquadronOvda Air Base, IsraelStealth air superiority, offensive counter-air, radar neutralization
F-15E Strike Eagle494th EFS, 391st FS, Seymour Johnson unitMuwaffaq Salti Air Base, JordanDeep strike, heavy precision interdiction, defensive counter-air
F-35A/C Lightning IIUnspecifiedMuwaffaq Salti (A); CVN-72 (C)Stealth multi-role strike, advanced sensor fusion
A-10C Thunderbolt IIMoody AFB unitMuwaffaq Salti Air Base, JordanClose air support, forward air control, maritime interdiction
F-16C/CM/CJAviano AB unitMuwaffaq Salti, Jordan; Diego GarciaMulti-role strike, base defense (Diego Garcia)
B-2 SpiritBomber Task ForceCONUS OriginStealth strategic bombardment, bunker-busting hardened targets
B-1B LancerBomber Task Force (Ellsworth AFB)CONUS OriginHigh-payload conventional strategic strike, low-altitude penetration
LUCAS DronesTask Force Scorpion StrikeLocation undisclosed but operating in the AORLow-cost, high-volume one-way attack, air defense saturation
MQ-9 Reaper380th AEWAl Dhafra Air Base, UAEPersistent ISR, time-sensitive targeting, battle damage assessment
RC-135V Rivet JointUnspecifiedCrete, Greece (Relocated from Qatar)Signals intelligence, electronic reconnaissance
KC-135 / KC-46MultiplePrince Sultan AB, Saudi Arabia; Ben Gurion, IsraelAerial refueling, range extension for fighters and bombers
E-3 Sentry AWACSUnspecifiedPrince Sultan AB, Saudi ArabiaAirborne early warning, battle management, command and control

4.0 Air and Missile Defense (AMD) Posture and the Interceptor Crisis

The rapid escalation of hostilities has subjected the coalition’s integrated air and missile defense networks to unprecedented and unsustainable levels of stress. Iranian military doctrine eschews traditional air-to-air combat in favor of a “Mosaic Defense” and attritional warfare. This strategy relies heavily on launching massive, coordinated swarms of ballistic missiles, land-attack cruise missiles, and Shahed-series unmanned aerial vehicles to oversaturate defending systems and overwhelm radar tracking capacities.13 In response, the United States has deployed a highly sophisticated, layered defensive architecture across its Gulf State partners, but this shield is currently facing a critical logistical breaking point.

4.1 Theater Defense Architecture

The terminal defense layer is anchored by Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) batteries, which are deployed extensively across Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia.59 These systems provide point defense, designed to intercept short and medium-range ballistic missiles and cruise missiles in their final phase of flight, protecting vital military installations and critical energy infrastructure. Upper-tier, wide-area defense is provided by Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries, which engage incoming threats at much higher altitudes and longer ranges, providing a first line of defense against intermediate-range ballistic missiles.59

Furthermore, the theater defense architecture is heavily integrated with the Aegis Ashore system situated in Eastern Europe. Originally conceptualized under the European Phased Adaptive Approach (EPAA) to protect NATO allies from Iranian missile proliferation, the Aegis Ashore site in Deveselu, Romania, and the recently completed and operationalized site in Redzikowo, Poland, are actively monitoring the exoatmospheric threat environment.61 Operating under NATO command at Ramstein Air Base, these installations utilize the AN/SPY-1 radar and SM-3 interceptors to provide critical early warning tracking data and engagement capability for intermediate-range ballistic missiles that might be launched toward European or Levantine targets.61

4.2 The Interceptor Depletion Crisis

Despite the immense technological sophistication of these systems, the mathematical reality of modern interceptor warfare strongly favors the attacker. Current U.S. military doctrine dictates the expenditure of two to three interceptors per inbound threat to ensure a high probability of kill and minimize the risk of “leakers” impacting critical infrastructure.14

Chart: Projected Patriot interceptor depletion in UAE (7 days) and Qatar (4 days). Defence Security Asia data.

When Iran launches high-volume, coordinated barrages of relatively inexpensive munitions, coalition defensive inventories are drained at a massive multiplier effect. Analysts warn that interceptor stocks across the region are now “dangerously low,” representing a severe structural mismatch between the rate of consumption in active, daily combat and the peacetime capacity of the defense industrial base to replenish them.14 By early March 2026, intelligence assessments project a dire logistical reality: Qatar’s Patriot missile stocks will be entirely exhausted within four days of sustained operations, while the United Arab Emirates possesses only an estimated seven-day supply.14 The U.S. has reportedly admitted that “years of production” of these highly complex missiles have already been exhausted during the conflict.14

The financial asymmetry exacerbating this crisis is severe. A single THAAD interceptor costs approximately fifteen million dollars, and these multi-million dollar assets are frequently utilized to defeat Iranian drones or older ballistic missiles that cost a fraction of that amount.14 This magazine exhaustion crisis is fundamentally altering tactical decision-making; CENTCOM commanders are being forced to ration defensive engagements. They must prioritize the protection of strategic oil infrastructure and major expeditionary airbases, while leaving secondary civilian or military targets exposed, creating visible gaps in the regional defense umbrella that Iranian forces are actively trained to exploit.14

The strategic implications of this shortage are profound. The crisis is prompting Pentagon planners to consider the unprecedented and highly risky step of redeploying Patriot and THAAD batteries,as well as MQ-9 Reaper drones,from permanent bases in South Korea to the Middle East.64 Such a move, while necessary to sustain the defense of Gulf allies, would dangerously expose the Korean Peninsula and U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) to North Korean ballistic missile threats, demonstrating the global ripple effects of a sustained Middle Eastern conflict.64

Air & Missile Defense AssetVerified LocationPrimary Operational RoleSystem Status / Notes
Patriot PAC-3 BatteriesQatar, UAE, Kuwait, Jordan, Saudi ArabiaTerminal point defense (Short/Medium Range)Critical depletion; rationing of engagements required
THAAD BatteriesQatar, UAE, Kuwait, Jordan, Saudi ArabiaUpper-tier wide-area defenseSevere interceptor shortage; unsustainable cost-exchange ratio
Aegis AshoreDeveselu, Romania; Redzikowo, PolandExoatmospheric tracking and interceptionFully operational; providing vital theater-level early warning

5.0 Assets in Transit and Reinforcements

Recognizing the potential for a protracted conflict characterized by high attrition rates, and the absolute necessity of sustaining cyclic carrier operations and ground security, the Department of Defense has initiated a surge of reinforcements toward the CENTCOM theater. The sheer volume of munitions expended requires constant logistical resupply, and the potential for asset degradation demands rotational replacements.

In the naval domain, the USS George H.W. Bush (CVN-77) Carrier Strike Group is actively spinning up for emergency deployment. Currently completing expedited Composite Training Unit Exercises (COMPTUEX) off the coast of Virginia in the Atlantic Ocean, the Bush could receive orders to deploy immediately.1 However, even with an expedited departure, transit across the Atlantic Ocean and through the Mediterranean Sea (or around the Cape of Good Hope if Suez transit is deemed too high-risk) would require several weeks before the carrier could arrive on station.67 The arrival of a third supercarrier would provide the necessary tactical airpower to sustain offensive operations if the conflict protracts, or allow for the safe rotation of the USS Abraham Lincoln out of the high-threat environment.

Ground force reinforcements are also mobilizing to secure staging areas and logistical hubs. While the administration maintains there are no American conventional combat troops operating on the ground inside Iranian territory 60, force protection and base security requirements in allied nations have necessitated fresh troop deployments. The Department of the Army has announced the deployment of the 2nd Mobile Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division, to the CENTCOM AOR.68 This newly reorganized unit, a product of the Army’s “Transform in Contact” initiative, is specifically designed for rapid mobility and reduced electromagnetic signature, making it highly survivable in environments saturated by enemy drone surveillance and indirect fire.70 They will replace elements of the National Guard (specifically the 34th Infantry Division), joining other rotational units such as the 101st Airborne Division, which is currently managing the return of its Combat Aviation Brigade after a lengthy deployment supporting Operation Inherent Resolve.69

6.0 Operational Capabilities & Integration: The AI-Driven Kill Chain

Operation Epic Fury is not merely a display of overwhelming kinetic force; it represents a fundamental paradigm shift in the application of artificial intelligence and algorithmic decision-making in modern warfare. The operational capability of the United States forces relies on a highly integrated, multi-domain kill chain that has drastically compressed the time between target acquisition and payload delivery. For the first time in human history, an artificial intelligence network fully dominated the upper echelons of the kill chain in a high-level decapitation strike.10

6.1 Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD) and Cyber Operations

The initial phase of the operation focused on the total suppression of Iranian integrated air defense systems, specifically targeting the advanced, Russian-supplied S-300 and S-400 surface-to-air missile networks. Before physical munitions were dropped, United States Cyber Command (CYBERCOM) executed highly sophisticated digital disruptions against the Iranian air defense grid. These cyber strikes were designed to blind early warning radars, sever command-and-control datalinks, and inject false telemetry into the Iranian system.73

This invisible cyber offensive was instantly followed by aggressive electronic attack aircraft operations. EA-18G Growlers launched from the USS Abraham Lincoln flooded the remaining electromagnetic spectrum with jamming signals, effectively neutralizing any radars that survived the cyber-attack.2 This synchronized cyber-electronic warfare effort created a temporary permissive environment, allowing the physical strike packages to cross into Iranian airspace undetected.

6.2 The Algorithmic Targeting Network

Once the air defense network was degraded, the target acquisition phase was managed by an unprecedented global surveillance and strike network. Intelligence gathering transitioned from manual human analysis,which is often too slow to prosecute mobile targets,to an AI-driven “battlefield brain.” Systems provided by defense technology firms Palantir and Anduril, integrated with advanced large language models like Claude, analyzed vast quantities of remote sensing data, satellite imagery, and intercepted communications in real-time.10

Palantir’s flagship product, Gotham 5, utilized its “ontology” mapping to break down historical data silos between various intelligence agencies. This system rapidly synthesized disparate data points to identify the precise, fleeting locations of high-value targets, including the subterranean command centers utilized by the IRGC and the Supreme Leader.11 The AI system did not merely display data; it actively generated targeting solutions based on probabilities of location and asset availability.

Algorithmic warfare kill chain: data collection (satellite, RC-135, MQ-9 Reaper) to kinetic execution (F-35, B-2, LUCAS).

6.3 Kinetic Execution and Payload Delivery

This AI network effectively automated the upper echelons of the kill chain, distributing firing solutions to the most optimal, available platforms in the theater. For deep, hardened targets identified by the AI, the system directed B-2 stealth bombers to deliver heavy penetrator munitions (GBU-31(V)3).2 For time-sensitive, dynamic targets,such as mobile ballistic missile erector-launchers moving into firing positions,targeting data was instantly relayed via datalink to forward-deployed F-15E Strike Eagles and F-35s loitering in the theater, kept aloft by the massive organic tanking operations.4

Simultaneously, the network directed the LUCAS drone swarms of Task Force Scorpion Strike to prosecute soft targets and overwhelm any remaining point defenses. By integrating Tomahawk strikes from the sea, B-2 bombers from the air, and drone swarms directed by AI, the coalition created a chaotic, multi-vector, simultaneous assault that completely collapsed the Iranian defensive doctrine from within.10 This synthesis of cyber disruption, algorithmic targeting, and precision kinetic delivery represents the core operational capability enabling the rapid degradation of the Iranian state security apparatus.

7.0 Information Gaps and OPSEC Limitations

While open-source intelligence and official disclosures provide a comprehensive overview of the theater posture, several critical intelligence gaps remain due to strict Operational Security (OPSEC) measures enforced by the Department of Defense. The precise operating areas of independent naval deployers, specifically the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers and the Ohio-class SSGN, remain undisclosed to preserve their survivability against long-range anti-ship ballistic missiles. Furthermore, the specific munitions loadouts of the forward-deployed fighter squadrons, the exact number of fifth-generation fighters currently operational (accounting for routine maintenance and potential battle damage), and the true extent of the subterranean damage to Iranian nuclear facilities cannot be definitively verified via recent unclassified channels. Any subsequent strategic analysis must account for these deliberate ambiguities in the public record.


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