Tag Archives: Operation Epic Fury

Operation Epic Fury: United States Military Order of Battle and Strike Posture in the CENTCOM AOR

Executive Summary

As of late February 2026, the United States Armed Forces, acting in direct coordination with the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), have initiated major kinetic combat operations against the Islamic Republic of Iran under the Department of Defense operational designation “Operation Epic Fury”.1 This military action, launched in tandem with the Israeli operations codenamed “Lion’s Roar” and “Shield of Judah,” represents the culmination of an unprecedented, multi-domain force buildup across the United States Central Command (CENTCOM) and European Command (EUCOM) Areas of Responsibility (AOR).2 The current deployment and subsequent combat operations mark the most significant concentration of American naval, aerial, and logistical combat power in the Middle Eastern theater since the 2003 invasion of Iraq, effectively dwarfing previous regional deterrence postures and operations.5

The contemporary United States Order of Battle (ORBAT) is strategically anchored by a geographically distributed, highly survivable dual-carrier strike force architecture. Carrier Strike Group Three (CSG-3), operating the Nimitz-class USS Abraham Lincoln, is actively deployed in the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman, projecting sustained combat power directly into Iran’s southern threat vectors and maritime chokepoints.8 Concurrently, Carrier Strike Group Twelve (CSG-12), led by the Ford-class USS Gerald R. Ford, has established a forward operating presence in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea near the coastlines of Israel and Crete.5 This specific geographic positioning deliberately isolates the high-value flagship from Iran’s anti-ship ballistic missile (ASBM) envelopes while utilizing an extensive, trans-continental aerial refueling bridge to project carrier-based strike capabilities deep into Iranian sovereign territory.5

Land-based expeditionary air power has surged to encompass over 330 combat and specialized support aircraft positioned across allied host nations, representing an approximate 10% increase in regional air assets within the final 48 hours prior to the commencement of kinetic strikes.14 Data indicates that combat aircraft constitute approximately 65% of this total deployed force, supported by a dense network of electronic warfare, command and control, and aerial refueling platforms.14 This air armada is characterized by a heavy reliance on fifth-generation low-observable platforms (F-35A/C, F-22), advanced electronic warfare (EW) and suppression of enemy air defenses (SEAD) assets (EA-18G, EA-37B), and an exceptionally robust Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) architecture (RC-135, MQ-4C, E-3).14

The defensive posture established to protect these offensive assets is equally robust and has already been kinetically validated. Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) and Patriot PAC-3 systems are actively engaging retaliatory Iranian ballistic missile launches aimed at forward staging bases.17 This was notably demonstrated by recent successful exo-atmospheric intercepts over Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which safeguarded critical USAF reconnaissance and refueling infrastructure.17 The operational integration of cyber warfare with conventional electronic attack platforms has successfully degraded Iranian integrated air defense systems (IADS), specifically targeting S-300 and S-400 equivalents, facilitating the successful ingress of allied strike packages in the opening salvos of Operation Epic Fury.18

Current Order of Battle (ORBAT)

The following sections detail the verified and assessed dispositions of United States military assets within the CENTCOM and adjacent EUCOM AORs, categorized by domain.

Naval Surface and Subsurface Posture

The maritime component of the current US force posture is engineered to establish multi-axis sea control, provide layered ballistic missile defense (BMD) for regional allies and staging bases, and deliver overwhelming long-range precision fires via BGM-109 Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles (TLAM). The naval ORBAT is strategically distributed across the Eastern Mediterranean Sea, Red Sea, Arabian Sea, and the Persian Gulf, forcing Iranian defense planners to calculate threats from 360 degrees.9

Carrier Strike Groups (CSG)

The deployment of a dual-carrier formation provides combatant commanders with nearly continuous, 24-hour sortie generation capabilities. The geographic separation of the two strike groups maximizes threat axes while complicating Iranian counter-targeting efforts.

Unit DesignationPlatform / ClassCurrent Location AssessedKey Embarked Assets / Composition
Carrier Strike Group 3 (CSG-3)USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) Nimitz-classArabian Sea / Gulf of Oman 8CVW-9: VMFA-314 (F-35C), VFA squadrons (F/A-18E/F), VAQ-133 “Wizards” (EA-18G w/ ALQ-249 NGJ), VAW-117 (E-2D).21
Carrier Strike Group 12 (CSG-12)USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) Ford-classEastern Mediterranean Sea (near Israel/Crete) 11CVW-8: VFA-31, 37, 87, 213 (F/A-18E/F), VAQ-142 (EA-18G), VAW-124 (E-2D).27 Nearing 300-day deployment record.29

Deployed to the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman, CSG-3 provides the primary southern axis of attack against Iranian military infrastructure.5 The presence of Carrier Air Wing Nine (CVW-9) brings critical fifth-generation capabilities to the maritime domain via Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 314 (VMFA-314) operating the F-35C Lightning II.25 Furthermore, the embarkation of Electronic Attack Squadron 133 (VAQ-133), the “Wizards,” is of paramount strategic importance. VAQ-133 is currently the vanguard unit deploying the AN/ALQ-249 Next Generation Jammer (NGJ), an advanced electronic warfare pod that significantly enhances the EA-18G Growler’s ability to blind and suppress sophisticated, multi-frequency Iranian radar networks.21

Originally deployed to the Caribbean Sea for Operation Southern Spear, CSG-12 was rapidly repositioned across the Atlantic, transited the Strait of Gibraltar, and is currently operating in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea near the Israeli coast and Crete.10 This positioning protects the carrier from Iranian anti-ship ballistic missiles while utilizing an aerial refueling bridge to allow its air wing to strike Iranian targets.5 The Ford-class brings advanced Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch Systems (EMALS) and Advanced Arresting Gear (AAG) to the theater, theoretically permitting a higher sortie generation rate than legacy Nimitz-class carriers, though the vessel and its crew are currently being pushed to the limits of operational endurance as they near a 300-day continuous deployment.13

Independent Surface Action Groups and Destroyer Squadrons (DESRON)

To secure vital maritime chokepoints and augment the Tomahawk strike package, a formidable fleet of guided-missile destroyers (DDG) has been forward-deployed. These Arleigh Burke-class vessels are dual-hatted: they serve as the primary Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) shield for allied assets while concurrently acting as the principal launch platforms for hundreds of TLAMs. Open-source intelligence analysts estimate that the assembled naval combat power could unleash over 600 Tomahawk missiles in a single coordinated salvo.31

Unit DesignationPlatform / ClassCurrent Location AssessedPrimary Operational Mandate
USS Frank E. Petersen Jr. (DDG-121)Arleigh Burke-class DDGNorth Arabian Sea 32CSG-3 Escort / Air Defense / Strike.32
USS Spruance (DDG-111)Arleigh Burke-class DDGNorth Arabian Sea 32CSG-3 Escort / Air Defense / Strike.32
USS Michael Murphy (DDG-112)Arleigh Burke-class DDGNorth Arabian Sea 32CSG-3 Escort / Air Defense / Strike.32
USS Bainbridge (DDG-96)Arleigh Burke-class DDGEastern Mediterranean Sea 33CSG-12 Escort / Air Defense / Strike.28
USS Mahan (DDG-72)Arleigh Burke-class DDGEastern Mediterranean Sea 33CSG-12 Escort / Air Defense / Strike.28
USS Winston S. Churchill (DDG-81)Arleigh Burke-class DDGEastern Mediterranean Sea 33CSG-12 Escort / Air Defense / Strike.28
USS Bulkeley (DDG-84)Arleigh Burke-class DDGEastern Mediterranean Sea 32Independent Aegis BMD operations / Strike.32
USS Roosevelt (DDG-80)Arleigh Burke-class DDGEastern Mediterranean Sea 32Independent Aegis BMD operations / Strike.32
USS McFaul (DDG-74)Arleigh Burke-class DDGStrait of Hormuz / Persian Gulf 34Chokepoint defense / Coastal strike / Escort.32
USS Mitscher (DDG-57)Arleigh Burke-class DDGStrait of Hormuz / Persian Gulf 34Chokepoint defense / Coastal strike / Escort.32
USS Delbert D. Black (DDG-119)Arleigh Burke-class DDGRed Sea / Bab el-Mandeb 34Chokepoint defense / Anti-Houthi overwatch / Strike.32

The positioning of the USS McFaul and USS Mitscher within the Persian Gulf and near the Strait of Hormuz is particularly high-risk but necessary for securing the critical energy transit corridor.32 These vessels are uniquely positioned to defend US installations in Bahrain and the UAE, escort commercial shipping, and launch close-range cruise missile strikes into Iranian coastal defense networks, despite being well within the range of Iranian shore-based anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) and fast attack craft swarms.34

Subsurface Assets (SSGNs and SSNs)

While the exact locations of nuclear-powered attack (SSN) and guided-missile (SSGN) submarines remain highly classified under strict OPSEC protocols, OSINT and historical deployment patterns indicate a heavy subsurface presence operating in the AOR.

Unit DesignationPlatform / ClassCurrent Location AssessedPrimary Operational Mandate
USS Florida (SSGN-728)Ohio-class SSGNLocation undisclosed but operating in the AOR (Recently observed NSA Souda Bay, Crete) 35Massive conventional strike (154x TLAM capacity) / Special Operations.36
USS Georgia (SSGN-729)Ohio-class SSGNLocation undisclosed but operating in the AOR 38Massive conventional strike (154x TLAM capacity) / Special Operations.38
Multiple UnitsVirginia / Los Angeles-class SSNsLocations undisclosed but operating in the AOR 39Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance (ISR) / ASW / Strike.40

The Ohio-class submarines, notably the USS Florida and USS Georgia, possess unprecedented conventional strike capabilities. Each SSGN was converted from a strategic nuclear deterrent platform to a conventional cruise missile carrier capable of launching up to 154 BGM-109 Tomahawks from 22 vertical launch tubes.36 Open-source tracking indicates USS Florida has recently utilized the Marathi NATO Pier Facility at NSA Souda Bay, Crete, for logistical support.35 The presence of these vessels in the Mediterranean, Red, or Arabian Seas provides combatant commanders with a massive, stealthy first-strike capability designed to overwhelm Iranian air defenses without exposing surface ships to counter-battery fire.41 Fast attack submarines (SSNs) are concurrently tasked with sanitizing the operational zones of Iranian Kilo-class diesel-electric submarines and providing persistent, undetected ISR along the Iranian littoral.40

Amphibious Ready Groups (Information Gaps & Strategic Indicators)

Notably, the massive US military buildup lacks a dedicated Amphibious Ready Group (ARG) or Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU) deployed within the immediate CENTCOM AOR.

Unit DesignationPlatform / ClassCurrent Location AssessedStrategic Indicator
USS Iwo Jima ARG / 24th MEUWasp-class LHD / USMC MEUCaribbean Sea 10Continuing operations in SOUTHCOM.10
USS Boxer ARGWasp-class LHDPacific Ocean 10Operating in INDOPACOM.10

The USS Iwo Jima (LHD-7) ARG, carrying the 24th MEU, remains deployed in the Caribbean Sea supporting SOUTHCOM tasking, while the USS Boxer (LHD-4) ARG is currently underway in the Pacific Ocean.10 This specific force structure confirms assessments that the current military objective is purely focused on kinetic, long-range power projection (air and cruise missile strikes) and regime infrastructure degradation, rather than any form of amphibious assault, coastal seizure, or large-scale ground force insertion.39

Land-Based Air Power & Enablers

The United States Air Force (USAF), augmented by naval aviation detachments and allied assets, has executed a staggering logistical and combat surge to deploy more than 330 military aircraft to the Middle East.14 Data indicates that combat aircraft constitute approximately 65% of this total deployed force, supported by a dense network of electronic warfare, command and control, and aerial refueling platforms.14 Specifically, the combat breakdown includes roughly 84 F-18E/F Super Hornets, 54 F-16C/CJ/CM Fighting Falcons, 42 F-35A/C Lightning IIs, 36 F-15E Strike Eagles, and 12 A-10C Thunderbolts.14 The specialist and support tier comprises 18 EA-18G Growlers, 6 E-3 AWACS, and 5 E-11A BACN aircraft, underpinned by a massive fleet of 86 KC-46 and KC-135 refueling tankers either currently in CENTCOM or en route.14 This airpower is deliberately dispersed across multiple allied bases and European staging grounds to complicate Iranian ballistic missile targeting and ensure continuous operational sortie generation.

Combat Aircraft Dispositions

The tactical fighter deployment reveals a clear emphasis on stealth penetration, electronic attack, and heavy ordnance delivery.

Host InstallationWing / Squadron DesignationAircraft TypeAssessed Operational Role
Muwaffaq Salti Air Base (Jordan)Undisclosed Fighter SquadronsF-15E Strike Eagle (36x) 14Deep interdiction / Heavy payload delivery.44
Muwaffaq Salti Air Base (Jordan)Undisclosed Fighter SquadronsF-35A Lightning II (30x) 44Stealth penetration / DEAD operations.45
Muwaffaq Salti Air Base (Jordan)Undisclosed VAQ SquadronEA-18G Growler (6x) 46Electronic Attack / SEAD.46
Prince Sultan Air Base (Saudi Arabia)378th AEW / 555th EFS (“Triple Nickel”)F-16C/CJ Fighting Falcon 47Multi-role / Wild Weasel SEAD.47
Prince Sultan Air Base (Saudi Arabia)378th AEW / 494th EFS (“Mighty Black Panthers”)F-15E Strike Eagle 48Deep interdiction / Heavy payload delivery.48
Al Dhafra Air Base (UAE)380th AEW / 34th EFSF-35A Lightning II 48Stealth penetration / DEAD operations.48
Al Dhafra Air Base (UAE)380th AEW / 79th EFSF-16 Fighting Falcon 48Multi-role strike and defense.48
Ovda Air Base (Israel)Undisclosed Fighter SquadronF-22 Raptor (11x) 44Air dominance / Escort / Stealth penetration.49

Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan serves as a primary hub for kinetic operations due to its proximity to Syrian and Iraqi airspace, which act as flight corridors into Iran.46 The concentration of 36 F-15E Strike Eagles and 30 F-35A Lightning IIs at this location provides a highly lethal combination of survivable penetrating capability and heavy ordnance delivery.44 Furthermore, six Navy EA-18G Growlers have been land-based here to support complex SEAD packages.46

Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, a heavily defended installation deep within the peninsula, hosts the F-16CJs of the 555th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron and the F-15Es of the 494th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron.47 The F-16CJs are specifically optimized for “Wild Weasel” operations, armed with AGM-88 High-speed Anti-Radiation Missiles (HARM) designed to autonomously home in on and destroy active Iranian radar emissions.46

In an unprecedented display of joint US-Israeli operational integration, the US Air Force has forward-deployed at least 11 F-22 Raptor air dominance fighters to Ovda Air Base in the Negev desert.44 These specialized platforms are tasked with sanitizing the airspace of Iranian interceptors, providing top-cover for slower bomber assets, and protecting allied strike packages as they transition from the Mediterranean into hostile airspace.44

Conversely, Al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, historically the central nervous system for CENTCOM air operations, has seen a strategic dispersal of its highly valuable, non-stealthy assets due to its acute vulnerability to Iranian missile barrages across the Persian Gulf.50 While it retains a presence of heavy airlift and tiltrotor aircraft, many high-end combat and refueling assets have been relocated to operational depths further west.50

Strategic Bombers and Long-Range Strike

The integration of the Air Force Global Strike Command (AFGSC) is a critical requirement for delivering the massive ordnance payloads necessary to destroy deeply buried Iranian nuclear enrichment facilities, such as the subterranean complexes at Fordow and Natanz.51

Unit DesignationPlatform / ClassCurrent Location AssessedPrimary Operational Mandate
Bomber Task Force (BTF) 25-2B-52H StratofortressRAF Fairford, United Kingdom 53Standoff cruise missile delivery / Force projection.53
Undisclosed Bomb WingsB-2 SpiritAlert status CONUS / Potential staging Diego Garcia 14Penetrating strike / MOP delivery against hardened targets.51

B-52H Stratofortress bombers attached to BTF 25-2 have recently conducted extensive force projection missions across the Middle East, originating from their European staging ground at RAF Fairford.53 Operating from these European sanctuaries, the B-52Hs utilize the extensive tanker bridge to reach launch points where they can deliver standoff munitions (such as the AGM-158 JASSM-ER) without ever crossing into the lethal threat rings of Iranian surface-to-air missiles.

While no B-2 Spirit stealth bombers have been publicly observed forward-deploying to Naval Support Facility Diego Garcia, OSINT monitors have recorded a sharp increase in strategic airlift activity (C-17s, C-5Ms) to the remote Indian Ocean atoll, strongly indicating logistical preparation for bomber staging.14 B-2s remain on high alert in the continental United States (CONUS) and hold a proven operational history of striking Iranian targets, having delivered 30,000-pound GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators (MOP) during Operation Midnight Hammer in June 2025.51

Electronic Warfare, ISR, and Command and Control (C2)

Modern air campaigns are heavily reliant on dominance of the invisible electromagnetic spectrum. CENTCOM has amassed a formidable array of Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance (ISR) and Command and Control (C2) platforms to manage the complex battlespace and find targets for the kinetic shooters.

Unit DesignationPlatform / ClassCurrent Location AssessedPrimary Operational Mandate
380th AEW DetachmentsU-2S Dragon Lady / RQ-4 Global HawkAl Dhafra Air Base (UAE) 58High-altitude, long-endurance optical and radar ISR.58
US Navy Patrol SquadronsMQ-4C Triton / P-8A PoseidonAl Dhafra (UAE) / Isa Air Base (Bahrain) 15Maritime surveillance / ASW / Persian Gulf monitoring.60
Undisclosed Recon SquadronsRC-135V/W Rivet JointAl-Udeid (Qatar) / Various AOR 15Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) / Electronic order of battle mapping.61
55th Electronic Combat GroupEA-37B Compass CallRamstein Air Base (Germany) 62Stand-off electronic attack / Communications jamming.63
Undisclosed C2 SquadronsE-3 Sentry (AWACS) / E-11A BACNVarious AOR 14Airborne battle management / Datalink translation and relay.14

High-altitude ISR is managed heavily out of the 380th AEW at Al Dhafra, which operates the U-2S Dragon Lady, RQ-4 Global Hawk, and at least two newly arrived US Navy MQ-4C Triton maritime surveillance drones.15 These platforms provide persistent, high-altitude synthetic aperture radar (SAR) mapping of Iranian military movements and naval deployments in the Gulf of Oman and Strait of Hormuz.60

Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) is gathered by multiple RC-135V/W Rivet Joint aircraft operating throughout the theater, actively vacuuming the electromagnetic spectrum to map the emissions of Iranian IADS and military communications networks.15 To manage the crowded airspace and deconflict the massive strike packages, six E-3 Sentry AWACS and five E-11A Battlefield Airborne Communications Node (BACN) aircraft serve as airborne command posts.14 The E-11A BACN is particularly crucial for translating distinct tactical datalinks, acting as a Wi-Fi node in the sky that bridges legacy Link-16 networks with the proprietary Multifunction Advanced Data Link (MADL) utilized by the F-35 fleet, ensuring seamless situational awareness across fourth and fifth-generation platforms.14

In the realm of Electronic Attack (EA), the USAF has recently deployed the brand-new EA-37B Compass Call to the European theater at Ramstein Air Base.62 This highly classified platform is designed to integrate directly with the RC-135s to execute devastating stand-off electronic attacks against adversary command and control networks, effectively paralyzing the enemy’s ability to coordinate a defense before strike aircraft even cross the border.16

The Strategic “Tanker Bridge”

A regional war campaign of this magnitude, particularly one utilizing aircraft carriers stationed as far away as the Mediterranean and bombers flying from the United Kingdom, requires an unparalleled aerial refueling infrastructure. Open-source flight tracking indicates that the US military has mobilized approximately 127 KC-135 Stratotankers and KC-46A Pegasus aircraft globally for this operation.14 Approximately 86 of these tankers are deployed directly within CENTCOM bases or are actively en route.14 For instance, the 77th Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron (EARS), operating the modern KC-46A Pegasus, recently established operations at Prince Sultan Air Base under the 378th AEW.67

The strategic tanker bridge spans from Sofia, Bulgaria, and Souda Bay, Greece, across the Mediterranean to staging areas at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel, bypassing the political constraints and acute vulnerabilities associated with basing entirely within the Persian Gulf.69 By staging KC-135 and KC-46 tankers at these European and Israeli nodes, the US Air Force has established an unbroken aerial refueling corridor. This logistical bridge enables carrier-based fighters from the USS Gerald R. Ford in the Mediterranean, as well as land-based fighters in Jordan and bombers from the UK, to execute deep-penetration strikes into Iranian territory and return to safe havens without exhausting their fuel reserves.5

Air and Missile Defense (AMD) Architecture

Because US and allied host-nation bases are well within the range of Iran’s vast arsenal of short- and medium-range ballistic missiles, the Pentagon has established a deeply layered, integrated air and missile defense (IAMD) shield across the theater.72 Iran is widely assessed to possess the largest and most diverse ballistic missile force in the Middle East, heavily stockpiling solid-fueled, precision-guided variants.73

Defensive SystemDomain / PlatformAssessed LocationsPrimary Interception Role
THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense)Land-based Mobile BatteryUAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan 14Exo-atmospheric ballistic missile intercept (Hit-to-Kill).17
Patriot PAC-3Land-based Mobile BatteryVarious CENTCOM Airbases 14Point defense against short-range ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and UAVs.72
Aegis BMD (SM-3 / SM-6)Arleigh Burke-class DDGEast Med, Red Sea, Persian Gulf 32Midcourse and terminal ballistic missile defense over maritime and allied airspace.32

Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries have been rapidly deployed across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan.14 These systems are capable of intercepting incoming ballistic missiles in their terminal phase utilizing kinetic “hit-to-kill” technology—destroying the target through sheer impact velocity rather than an explosive fragmentation warhead.72 While highly effective, these systems rely on a finite inventory of interceptors that cost upwards of $12 million each and take years to procure, creating a critical logistical constraint if Iran employs mass saturation tactics.72 Operating in conjunction with THAAD, Patriot Advanced Capability-3 (PAC-3) batteries provide the inner layer of point defense for critical infrastructure, airfields, and command nodes.14

The efficacy of this network has already been tested in live combat. On February 28, Iranian ballistic missiles targeted Al Dhafra Air Base in the UAE, a critical hub housing the 380th AEW. Preliminary reports indicate that a UAE-deployed THAAD system successfully engaged and intercepted two incoming ballistic missiles over Abu Dhabi, preventing catastrophic damage to the operational hub and safeguarding the highly concentrated reconnaissance and aerial refueling assets stationed on the flight line.17

Reinforcements & Transit Status

The Pentagon continues to surge reinforcements toward the CENTCOM AOR, preparing the logistics and force structure necessary for sustained, multi-day combat operations. The buildup relies heavily on a global pipeline of assets transiting from EUCOM, INDOPACOM, and CONUS.14

Since early January, an estimated 310 strategic airlift flights utilizing C-17 Globemaster III and C-5M Super Galaxy transports have established an air bridge into the Middle East, delivering vital personnel, heavy munitions, and the massive radar and launcher components required for the Patriot and THAAD missile defense systems.14

Simultaneously, a steady stream of tactical fighters continues to arrive via the European staging bridge. Recent flight tracking data confirmed the arrival of an additional 38 fighters—comprising 12 F-22 Raptors, 14 F-15E Strike Eagles, and 12 F-35A Lightning IIs—at RAF Lakenheath in the UK.44 These aircraft, having completed their initial transatlantic transit from bases in Utah, Idaho, and Virginia, are resting and refitting in Europe before making the final flight into the Middle East to replenish and reinforce the strike packages currently engaged in combat operations.44

In the maritime domain, the US Navy is actively preparing to deploy a third aircraft carrier to the theater. The USS George H.W. Bush (CVN-77) Carrier Strike Group, which had been conducting expedited training exercises off the coast of Virginia, is being readied for an emergency deployment within a two-week operational window.5 This aggressive scheduling suggests military planners are anticipating a prolonged, grinding campaign that will require rotational carrier availability to maintain the relentless pace of strike sorties without collapsing the endurance of the Ford or Lincoln crews.

Operational Capabilities & Integration: “The Kill Chain”

The execution of “Operation Epic Fury” relies entirely on the seamless, multi-domain integration of the disparate assets detailed in this ORBAT. The US military does not fight with individual platforms; it employs a sophisticated, interconnected “kill chain” designed to systematically blind, dismantle, and finally destroy Iranian military infrastructure. This methodology is executed in distinct, overlapping phases.

Phase 0: Cyber Infiltration and Spectrum Dominance

Before the first physical munitions are released, the battlespace is prepared through offensive cyber operations and electromagnetic warfare. According to verified intelligence sources, US Cyber Command successfully executed digital strikes against Iranian air defense networks, specifically targeting digital “aim-points”—vulnerable nodes such as routers, servers, and peripheral devices—connected to the command infrastructure of radar systems protecting the heavily fortified nuclear enrichment sites at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan.18 By degrading these Russian-equivalent S-300 and S-400 systems digitally from the inside out, cyber operators effectively blinded the Iranian Integrated Air Defense System (IADS) at critical junctures, preventing the launch of surface-to-air missiles against the initial waves of incoming American warplanes.18 This invisible preparation of the battlefield is a prerequisite for survivability in heavily contested airspace.

Phase 1: SEAD and DEAD Operations (Suppression/Destruction of Enemy Air Defenses)

As cyber strikes create localized blind spots and confusion within the Iranian command structure, dedicated electronic and kinetic warfare aircraft exploit these gaps to permanently dismantle the defensive network.

  1. The Sensors (Detection & Geolocation): High-altitude RC-135V/W Rivet Joint aircraft loiter at safe standoff distances over international waters or allied airspace. Utilizing highly sensitive, specialized receiver arrays, these aircraft detect, classify, and precisely geolocate the emissions of active Iranian early-warning and targeting radars.16
  2. The Jammers (Electronic Attack): The targeting data collected by the Rivet Joints is instantly transmitted via secure, low-latency datalinks to EA-37B Compass Call aircraft and carrier-launched EA-18G Growlers operating closer to the threat edge.16 The EA-18Gs, specifically those of VAQ-133 equipped with the new ALQ-249 Next Generation Jammer (NGJ), project focused, high-power electromagnetic energy to overwhelm and scramble the remaining Iranian radar arrays, injecting false targets and noise into their receivers and rendering them incapable of achieving a weapons lock on allied aircraft.22 The recent, historic integration of the RC-135 and EA-37B has significantly refined this electromagnetic kill chain, allowing for rapid, coordinated jamming of pop-up threats in real-time.16
  3. The Hunters (Kinetic Destruction): Under the protective umbrella of this electronic shielding, F-35A and F-35C stealth fighters penetrate deep into Iranian airspace. Utilizing their advanced sensor fusion and the secure Multifunction Advanced Data Link (MADL), F-35s operate as forward quarterbacks. They identify hidden or mobile SAM sites and neutralize them using internal precision-guided munitions like the GBU-39 Small Diameter Bomb (SDB) to maintain their stealth profile, or they pass the precise targeting coordinates back to heavier “bomb trucks” waiting outside the threat ring.80 Furthermore, specialized F-16CJs armed with AGM-88 High-speed Anti-Radiation Missiles (HARM) actively hunt and destroy radar transmitters by riding the enemy’s radar beam directly back to its source.46

Phase 2: Kinetic Execution and Heavy Payload Delivery

Once the IADS is sufficiently degraded and safe air corridors are secured, the heavy kinetic phase initiates to destroy the regime’s strategic capabilities.

  • Standoff Strikes: The USS Florida and USS Georgia (SSGNs), alongside the Arleigh Burke destroyers stationed in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf, launch massive salvos of Tomahawk Land Attack Missiles (TLAM).31 These cruise missiles navigate at low altitudes to avoid radar detection, targeting fixed command and control bunkers, ballistic missile production facilities, and IRGC naval bases.31 Simultaneously, B-52H bombers stationed in Europe launch long-range cruise missiles from well outside Iranian airspace.53
  • Penetrating Strikes: Fourth-generation fighters bearing heavy ordnance payloads, primarily the F-15E Strike Eagles staging from Jordan and Saudi Arabia, ingress through the cleared air corridors.5 Sustained by the massive aerial refueling bridge of KC-135s and KC-46s, these aircraft deliver precision-guided bunker-busters to obliterate hardened Iranian ballistic missile silos and subterranean nuclear enrichment sites that cruise missiles cannot penetrate.5

Phase 3: Battle Damage Assessment (BDA) and Persistent ISR

Following the strike waves, High-Altitude ISR platforms—such as the MQ-4C Triton, U-2S, and RQ-4 Global Hawk—loiter high above the target areas.15 Utilizing synthetic aperture radar and high-resolution electro-optical sensors, these platforms conduct immediate Battle Damage Assessments (BDA), determining the precise level of destruction achieved and relaying this intelligence back to the Combined Air Operations Center (CAOC) to determine if follow-on restrikes are required to fully neutralize the target sets.15

Appendix: Glossary of Acronyms

  • AAG: Advanced Arresting Gear
  • AEW: Air Expeditionary Wing
  • AFGSC: Air Force Global Strike Command
  • AMD: Air and Missile Defense
  • AOR: Area of Responsibility
  • ARG: Amphibious Ready Group
  • ASBM: Anti-Ship Ballistic Missile
  • ASCM: Anti-Ship Cruise Missile
  • ASW: Anti-Submarine Warfare
  • AWACS: Airborne Warning and Control System
  • BACN: Battlefield Airborne Communications Node
  • BDA: Battle Damage Assessment
  • BMD: Ballistic Missile Defense
  • BTF: Bomber Task Force
  • C2: Command and Control
  • CAOC: Combined Air Operations Center
  • CENTCOM: Central Command (United States Central Command)
  • CONUS: Continental United States
  • CSG: Carrier Strike Group
  • CVN: Aircraft Carrier, Nuclear-powered
  • CVW: Carrier Air Wing
  • DDG: Guided-Missile Destroyer
  • DEAD: Destruction of Enemy Air Defenses
  • DESRON: Destroyer Squadron
  • DoD: Department of Defense
  • EA: Electronic Attack
  • EARS: Expeditionary Air Refueling Squadron
  • EFS: Expeditionary Fighter Squadron
  • EMALS: Electromagnetic Aircraft Launch System
  • EUCOM: European Command (United States European Command)
  • EW: Electronic Warfare
  • HARM: High-speed Anti-Radiation Missile
  • IADS: Integrated Air Defense System
  • IAMD: Integrated Air and Missile Defense
  • IDF: Israel Defense Forces
  • INDOPACOM: Indo-Pacific Command (United States Indo-Pacific Command)
  • IRGC: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
  • ISR: Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance
  • LHD: Landing Helicopter Dock
  • MADL: Multifunction Advanced Data Link
  • MEU: Marine Expeditionary Unit
  • MOP: Massive Ordnance Penetrator
  • NGJ: Next Generation Jammer
  • NSA: Naval Support Activity
  • OPSEC: Operational Security
  • ORBAT: Order of Battle
  • OSINT: Open-Source Intelligence
  • PAC-3: Patriot Advanced Capability-3
  • RAF: Royal Air Force
  • SAM: Surface-to-Air Missile
  • SAR: Synthetic Aperture Radar
  • SDB: Small Diameter Bomb
  • SEAD: Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses
  • SIGINT: Signals Intelligence
  • SM: Standard Missile
  • SOUTHCOM: Southern Command (United States Southern Command)
  • SSGN: Guided-Missile Submarine, Nuclear-powered
  • SSN: Attack Submarine, Nuclear-powered
  • THAAD: Terminal High Altitude Area Defense
  • TLAM: Tomahawk Land Attack Missile
  • UAE: United Arab Emirates
  • UAV: Unmanned Aerial Vehicle
  • USAF: United States Air Force
  • USMC: United States Marine Corps
  • VAQ: Electronic Attack Squadron
  • VAW: Airborne Command & Control Squadron
  • VFA: Strike Fighter Squadron
  • VMFA: Marine Fighter Attack Squadron

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Sources Used

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Operation Epic Fury: Assessing Military Effectiveness Against Iran And Iran’s Potential Next Steps

1. Assessment of Effectiveness (Current State)

As of February 28, 2026, the geopolitical and security environment in the Middle East has entered a period of unprecedented volatility following the commencement of coordinated preemptive military strikes by the United States and Israel against the Islamic Republic of Iran. The joint offensive-designated “Operation Epic Fury” by the United States Department of Defense and “Operation Lion’s Roar” by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF)-marks a paradigm shift from coercive diplomacy to direct, high-intensity kinetic confrontation.1 This section evaluates the current state of military effectiveness regarding both the allied strikes and the immediate Iranian kinetic and non-kinetic responses, situated within the broader strategic context of the collapsed diplomatic negotiations.

1.1 Strategic Context and the Genesis of the Allied Offensive

The immediate catalyst for the allied military campaign was the expiration of a ten-to-fifteen-day ultimatum issued by United States President Donald Trump, which explicitly demanded the total and verifiable dismantlement of Iran’s uranium enrichment capabilities.3 Prior to the initiation of hostilities, diplomatic efforts mediated by Omani Foreign Minister Badr Albusaidi in Geneva, Switzerland, attempted to secure a framework agreement to avert a regional conflagration.4 The United States negotiating delegation, led by Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, presented maximalist demands: the total cessation of uranium enrichment, the dismantling of fortified nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Isfahan, the transfer of all enriched uranium to United States custody, and a permanent agreement lacking sunset clauses.6

Iranian negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, counter-proposed a framework that would cap enrichment at 1.5 percent for civil research or potentially up to 20 percent for the Tehran Research Reactor, while demanding immediate and comprehensive relief from United States and United Nations sanctions.5 The Iranian delegation fundamentally refused to dismantle physical nuclear infrastructure or export existing fissile material.6 The operational objective of the subsequent military strikes, as stated by the United States administration, is the elimination of imminent threats, the destruction of Iran’s ballistic missile infrastructure, the neutralization of its naval capabilities, and the prevention of nuclear weaponization, ultimately aiming at regime decapitation.1

1.2 The Kinetic Landscape: Allied Preemptive Strikes

To execute Operation Epic Fury, the United States executed a massive regional force posture realignment. In the weeks preceding the strike, the Pentagon deployed the USS Gerald R. Ford and USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike groups to the region, introducing over 150 tactical aircraft and hundreds of sea-launched cruise missiles into the theater.3 This naval armada was augmented by a substantial airlift operation, including more than ten C-17 Globemaster III flights from the United Kingdom to Jordan, and heavy transport movements to the strategic bomber base at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.12 Furthermore, the United States deployed twelve F-22 Raptor stealth air-superiority fighters to Israeli air bases, representing a historic shift in forward-positioning offensive American assets directly on Israeli soil.8

The tactical execution of the allied strikes demonstrated deep penetration into highly defended Iranian airspace during daylight hours-a timing selected specifically to maximize tactical surprise.11 Targets included the residential and administrative complexes of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Masoud Pezeshkian in central Tehran, as well as critical military and infrastructure nodes in Isfahan, Qom, Karaj, Kermanshah, Tabriz, and the southern port city of Bushehr.1

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The munitions utilized in the assault indicate a focus on hardened, deeply buried targets. The United States Air Force deployed B-2 Spirit stealth bombers to deliver thirty-thousand-pound GBU-57A/B Massive Ordnance Penetrators (MOPs), which are specialized bunker-buster munitions capable of penetrating subterranean rock formations, specifically targeting the Fordow Uranium Enrichment Plant and the Natanz Nuclear Facility.14 Concurrent naval operations utilized submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles.14 Additionally, the Israel Defense Forces utilized air-launched ballistic missiles to degrade Iranian air defenses and command-and-control centers, preparing the battlespace for manned aircraft operations.2

1.3 Evaluation of Allied Strike Effectiveness

It is assessed with High Confidence that Iran’s Integrated Air Defense System (IADS) failed to repel the allied assault, exposing critical vulnerabilities in the Islamic Republic’s airspace denial capabilities. Iran’s defensive posture had already been severely compromised prior to this operation. During the preceding Israel-Iran War of June 2025, Iran’s domestically produced Bavar-373 ground-based air defense systems systematically failed to intercept United States and Israeli targets.16 Furthermore, targeted Israeli operations in April and October of 2024 successfully destroyed Iran’s advanced Russian-supplied S-300 batteries.16

To compensate for these strategic deficits, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps attempted to implement temporary and extremely suboptimal solutions.16 Intelligence indicates that Iran attached loaded Russian Verba Man-Portable Air-Defense Systems (MANPADS)-which possess a maximum engagement altitude of only 4,500 meters-along with cameras and radios onto domestically produced Shahed drones.16 While this improvisation theoretically increases the altitude at which infrared homing missiles can engage targets, it proved entirely ineffective against high-altitude, low-observable stealth platforms and supersonic cruise missiles utilized in Operation Epic Fury.16 Consequently, allied forces achieved total air superiority, allowing them to prosecute targets at will.17 Open-source intelligence is inconclusive on the precise number of Iranian military casualties, though Iranian state media and regional reporting suggest significant losses within the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, including several senior commanders.1

1.4 Iranian Kinetic Responses: “True Promise 4”

In immediate retaliation to the decapitation strikes, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps launched an operation designated “True Promise 4,” described as a first wave of extensive ballistic missile and drone swarm attacks targeting both Israel and United States assets throughout the Middle East.19 Unlike previous regional escalations where Iran demonstrated calculated restraint to avoid triggering an all-out war, the target selection on February 28 indicated a highly risk-acceptant strategy intended to inflict maximum systemic damage.

Iranian ballistic missiles, likely drawn from its extensive inventory of Sejil, Emad, and Ghadr platforms (which boast ranges up to 2,000 kilometers and are specifically designed to evade conventional radar systems), penetrated Israeli airspace, with confirmed impacts in the northern city of Haifa.2 The Israeli Home Front Command activated nationwide sirens, and civilian medical infrastructure, including hospitals, initiated emergency protocols to transfer patients to underground facilities.23

Simultaneously, Iran broadened the conflict horizontally by targeting the epicenter of United States power projection in the Persian Gulf. Missiles successfully struck the United States Navy’s Fifth Fleet Headquarters in Bahrain, reportedly causing a sizable impact on the facility.2 Additional Iranian strikes targeted Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar, Ali Al Salem Air Base in Kuwait, and Al Dhafra Air Base in the United Arab Emirates.1

The effectiveness of Iran’s retaliatory salvos was significantly blunted by advanced allied air defense networks, though the sheer volume of the attack allowed some munitions to penetrate the shield. The United Arab Emirates Ministry of Defense confirmed the successful interception of multiple incoming missiles, though falling interceptor debris resulted in the death of one civilian in Abu Dhabi.1 Qatari authorities reported successful interceptions utilizing United States-operated Patriot missile defense systems, with no immediate damage reported to Al Udeid.20 The Jordanian military also successfully intercepted two ballistic missiles traversing its sovereign airspace.20 While the exact number of United States and Israeli military casualties remains classified, and open-source intelligence is inconclusive on this point, the psychological and operational disruption across the region was absolute, leading to the uniform closure of civilian airspace across Israel, Iran, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar.26

1.5 Asymmetric, Cyber, and Economic Engagements

The military confrontation on February 28 was heavily augmented by non-kinetic, cyber, and asymmetric warfare. Coinciding with the physical airstrikes, Iran was subjected to a crippling digital offensive. Internet monitor NetBlocks reported that national connectivity plunged to merely four percent of normal levels, inducing a near-total information blackout.28 Western intelligence assessments suggest this cyberattack-likely orchestrated jointly by the United States and Israel-was designed to sever the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ command-and-control infrastructure, preventing the coordinated launch of additional drones and ballistic missiles by Iranian electronic warfare units.28 Furthermore, state-affiliated media apparatuses, including the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) and the IRGC-aligned Tasnim outlet, were taken offline or hacked to display subversive anti-regime messaging directed against Supreme Leader Khamenei.28 In the domestic sphere, the Tehran Stock Exchange entirely suspended trading, and telecommunications networks experienced severe disruptions.30

The global economic response to the strikes was instantaneous, highlighting Iran’s asymmetric leverage over global energy markets. Anticipation of the strikes drove Brent crude oil prices up significantly to over $72 per barrel, injecting a heavy war premium into global markets as traders assessed the geopolitical risk to maritime energy corridors.31

1.6 Assessment of Overall Effectiveness

The current state of military effectiveness heavily favors the conventional supremacy of the allied forces. It is assessed with High Confidence that the United States and Israel demonstrated overwhelming conventional dominance, achieving air superiority and successfully striking high-value leadership and military targets with impunity. The digital decapitation of Iran’s communication grid was highly effective in the short term, degrading the regime’s ability to coordinate a unified response.28

Conversely, Iran’s military effectiveness is currently limited to its capacity for area denial, economic disruption, and the saturation of regional air defenses. It is assessed with Moderate Confidence that while its indigenous air defense network collapsed entirely, its heavily fortified, underground ballistic missile forces retained sufficient survivability to launch a massive counter-salvo capable of bypassing sophisticated allied interceptors to strike targets as distant as Haifa and Bahrain.2

2. Forecast of Likely Next Steps (Iranian Response Options)

With the collapse of the Geneva nuclear negotiations and the onset of major combat operations, the strategic calculus for the Islamic Republic has fundamentally shifted from maintaining regional deterrence to ensuring absolute regime survival.3 Based on current Iranian military doctrine, recent behavior during the June 2025 conflict, and the unprecedented scale of the February 28 strikes, the following threat matrix forecasts Iran’s most probable next steps in the immediate to medium term.

Threat Matrix: Iranian Response Options

Response OptionDescription of Tactics and VectorsProbability of ExecutionProbability of SuccessAnticipated Allied Countermeasures
Direct Military ConfrontationSustained ballistic and cruise missile salvos, accompanied by Shahed drone swarms, targeting Israeli population centers and U.S. Gulf bases (Qatar, Bahrain, UAE, Kuwait).HighModerateDeployment of U.S. THAAD, Patriot PAC-3, and Israeli Arrow/David’s Sling. Preemptive strikes on Iranian mobile launch sites.
Proxy Utilization (Iraq/Syria)Activation of the Popular Mobilization Forces, Kataib Hezbollah, and Harakat al-Nujaba to strike U.S. bases in Erbil and Baghdad, aiming to force an American withdrawal.HighModerate to HighTargeted assassinations of militia leadership; sustained aerial bombardment of PMF infrastructure and logistics routes.
Proxy Utilization (Levant/Red Sea)Hezbollah rocket barrages on northern Israel; Houthi closure of the Bab el-Mandeb strait and anti-ship missile targeting in the Red Sea.HighModerateIsraeli ground incursions and aerial campaigns in Lebanon; U.S. naval bombardment of Houthi coastal launch facilities in Yemen.
Asymmetric/Maritime WarfareMining operations, GPS jamming, and fast-attack craft harassment of commercial oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz.Medium-HighHigh (Economic Impact)U.S. 5th Fleet naval escorts; international maritime security coalitions; preemptive strikes on IRGC Navy coastal bases.
Cyber and Global TerrorismWiper malware attacks on Israeli/U.S. critical civilian infrastructure; physical targeting of Jewish or Israeli embassies and diplomatic personnel globally.MediumLow to ModerateDefensive cyber protocols; heightened global intelligence sharing; enhanced embassy security protocols.

2.1 Direct Military Confrontation

It is assessed with High Confidence that Iran will maintain a posture of direct military confrontation. The regime perceives that a failure to respond forcefully to an attack on the Supreme Leader’s compound would fatally undermine its domestic authority and its standing among the Axis of Resistance.1 Iran’s primary operational goal in this domain is not to win a conventional war, but to engage in a war of mathematical attrition.

Iran possesses the largest ballistic missile arsenal in the Middle East, deeply buried in underground missile cities located in Kermanshah, Semnan, and along the Persian Gulf coast, making them highly resilient to preemptive strikes.22 Iran’s strategy relies on volume: launching massive, synchronized swarms designed to mathematically exhaust allied interceptor magazines. While United States and Israeli interceptors are technologically superior, they are constrained by inventory limitations and immense financial costs. For context, during the June 2025 conflict, United States Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries expended 92 interceptors defending against Iranian missiles out of a total pre-conflict global inventory of 632.12 Each THAAD battery costs approximately $2.73 billion, with individual interceptors priced at $12.7 million.12 The United States Missile Defense Agency estimates a three-to-eight-year timeline to replenish these stockpiles given current production rates.12 Therefore, the probability of Iranian success in penetrating these defenses increases proportionally with the duration of the conflict.

The anticipated countermeasures by the United States involve relying heavily on destroying Iranian mobile launchers before they can fire, utilizing F-35s and loitering munitions, while selectively utilizing THAAD interceptors only against the most critical inbound threats.12

2.2 Proxy Utilization: The Axis of Resistance (Iraq and Syria)

Iran’s proxy network acts as its strategic depth, allowing Tehran to project power while maintaining a degree of plausible deniability. Despite suffering degradation over the past two years, these groups remain capable of opening multiple geographic fronts.33 It is assessed with High Confidence that Iran will heavily utilize its proxies in Iraq and Syria to target American personnel.

In Iraq, groups operating under the umbrella of the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, including Kataib Hezbollah and Harakat al-Nujaba, possess deep operational experience. Hours after the February 28 strikes began, these militias launched rocket attacks against a United States military base in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan.18 The effectiveness of these proxies is high because they force the United States to expend resources defending dispersed, remote outposts. However, the domestic political situation in Iraq presents a severe constraint on Iran’s freedom of action. Major Shiite political blocs comprising the Coordination Framework, including the State of Law Coalition led by Nuri al-Maliki and the Fatah Alliance led by Hadi al-Ameri, view a United States-Iran conflagration on Iraqi soil as an existential threat to their fragile sovereignty and are desperate to stay out of the fight.16 Tehran itself relies on a stable Iraq as an economic lifeline and trade partner to circumvent sanctions.34

Consequently, the United States and Israel are actively preempting proxy mobilization without waiting for Iraqi government permission. Coinciding with the strikes on Tehran, allied aircraft bombed the Popular Mobilization Forces base at Jurf al-Sakhar south of Baghdad, killing at least five Kataib Hezbollah fighters.1 Continuous kinetic suppression of proxy command structures will remain the primary allied countermeasure in this theater.

2.3 Proxy Utilization: The Axis of Resistance (Levant and Red Sea)

It is assessed with High Confidence that Iran will mobilize Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen. The Alma Research and Education Center predicts that Hezbollah will play the most significant operational role in retaliation efforts among all proxies, threatening northern Israel with massive rocket barrages.36 Concurrently, the Houthis have already announced their intention to close the Bab el-Mandeb strait, which connects the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden, threatening a critical node of global maritime trade.2 The anticipated countermeasures will include severe Israeli aerial campaigns in Lebanon and United States naval bombardment of Houthi coastal launch facilities, further expanding the geographical scope of the war.

2.4 Asymmetric and Maritime Warfare: The Strait of Hormuz

As its conventional military options wane under the pressure of allied air superiority, Iran is highly likely to exercise its ultimate asymmetric leverage: disrupting the global economy by choking the Strait of Hormuz. It is assessed with a Medium-High Probability that Iran will escalate maritime hostilities in this sector.

The Strait of Hormuz connects the Persian Gulf to the Indian Ocean and is an essential passage for global oil trade. The waterway is approximately 161 kilometers long and 33 kilometers wide at its narrowest point, with the designated shipping lanes in each direction measuring just two miles wide.37 Approximately twenty percent of the world’s seaborne oil and fifty percent of India’s total crude imports transit through this narrow chokepoint.31

A total physical blockade of the strait is practically difficult and legally complex, as international law mandates the right of transit passage, though Iran has not ratified the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.37 However, Iran does not need to establish a physical blockade to achieve success; the mere threat of violence drives up commercial maritime insurance premiums and global oil prices. Iran can achieve immense disruption utilizing localized global positioning system (GPS) jamming, deploying naval mines in the shallow shipping lanes, and utilizing Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps fast-attack patrol boats to harass commercial shipping.37 Current economic modeling suggests that an energy price spike stemming from severe disruption in the Strait of Hormuz could generate additional global inflation pressures of 1.2 to 2.5 percent, with economic recovery timelines extending six to twelve months depending on the duration of the conflict and infrastructure damage assessments.31

Anticipating this move, the United States military has already begun preemptive strikes against major Iranian Navy and IRGC Navy bases in the Persian Gulf and Arabian Sea to preempt mining operations and degrade their capacity to launch fast-attack craft.2

2.5 Cyber Warfare and Global Terrorism

It is assessed with a Medium Probability that Iran will engage in retaliatory cyber warfare and global terrorism. Iran could launch cyberattacks aimed at inflicting economic harm by targeting power grids, financial institutions, and civilian infrastructure within Israel and the United States.36 The historical record demonstrates that following Israel’s military strikes in 2025, there was a 700 percent increase in cyberattacks targeting Israel.39 Furthermore, the Alma Center assesses that Iranian attacks against Israeli and Jewish targets worldwide, including embassies and diplomatic personnel, remain firmly on the table.36 However, the probability of strategic success for these operations is low to moderate, as they are unlikely to alter the fundamental military balance of power, serving primarily as a mechanism to demonstrate reach and undermine the target population’s sense of security.36

3. Assessment of Nuclear Escalation Likelihood

The central justification for Operation Epic Fury was the immediate prevention of Iranian nuclear weaponization following the breakdown of diplomatic negotiations in Geneva.3 The current crisis has brought the possibility of Iran permanently altering its nuclear doctrine to its most acute phase in the history of the Islamic Republic. This section evaluates the technical indicators, the doctrinal shifts, and the threshold for preemptive strikes regarding Iran’s nuclear program.

3.1 Real-Time Indicators and Breakout Time

It is assessed with High Confidence that Iran currently possesses the fissile material necessary for a rapid nuclear breakout. Following the United States’ withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in 2018, Iran systematically breached the agreement’s limitations, which had capped uranium enrichment at 3.67 percent and restricted the total stockpile to 202.8 kilograms using only legacy IR-1 centrifuges.40

By February 2026, Iran’s nuclear advances had entirely eroded these constraints. Prior to the February 28 strikes, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reported that Iran maintained vast stockpiles of enriched material. Historical data indicates a severe escalation in highly enriched uranium (HEU) production. The inventory includes 2,595 kilograms of uranium enriched to 5 percent, 840 kilograms enriched to 20 percent, and critically, a stockpile of 440.9 kilograms enriched to 60 percent purity.40 This 60 percent enrichment level has no credible civilian application and represents the most technically challenging hurdle toward achieving weapons-grade (90 percent) material.40

The IAEA assesses that this 60 percent stockpile is theoretically sufficient to construct approximately ten nuclear bombs if enriched further to 90 percent.41 Because the leap from 60 percent to 90 percent requires vastly less time and technical effort than enriching from natural uranium to 20 percent, Iran’s technical breakout time-the time required to produce enough weapons-grade uranium for one nuclear device-is currently measured in a matter of weeks, if not days.7

3.2 Information Gaps and the Loss of Verification

Compounding the threat of a rapid breakout is the fact that international regulatory bodies have been effectively blinded. A confidential IAEA report circulated to member states on February 27, 2026, warned of a total “loss of continuity of knowledge over all previously declared nuclear material at affected facilities” following the June 2025 war.41 The agency explicitly stated it could not verify the current size, composition, or whereabouts of the stockpile of enriched uranium in Iran.41

Specifically, the IAEA pointed to an underground tunnel complex at Isfahan, where Iran had stored its 20 percent and 60 percent enriched uranium, which appeared to have averted destruction during the June 2025 bombings.7 Furthermore, despite strikes on the Natanz facility, Iran had continued construction on the deeply buried Pickaxe Mountain site, which is heavily fortified and capable of housing a new enrichment facility.7 Open-source intelligence is inconclusive on whether the February 28 strikes utilizing GBU-57A/B bunker-buster munitions successfully penetrated and destroyed the Isfahan tunnel complex or the Pickaxe Mountain site, representing a critical intelligence gap regarding the true extent of the damage inflicted on Iran’s nuclear capabilities.

3.3 Doctrine Shift: Rhetoric vs. Actionable Steps

The probability of Iran formally shifting its nuclear doctrine from strategic hedging to active weaponization is now assessed as Moderate to High. Analyzing this probability requires separating diplomatic rhetorical posturing from actionable military imperatives.

In the days preceding the February 28 strikes, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian attempted to assure the international community that Iran would not pursue a nuclear bomb, explicitly citing a religious fatwa issued by Supreme Leader Khamenei in the early 2000s forbidding the development of weapons of mass destruction.43 Pezeshkian emphasized that “the religious leader of a society cannot lie like politicians,” attempting to frame the fatwa as an immutable theological constraint.43

However, intelligence analysis dictates that such public political statements are often designed for diplomatic leverage and must be weighed against institutional military imperatives. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and hardline defense officials operate on a distinct strategic track heavily influenced by historical trauma. Iran’s geopolitical location is conceptualized as a persistent strategic dilemma, deeply shaped by the devastating Iran-Iraq war (1980–1988), during which Saddam Hussein’s systematic use of chemical weapons instilled a profound psychological imperative for military self-reliance and asymmetric defense.45

Following the severe degradation of Iran’s conventional air defense and ballistic missile deterrents in 2024 and 2025, prominent Iranian officials openly began discussing the necessity of a nuclear deterrent to guarantee regime survival.46 Kamal Kharrazi, an advisor to Khamenei, previously stated that if Iran’s existence is threatened, it will have no choice but to change its nuclear doctrine. The threshold for a doctrinal shift is inextricably tied to the perceived threat to the Islamic Republic’s survival. The United States and Israel have crossed a definitive red line by actively targeting Khamenei’s residential complexes and urging the Iranian populace to overthrow the government.1 Under these existential conditions, the religious and political constraints of the anti-nuclear fatwa are highly likely to be overridden by the supreme national security imperative of regime preservation.48

3.4 The Preemptive Strike Threshold

The United States and Israeli calculus for initiating Operation Epic Fury and Lion’s Roar was based precisely on the assessment that Iran was creeping inexorably toward breakout and exploiting diplomatic channels to buy time. During the Geneva negotiations on February 26, the United States presented its maximalist demands.6 While some reports indicated Washington might consider allowing a “token” enrichment of 1 to 1.5 percent, intelligence analysts noted that even 1 percent enrichment represents roughly half the technical effort required to reach weapons-grade uranium.7 When President Trump determined that Iran would not concede to total dismantlement, the threshold for preemptive counter-proliferation strikes was met, prioritizing kinetic disruption over a flawed diplomatic compromise.49

From an intelligence perspective, the critical variable moving forward is whether these strikes successfully eliminated the deeply buried hardware and metallurgic and explosives research-such as operations at the Taleghan 2 facility in Parchin-required to manufacture a workable warhead, or if they merely destroyed surface infrastructure while permanently accelerating Iran’s political resolve to build a device underground.7

4. Executive Summary & Strategic Conclusion

Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF):

The geopolitical paradigm in the Middle East has definitively shifted from proxy attrition and coercive diplomacy to a direct, high-intensity state-on-state conflict. The United States and Israeli preemptive military campaign (Operation Epic Fury and Operation Lion’s Roar) launched on February 28, 2026, aims to permanently dismantle Iran’s nuclear and conventional military infrastructure, neutralize its regional threat, and incite regime change. In immediate response, the Islamic Republic has executed massive retaliatory ballistic missile strikes against Israel and key United States military installations across the Persian Gulf, achieving partial penetrations of allied air defenses and triggering global economic volatility.

The Escalatory Ladder and Immediate Trajectory:

It is assessed with High Confidence that the conflict will not quickly de-escalate. The strategic environment is characterized by the following dynamics:

  1. The Death of Diplomacy: The structural failure of the Geneva negotiations and the onset of heavy kinetic operations have removed all diplomatic off-ramps in the near term. Iran’s leadership perceives the current allied assault as an existential threat aimed at the total eradication of the Islamic Republic, precluding any near-term return to the negotiating table.1
  2. A War of Attrition and Saturation: The immediate trajectory points toward a violent, sustained war of attrition. Iran will utilize its vast, deeply buried ballistic missile reserves and expansive proxy network (including Hezbollah, Iraqi militias, and the Houthis) to saturate United States and Israeli air defenses. The operational goal is to inflict unacceptable military and economic costs on the allies, banking on the mathematical exhaustion of expensive interceptor inventories like THAAD and Patriot systems.12
  3. Global Economic Vulnerability: The global economy faces severe near-term risks due to anticipated Iranian asymmetric operations targeting the Strait of Hormuz. The mere threat of maritime disruptions involving naval mines or GPS jamming has already initiated a spike in crude oil prices, threatening to inject significant inflationary pressure into the global economy.31
  4. Regional Distractions and Phase 2 Collapse: The conflagration with Iran threatens to completely overshadow and derail the United States-brokered Phase 2 of the Gaza ceasefire. The newly inaugurated National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, designed to manage post-war reconstruction under a technocratic framework led by Dr. Ali Shaath, is likely to be marginalized as regional attention and military resources are entirely consumed by the Iranian theater.50
  5. The Nuclear Paradox: Paradoxically, while the allied strikes were specifically designed to neutralize Iran’s nuclear threat, they have validated the arguments of Iranian hardliners who claim that conventional deterrence has failed and that a nuclear weapon is the only guarantor of regime survival. If the allied bunker-buster munitions failed to utterly eradicate Iran’s underground highly enriched uranium stockpiles and weaponization hardware, Iran is highly likely to abandon its previous hedging strategy, discard the religious fatwa against weapons of mass destruction, and officially pursue a nuclear device as rapidly as technically feasible.

The Middle East is currently experiencing its most profound security crisis in decades. The ultimate success of the allied campaign hinges on whether it can rapidly and permanently degrade Iran’s command and control infrastructure before Iran’s asymmetric and conventional retaliation inflicts catastrophic economic and strategic damage on United States regional interests. Open-source intelligence will continue to closely monitor the integrity of the Strait of Hormuz, the operational status of the United States Fifth Fleet in Bahrain, and internal Iranian political stability as the leading indicators of the conflict’s ultimate trajectory.


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SITREP Iran Including the US & Israeli Strike – Week Ending February 28, 2026

Executive Summary

The week ending February 28, 2026, represents a profound and catastrophic inflection point in the geopolitical and security architecture of the Middle East. Following the complete collapse of high-stakes, Omani-mediated nuclear negotiations in Geneva, the United States and the State of Israel initiated a massive, coordinated, preemptive military campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran. Designated “Operation Epic Fury” by the United States Department of Defense and “Operation Roaring Lion” by the Israel Defense Forces, this offensive marks the transition from a prolonged strategy of maximalist diplomatic pressure and deterrence into direct, theater-wide, high-intensity armed conflict.1 The kinetic operations, deliberately executed in broad daylight to maximize psychological impact and demonstrate absolute airspace dominance, targeted the deepest echelons of the Iranian command-and-control apparatus, critical subterranean nuclear infrastructure, and ballistic missile production facilities across multiple provinces.1

In immediate response to the US-Israeli offensive, Iran activated its strategic retaliatory framework, initiating “Operation True Promise 4.” Demonstrating a severe horizontal escalation of the conflict, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched extensive waves of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) not only at Israeli territory but directly at sovereign Gulf Arab states hosting United States military installations.4 By explicitly targeting US assets in the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait, Tehran has signaled its intent to fracture the US-led regional security umbrella, imposing unbearable security costs on US allies and transforming a localized dispute into a comprehensive, multi-front regional war.4

This kinetic exchange is simultaneously supported by a devastating non-kinetic cyber offensive. A near-total internet blackout has effectively isolated the Iranian populace from the global digital sphere, crippling state media apparatuses and reducing national internet connectivity to an estimated four percent of its ordinary baseline levels.6 The macroeconomic shockwaves of this sudden outbreak of war are already registering violently across global markets. Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil prices have spiked amid acute fears of an Iranian blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, while safe-haven assets such as gold have surged to historic, unprecedented highs above $5,230 per ounce.9 Concurrently, commercial aviation across the Middle East has ground to a complete halt as regional airspaces close, severing critical logistical arteries connecting Europe, Asia, and Africa.12

This situation report synthesizes multi-source intelligence across the military, diplomatic, cyber, and economic domains. The analysis indicates that the conflict has irrevocably altered the balance of power in the region. The decapitation strikes aimed at the inner circle of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei suggest an explicit US and Israeli objective of catalyzing regime change from within, exploiting existing domestic fractures, widespread economic despair, and ongoing anti-government protests.14 As the Iranian proxy network – the Axis of Resistance – mobilizes across Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen, the international community faces the immediate threat of a protracted, devastating regional conflict with severe implications for global energy security and great power competition.

1. Strategic Precursors and the Collapse of the Geneva Framework

The military operations executed on February 28 did not occur spontaneously; they represent the explosive culmination of a massive, multi-month force generation effort and a deliberate shift in strategic posture following the inconclusive 12-day war in June 2025.16 The intelligence landscape in the weeks leading up to the strike was dominated by unmistakable indicators of an impending offensive, driven by the United States’ maximalist pressure campaign and the catastrophic failure of last-ditch diplomatic efforts to curb Iran’s advancing nuclear program.

1.1. The Final Diplomatic Push in Geneva

Throughout February 2026, the international community observed a high-stakes, highly volatile diplomatic effort aimed at averting regional war. Indirect negotiations between the United States and Iran were held in Geneva, Switzerland, mediated heavily by Omani Foreign Affairs Minister Badr al Busaidi.18 The US delegation, led by envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, engaged with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in an attempt to forge a comprehensive agreement to replace the defunct 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).20

The Omani mediation channel initially reported “significant progress,” suggesting that a diplomatic off-ramp was within reach.18 According to Omani sources, Iran had tentatively agreed to cap its uranium enrichment, blend down existing stockpiles of highly enriched uranium (HEU) to the lowest possible level, and grant inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) “full access” to its nuclear sites to verify compliance.19 Iranian officials indicated a willingness to consider an interim deal, floating the possibility of addressing non-nuclear issues in later stages to delay military action and extract economic sanctions relief.15

1.2. Irreconcilable Red Lines

Despite the optimistic framing by regional mediators, the core negotiating positions of Washington and Tehran remained fundamentally irreconcilable. US negotiators presented a rigid set of maximalist demands that Tehran viewed as an unacceptable infringement on its national sovereignty. Specifically, the US demanded the complete and permanent physical dismantlement of Iran’s highly fortified subterranean nuclear facilities at Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan.18 Furthermore, the US insisted on the total surrender and extraction of all enriched uranium from Iranian territory, a permanent agreement without sunset clauses, and an absolute “zero-enrichment” mandate.18

Iran categorically rejected these conditions. An unspecified Iranian source with intimate knowledge of the discussions stated unequivocally that Iran was not willing to destroy its nuclear infrastructure, ship its enriched uranium out of the country, or accept a zero-enrichment mandate, insisting instead on its sovereign “right” to a peaceful nuclear program.15 In counter-proposals, US negotiators signaled a slight softening, indicating they “could be open” to allowing “token enrichment” at very low levels strictly for medical purposes, provided Iran could credibly prove it lacked the capacity to weaponize the material.18 However, the US offered only “minimal sanctions relief” in exchange for these sweeping concessions, a proposition that directly contradicted Tehran’s absolute prerequisite that all US and United Nations Security Council (UNSC) sanctions be lifted as the foundation of any deal.18

Date (Feb 2026)Event DescriptionStrategic Implication
Mid-FebUS initiates largest military buildup in the Middle East since 2003, moving naval, air, and logistics assets into the theater.23Establishes overwhelming theater supremacy and provides the President with diverse kinetic strike options.
Feb 19US President issues a 10-15 day deadline for Tehran to reach a “meaningful deal,” warning that otherwise “bad things happen”.24Sets a firm, public countdown clock for diplomacy, cornering both US and Iranian leadership into actionable commitments.
Feb 26Geneva talks hit an impasse. US demands dismantlement of Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan; Iran categorically refuses.18The diplomatic track officially fails as core red lines regarding domestic uranium enrichment prove unbridgeable.
Feb 27US President publicly expresses extreme dissatisfaction, stating he is “not happy” with the talks and that Iran “cannot have nuclear weapons”.19Signals the formal end of the diplomatic window and the imminent authorization of preemptive military force.
Feb 28Operations Epic Fury and Roaring Lion commence; US and Israeli forces launch massive preemptive strikes across Iranian territory.1The transition from deterrence and coercive diplomacy into direct, theater-wide armed conflict.

The timeline of escalation demonstrates a rapid compression of the diplomatic window. The failure to bridge the gap over domestic uranium enrichment directly precipitated the authorization of military force, bringing the months-long military buildup to its intended, kinetic conclusion.

2. Force Posture and Theater Buildup: The Road to War

To execute a campaign of this magnitude, the United States Department of Defense, operating in deep coordination with the Israel Defense Forces, required an unprecedented staging of military assets. Beginning in late January 2026, the United States executed its largest and most comprehensive military deployment to the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.23 This force generation was meticulously designed to establish absolute theater supremacy, overwhelm Iran’s integrated air defense systems (IADS), and provide a diverse array of strike vectors to ensure the destruction of deeply buried, hardened targets.

2.1. United States and Allied Force Generation

The maritime component of this buildup was anchored by the deployment of two massive Carrier Strike Groups (CSGs). The USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) and its accompanying strike group assumed operational positions in the Arabian Sea and the Gulf of Oman, providing immediate striking distance to Iran’s southern and eastern provinces.21 Simultaneously, the USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78), the newest and most advanced aircraft carrier in the US fleet, was deployed to the eastern Mediterranean Sea, providing an alternative strike vector and deep strategic reserve.20

Complementing the immense naval presence was a historic influx of land-based aerial assets. Intelligence reports tracked more than 100 aerial refueling tankers and over 200 heavy strategic cargo planes moving into regional bases in mid-February to establish the logistical backbone required for sustained combat operations.30 Satellite imagery analysis of the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan confirmed the presence of more than 50 combat aircraft massing near the Iraqi border.30

Crucially, the United States relocated 12 F-22 Raptor stealth air superiority fighters to highly secure installations within Israel.30 This specific deployment of fifth-generation stealth fighters, augmented by existing regional deployments of F-15, F-16, and F-35 squadrons previously utilized in other theaters, signaled a high-end combat capability explicitly intended to penetrate heavily defended Iranian airspace and systematically dismantle advanced surface-to-air missile (SAM) networks prior to the arrival of heavier payload bombers.28

Asset TypeDeployment DetailsStrategic Role
Carrier Strike GroupsUSS Abraham Lincoln (Arabian Sea); USS Gerald R. Ford (Eastern Mediterranean).20Massive maritime power projection; diverse launch vectors for strike aircraft and Tomahawk cruise missiles.
Stealth Fighters12 F-22 Raptors deployed to bases in Israel; diverse F-35 squadrons.28Penetration of contested airspace; Suppression/Destruction of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD/DEAD); escort missions.
Strike/Multirole Aircraft50+ aircraft (F-15s, F-16s) staged at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base in Jordan.28High-volume precision strike capabilities against infrastructure, command nodes, and missile silos.
Logistics Support100+ aerial refueling tankers; 200+ heavy cargo planes deployed across European and Middle Eastern bases.30Essential logistical backbone enabling sustained, high-tempo combat operations over vast geographic distances.

2.2. Iranian Defensive Posture and Critical Vulnerabilities

The Iranian regime and the IRGC were acutely aware of the massing US armada. Intelligence assessments indicate that Iran accurately perceived the high probability of a kinetic strike and initiated emergency, albeit insufficient, defensive preparations.31 Acknowledging critical vulnerabilities within its airspace coverage, Iran sought immediate materiel support from its primary geopolitical partners, the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China, to prepare for an asymmetrical war against the United States.31

Tehran specifically requested alternative, advanced air defense components to fortify its IADS.31 However, intelligence indicates that the stopgap measures acquired—such as portable Russian Verba man-portable air-defense systems (MANPADS)—were entirely insufficient to replace or supplement their localized, older S-300 batteries.31 These localized systems lacked the integration and processing power required to repel a coordinated, multi-axis stealth attack utilizing electronic warfare, cyber-blinding, and saturation munitions.

Furthermore, the Iranian regime was operating under immense internal pressure. Renewed anti-regime student protests had spread organically from university campuses to elementary and secondary high schools across the nation, indicating a deep, systemic, and generational disillusionment with the theocratic government.31 The Iranian economy, suffocated by compounding US sanctions and rampant hyperinflation, left the regime with limited domestic capital and severely degraded civilian morale. Analysts assess that this dual vulnerability—a porous, technologically outmatched air defense network and a highly hostile, economically devastated domestic populace—was heavily factored into the US and Israeli calculus as a critical force multiplier for preemptive kinetic action.

3. Execution of Operations Epic Fury and Roaring Lion

On the morning of Saturday, February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel crossed the ultimate threshold from coercive diplomacy to major combat operations. The joint offensive, utilizing dozens of attack aircraft flying from regional bases and carrier decks integrated with stand-off munitions and naval fires, struck deeply into the sovereign territory of the Islamic Republic.22

3.1. Tactical Shifts: The Psychology of the Daylight Offensive

A highly significant tactical anomaly in the February 28 offensive was the operational decision to conduct the initial waves of strikes in broad daylight, commencing at approximately 8:10 AM local time.1 Modern Western air campaigns, including the initial strikes of the 2003 Iraq War and the June 2025 air war against Iran, almost exclusively initiate during predawn hours.1 Operating under the cover of darkness maximizes the asymmetric advantages of superior Western night-vision capabilities, degrades the visual detection capacities of ground-based optical targeting systems, and exploits the circadian rhythms of defending forces.1

The decision to operate in the harsh light of day represents a profound psychological and tactical choice by US and Israeli command. Analytically, a daylight strike serves three primary strategic functions. First, it demonstrates absolute, supreme confidence in the success of the initial Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD) campaign. By flying combat sorties in daylight, the US and Israel signaled that Iran’s radar warning receivers and anti-aircraft artillery networks had been thoroughly blinded, jammed, or physically destroyed.

Second, the daylight operation provided immediate, undeniable visual confirmation of the regime’s destruction to the Iranian populace. Large, towering plumes of black smoke dominated the skylines of Tehran, Isfahan, and other major metropolitan areas, making it impossible for the state media to deny or downplay the scale of the attack.1 Third, it served as a direct, humiliating psychological blow to the regime’s carefully cultivated aura of invincibility, essentially executing a punitive, decapitating operation while the civilian populace was fully awake to witness the ultimate vulnerability of the state security apparatus.

3.2. Target Matrix and Decapitation Efforts

The target matrix for Operation Epic Fury and Roaring Lion was extensive, spanning the entirety of the Iranian geography but heavily, deliberately concentrated on the nodes essential for regime preservation, command and control, and strategic deterrence. Strikes were confirmed in the capital city of Tehran, the nuclear hub of Isfahan, the holy city of Qom, as well as critical military and industrial zones in Karaj, Kermanshah, Lorestan, Tabriz, Ilam, Khorramabad, and the southern port city of Bushehr.3

The most strategically significant targeting occurred within the political heart of Tehran. Precision strikes obliterated sections of the Pasteur Street compound in downtown Tehran.1 This highly fortified, multi-block complex houses the operational office of the Iranian President, the headquarters of the Supreme National Security Council, and the central intelligence leadership of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.1

More critically, the first wave of strikes directly targeted the immediate vicinity of the residential and office complex of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei—an area long considered the symbolic and operational center of the regime’s absolute authority.34 While state-affiliated media immediately broadcasted reports that the 86-year-old Khamenei was unharmed and had been preemptively transferred to a “secure location” outside of the capital, the kinetic penetration of his inner sanctum is a severe, unprecedented blow to the regime’s prestige.34 Videos circulating on restricted social media networks showed Iranian citizens reacting with shock, and in several verified instances, open celebration, referring to the targeted site as the “leader’s house” and expressing disbelief at the precision of the strikes.34

Beyond leadership decapitation nodes, the strikes prioritized the neutralization of the regime’s strategic military deterrents. Sites in Isfahan, a known hub for Iranian nuclear enrichment and research facilities, were heavily bombarded.3 While exact battle damage assessments regarding the deep subterranean centrifuge cascades remain highly classified, the strikes were intended to permanently degrade Iran’s nuclear breakout capacity.3 Furthermore, President Trump explicitly stated that the operational objective was to completely “annihilate” the Iranian Navy to ensure unimpeded freedom of navigation in the Persian Gulf and to “destroy their missiles and raze their missile industry to the ground,” eliminating the primary delivery mechanisms for any potential unconventional payloads.3

Yugo M85/M92 dust cover quick takedown pin installed

4. Operation True Promise 4: Iran’s Retaliatory Framework and Horizontal Escalation

The swiftness, volume, and specific targeting of Iran’s immediate counter-offensive, officially dubbed “Operation True Promise 4” by the IRGC, reveals a profound, highly dangerous shift in Tehran’s strategic military doctrine.5 Following the initial waves of US-Israeli airstrikes, Iran’s Foreign Ministry and the Supreme National Security Council rapidly mobilized, invoking Article 51 of the United Nations Charter to claim the inherent right to self-defense against what they termed “criminal aggression” and “flagrant violations” of international law.4

However, rather than exclusively targeting Israeli territory in a localized, symmetrical response—as witnessed during the April 2024 iteration of “Operation True Promise”—Iran unleashed a massive horizontal escalation.40 Tehran deliberately expanded the theater of war by launching a barrage of strikes targeting the sovereign territory of multiple Gulf Arab states that host critical United States military infrastructure.4

4.1. Targeting the US Gulf Security Architecture

Intelligence confirms that the IRGC Aerospace Force launched extensive waves of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and suicide drones directed southward across the Persian Gulf at the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, and Kuwait.4 This target selection is a cold, calculated strategic maneuver designed to test the resilience of the US alliance network. For years, Iran has explicitly threatened that any neighboring nation allowing its airspace, territorial waters, or landmass to be utilized by the US or Israel as a launchpad for an attack on the Islamic Republic would immediately be considered a legitimate, primary military target.4 Operation True Promise 4 is the brutal execution of this longstanding threat, attempting to impose an unbearable, visceral security cost on US allies.

The specific nodes targeted by the IRGC underscore Iran’s intent to decouple the United States from its regional partners:

  • Qatar: Iranian missiles specifically targeted the Al Udeid Air Base, the largest US military installation in the Middle East, which serves as the central node for US Central Command (CENTCOM) air operations.5
  • Bahrain: A barrage of missiles was directed at Juffair in the capital city of Manama, striking facilities directly linked to the headquarters of the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet, the entity responsible for securing the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.5
  • United Arab Emirates: Multiple ballistic missiles penetrated Emirati airspace, targeting locations near Abu Dhabi, triggering massive air raid sirens and forcing residents into shelters.5
  • Kuwait: The Kuwaiti military engaged multiple incoming projectiles transiting its airspace, aimed at neutralizing bases such as Ali Al Salem, which hosts thousands of US personnel.4
Targeted Gulf StateSpecific Military Target / LocationIncident Details & Casualties
QatarAl Udeid Air Base (Largest US Base in region) 5Incoming missiles successfully intercepted by US-made Patriot systems; no structural damage reported.5
BahrainUS Navy Fifth Fleet Headquarters (Manama/Juffair) 5Missiles struck facilities linked to the Fifth Fleet; loud explosions and smoke confirmed; casualty data restricted.5
United Arab EmiratesAbu Dhabi and surrounding residential/military zones 5Air defenses engaged; falling missile debris caused material damage and the death of one Asian national civilian.5
KuwaitSovereign Airspace / US troop concentrations 5Multiple explosions reported as military dealt with incoming missiles; no immediate casualties reported.5

4.2. Air Defense Efficacy and the Reality of Civilian Impact

The response of regional, US-supplied air defense networks was robust, yet ultimately imperfect against the volume of the Iranian saturation tactics. In Qatar, government officials confirmed that Patriot missile defense batteries successfully intercepted the incoming ballistic threats targeting Al Udeid, preventing structural damage to the strategic airfield.5 Similarly, the Jordanian military, acting as a buffer state, successfully engaged and shot down at least two ballistic missiles transiting its airspace en route to Israeli population centers.5

However, the sheer density of the IRGC barrage inevitably strained the regional defensive umbrellas. In the United Arab Emirates, while the Ministry of Defense proudly reported that its air defenses responded with “high efficiency” to intercept a number of incoming Iranian ballistic missiles, the physical reality of missile interception resulted in tragedy.41 Heavy, burning debris from the intercepted missiles fell into a densely populated residential area of Abu Dhabi, resulting in significant material damage and, crucially, the death of one Asian national.41

This specific civilian casualty represents a highly volatile inflection point in Gulf geopolitics. The UAE government immediately issued a furious condemnation, labeling the attack a “flagrant violation of national sovereignty and international law” and explicitly reserving the sovereign right to respond militarily.5 The realization of civilian casualties on Emirati soil severely tests the delicate diplomatic tightrope Abu Dhabi has walked over the past year—attempting to maintain ironclad US security guarantees while simultaneously pursuing economic détente and de-escalation with Tehran.

5. The Non-Kinetic Front: Cyber Warfare and Information Dominance

Synchronized perfectly with the physical destruction raining down on Iranian cities, a highly sophisticated, multi-pronged non-kinetic offensive was launched, aimed at severing the Iranian regime’s internal command and control and entirely blacking out its external communications. Analysts assess that this massive cyber campaign was designed to induce overwhelming friction within the IRGC, prevent the state from managing the domestic narrative, and facilitate civilian uprisings by demonstrating the regime’s technological impotence.

5.1. The Severing of Digital Arteries

Beginning concurrently with the first wave of airstrikes, global internet monitors, including the widely cited watchdog NetBlocks, registered a catastrophic, nation-wide drop in Iranian telecommunications infrastructure.6 Within minutes, national internet connectivity plummeted to a mere four percent of its ordinary baseline levels, constituting a near-total digital blackout.6

While the Iranian government routinely restricts internet access and throttles bandwidth during periods of domestic unrest to prevent civilian coordination, the scale, speed, and totality of this specific outage suggest an externally driven, state-sponsored cyberattack targeting core national routing infrastructure and primary internet service providers (ISPs).7 This blackout severely complicates the dissemination of verifiable, on-the-ground intelligence from within Iran. Independent eyewitness accounts, civilian videos of the strikes, and localized battle damage assessments are effectively embargoed within the country, forcing global analysts to rely on highly fragmented reports, satellite telemetry, or state-sanctioned broadcasts that manage to bypass the blockages.6

5.2. Targeting State Media Apparatuses and Psychological Operations

In addition to the broad degradation of civilian internet access, highly precise cyberattacks were directed specifically against the Iranian state’s propaganda and information ministries. Major domestic news agencies that serve as the mouthpieces of the regime, including the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA), Tabnak, and the IRGC-affiliated Fars News Agency, experienced massive disruptions, defacements, and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, rendering them entirely inaccessible for extended periods during the height of the crisis.8

By systematically neutralizing these platforms, the cyber offensive stripped the Iranian regime of its ability to project strength, broadcast continuous counter-narratives, issue civil defense instructions, or claim early victories. To aggressively fill this artificially created information vacuum, foreign intelligence services rapidly exploited the blackout to conduct sophisticated psychological operations (PSYOPS). Notably, the Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad, utilized the chaos to launch a dedicated Farsi-language Telegram channel, designed to provide unfiltered news updates, strike footage, and anti-regime messaging directly to the Iranian populace.44 This psychological maneuver aligns perfectly with the explicit, public calls from US and Israeli leadership for the Iranian people to rise up, seize the moment of regime weakness, and overthrow their government.14

6. Activation of the Axis of Resistance: Proxy Mobilization and Regional Spillover

The direct US and Israeli strikes on the sovereign territory of their patron state have triggered a coordinated, albeit stressed, response from the “Axis of Resistance”—Iran’s vast network of regional proxy militias and allied terror groups. These organizations serve as Iran’s forward defense line, designed to bleed adversaries asymmetrically, and are now fully activated to project power across multiple theaters to relieve the immense pressure on Tehran.

6.1. Hezbollah’s Precarious Posture in Lebanon

In Lebanon, Hezbollah represents the absolute crown jewel of Iran’s proxy network, possessing the most sophisticated arsenal of any non-state actor globally. However, intelligence indicates that Hezbollah entered this specific conflict in a state of severe, unprecedented vulnerability. Following devastating Israeli kinetic actions throughout late 2024 and 2025, which included a grueling ground invasion and the highly disruptive assassination of long-time Secretary General Hassan Nasrallah, the group’s operational capacity, command structure, and domestic political standing were significantly degraded.45

Recent reporting highlights that the situation became so dire that senior IRGC officers had effectively “taken over” Hezbollah’s operational command in early 2026 in a frantic, accelerated effort to rebuild its depleted drone and precision-guided missile stockpiles ahead of this exact scenario.15 Despite this extreme vulnerability, Hezbollah is inherently, ideologically bound to its patron in Tehran. The existential threat now posed to the Iranian regime forces Hezbollah to activate. Analysts assess that Hezbollah will prioritize opening a massive, sustained northern front against Israel, attempting to overwhelm the Iron Dome and David’s Sling air defense systems, regardless of the severe domestic political backlash within Lebanon regarding the destruction such a war will bring to the already failing Lebanese state.45

6.2. Houthi Resurgence and the Iraqi Militia Threat

To the south, the Iranian-backed Ansar Allah (Houthi) movement in Yemen has officially declared its absolute solidarity with Tehran and its intent to violently re-enter the conflict. Two senior Houthi officials, speaking anonymously, confirmed the group’s decision to immediately resume widespread, indiscriminate ballistic missile and suicide drone attacks on international commercial shipping routes in the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden, as well as direct, long-range strikes targeting the southern Israeli port city of Eilat.26 The resumption of Houthi maritime interdiction threatens to reignite the severe supply chain disruptions and naval skirmishes witnessed throughout 2024 and 2025, forcing the US Navy to expend further resources on defensive patrols.46

Simultaneously, in Iraq and Syria, Iranian-aligned Shia militias are rapidly mobilizing to strike soft US targets. Kataib Hezbollah, a premier and highly lethal Iraqi militia, issued stark warnings threatening the security and future of Iraqi Kurdistan if the regional government facilitates or ignores US or Israeli air operations transiting their airspace.18 Following the outbreak of hostilities on February 28, the Sabereen news agency reported that US positions southwest of Baghdad were immediately targeted by militia fires, highlighting the omnipresent, 360-degree threat to the approximately 30,000 US military personnel stationed in exposed bases across Iraq, Syria, and the broader Middle East.6 The activation of these proxy networks ensures that the conflict will not remain contained within the borders of Iran and Israel, but will bleed violently into Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and the critical maritime chokepoints of the global economy.

7. Global Economic Fallout, Market Shocks, and Logistical Paralysis

The rapid transformation of the Middle East—the world’s primary energy producing region—into an active, high-intensity war zone has triggered immediate and profound shockwaves across global commodity markets, international equities, and global logistics networks. The escalation threatens the core nervous system of the global energy supply and has driven panicked institutional capital into safe-haven assets at historic rates.

7.1. Energy Markets and the Threat to the Strait of Hormuz

The primary economic vector for this crisis is the existential threat posed to the Strait of Hormuz. At its narrowest point, the strait is roughly 30 miles wide and no deeper than 200 feet, yet it serves as the irreplaceable maritime corridor for approximately 20 million barrels of crude oil per day, representing roughly 20 percent of the world’s total oil supply, alongside massive volumes of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Qatar.10 Iran has long threatened to mine or militarily paralyze this chokepoint if its own territory or oil export infrastructure were ever attacked by the United States.20

Anticipating this catastrophic disruption, global energy markets immediately priced in a massive geopolitical risk premium. In the hours following the strikes, trading indices reflected severe, highly reactive volatility. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude spiked to $67.02 per barrel, and the global benchmark Brent crude surged to $72.87.10 Analysts at major financial institutions project that if Iran successfully initiates even a partial blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, or if its own 3.1 million barrels per day of production is taken offline by strikes, crude prices could easily and rapidly breach the $90 per barrel threshold in the near term.10 The sheer volume of oil passing through the region means that a disruption will transmit severe inflationary pressure through the global economy, directly impacting consumer prices, manufacturing costs, and forcing central banks to rapidly reassess interest rate policies.11

7.2. Safe Haven Assets and Unprecedented Aviation Chaos

In tandem with the energy shock, global investors, already roiled by inflation fears and technology sector volatility, have fled en masse to safety.9 Gold, the traditional, ultimate hedge against geopolitical catastrophe and runaway inflation, experienced its largest one-month percentage gain since January 2012. In February 2026 alone, gold jumped nearly 11 percent, finishing at an unprecedented $5,230.50 an ounce, the biggest one-month net gain ($516.60) on record.9 This historic surge reflects deep, systemic institutional fear regarding the trajectory of the US-Iran conflict and its potential to trigger a broader global recession.

Economic/Logistical SectorKey Metric / Data PointStrategic Implication
Global Energy SupplyStrait of Hormuz: 20M barrels/day transit (~20% of global supply).10Extreme vulnerability to Iranian mining or naval harassment; risk of severe global energy inflation.11
Commodity Markets (Oil)WTI spiked to $67.02/bbl; Brent spiked to $72.87/bbl.10Markets pricing in high probability of supply disruption; potential to breach $90/bbl if conflict protracts.51
Safe Haven AssetsGold surged 11% in February to $5,230.50/oz.9Largest one-month net gain on record reflects immense institutional panic and flight from risk assets.9

Compounding the severe economic damage is the immediate, near-total paralysis of commercial aviation across the region. The Middle East serves as the vital connective tissue and primary transit hub for air travel between Europe, Asia, and Africa. Following the US strikes and the subsequent Iranian retaliatory ballistic missile barrages, Israel, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and Jordan were forced to completely shutter their sovereign airspaces to civilian traffic to prevent the accidental downing of commercial airliners.5

A cascade of major international carriers immediately suspended regional routes, canceled flights outright, and executed emergency mid-air rerouting. Lufthansa suspended flights to Tel Aviv, Beirut, and Amman; Air India and IndiGo canceled all flights to the Middle East; and Qatar Airways aircraft were observed flying in holding patterns over Saudi Arabia, unable to navigate the congested and hostile skies.5 With Russian and Ukrainian airspace already heavily restricted due to ongoing conflicts, the sudden closure of the Middle Eastern corridor poses an astronomical logistical challenge. Airlines are forced to fly significantly longer routes, driving up fuel consumption, increasing operational costs, and severely disrupting global passenger travel and high-value air freight.

8. Domestic Iranian Dynamics and Regime Stability

A crucial, highly volatile, and entirely unpredictable variable in this conflict is the internal stability of the Islamic Republic. The US and Israeli strategic doctrine explicitly attempts to weaponize the profound domestic unpopularity of the Iranian regime, utilizing the shock of external military strikes to catalyze an internal political collapse. In his public address confirming the strikes, US President Donald Trump issued a direct, unambiguous call to the Iranian populace to “take over your government” and warned the Iranian military and IRGC to lay down their weapons to receive “complete immunity,” or otherwise face “certain death”.3

These direct calls for insurrection land on highly fertile, combustible ground. Iran has been convulsed by successive, massive waves of anti-government protests, most recently reignited by widespread student movements across university campuses and high schools in January and February 2026.15 The regime’s brutal, uncompromising crackdowns, which have resulted in thousands of civilian deaths and the ongoing executions of political dissidents, have fundamentally shattered the social contract between the theocracy and the populace.3 The Iranian economy is in shambles, crippled by decades of international sanctions, systemic corruption, and catastrophic mismanagement, leaving the average citizen impoverished.

Intelligence analysis presents a bifurcated outlook on the potential domestic response to the strikes. On one hand, the highly visible destruction of IRGC command nodes, the humiliating penetration of the Supreme Leader’s protective apparatus, and the total failure of the state’s air defenses may shatter the illusion of regime omnipotence. This perceived weakness could embolden furious protesters to launch a decisive, violent uprising while the state security forces are distracted and degraded by external war.

Conversely, foreign military intervention historically triggers a powerful “rally ’round the flag” effect, even among populations deeply hostile to their own government. The Iranian regime, utilizing whatever communication channels remain, will undoubtedly frame the US and Israeli attacks not as strikes against the government, but as an existential, imperialist threat to the Iranian nation, its history, and its people. The state will attempt to use the atmosphere of total war to justify absolute martial law, silence all remaining dissent under the unassailable guise of national security, and unite the fractured populace against a common external enemy.

9. Great Power Dynamics and International Diplomatic Posture

The sudden outbreak of high-intensity war in the Middle East has forced the international community, particularly great power rivals and traditional European allies, into complex, reactive diplomatic postures. The varied reactions across the globe underscore the increasingly multipolar reality of international diplomacy and highlight the profound limitations of unilateral US military action.

9.1. Russia and China: Capitalizing on Chaos

The Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China are meticulously navigating the conflict, seeking to maximize their strategic advantage while strictly minimizing direct military involvement or exposure.57 Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of Russia’s powerful Security Council, publicly mocked the United States in the aftermath of the strikes, chiding the US President as a false “peacemaker” whose true intention was always violent military action.58 Medvedev stated that “All negotiations with Iran are a cover operation,” and tauntingly questioned the longevity of the 249-year-old United States compared to the 2,500-year-old Persian civilization.58 For Moscow, the conflict is highly advantageous; it rapidly diverts massive US military resources, political capital, and global public attention away from the ongoing war in Ukraine, providing Russia with immense strategic breathing room.

China, conversely, is playing a highly nuanced “long game”.59 Beijing has consistently opposed US military strikes, advocated for diplomatic dialogue, and publicly urged restraint, given its heavy reliance on Middle Eastern energy imports and its formal comprehensive strategic partnership with Iran.59 However, China has pointedly refused to provide direct material military support or sophisticated air defenses to Tehran in its hour of need, repeating its behavior of strict non-intervention from the 2025 conflict.59 Beijing fundamentally opposes a nuclear-armed Iran, which would destabilize its energy supply lines, and may quietly tolerate the degradation of Iran’s nuclear infrastructure by the US, provided the conflict does not escalate into an all-out regional war that permanently disrupts global trade.59 Ultimately, China stands to benefit immensely from a weakened, increasingly economically dependent Iran and a United States bogged down in yet another costly, protracted Middle Eastern quagmire.

9.2. Allied Divergence and the United Nations

The reaction from traditional US allies has been notably fractured, lacking the unified front seen in previous global crises. While Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese issued a strong statement of absolute support for the US strikes, arguing they were a necessary and justified action to prevent a radical dictatorship from acquiring a nuclear weapon, European capitals have been far more circumspect and critical.3 In the United Kingdom, prominent political figures, such as Dame Emily Thornberry, openly questioned the fundamental legality of the preemptive US-Israeli strikes under international law, accurately noting that neither nation faced an “imminent threat” of attack at the precise moment the operation commenced.41 This divergence threatens to isolate the United States diplomatically and severely complicates any future efforts to build a unified Western coalition to manage the post-strike geopolitical fallout or enforce new sanctions regimes.

Geopolitical ActorOfficial Stance / ReactionStrategic Assessment
RussiaHighly critical of US; Medvedev mocks US diplomacy as a “cover operation”.58Benefits immensely from US distraction and resource diversion away from the Ukrainian theater.58
ChinaCalls for restraint and dialogue; refuses direct military aid to Tehran.59Plays the “long game.” Tolerates US degrading Iran’s nuclear program but fears long-term energy disruption.59
United Kingdom / EUDeeply skeptical; officials question the international legality of preemptive strikes.41Reflects a fractured Western alliance; extreme reluctance to be drawn into a new Middle Eastern war.41
United NationsIran demands emergency UNSC action, citing Article 2, Paragraph 4 violations.39The UNSC will likely remain paralyzed by US, Russian, and Chinese veto powers, rendering the body ineffective in halting the conflict.

Within the diplomatic halls of the United Nations, the Iranian Foreign Ministry has implored the Security Council to take immediate emergency action, framing the US and Israeli attacks as a “clear armed aggression” and a blatant violation of the UN Charter.39 However, given the veto power held by the United States, alongside the competing interests of Russia and China, the Security Council is guaranteed to remain paralyzed, incapable of passing binding resolutions to halt the violence, leaving the trajectory of the war to be decided entirely on the battlefield.

10. Intelligence Assessment and Strategic Outlook

As the week concludes, the Middle East stands at the precipice of a protracted, highly destructive, and entirely unpredictable conflict. The initial phase of Operations Epic Fury and Roaring Lion undeniably succeeded in delivering massive kinetic payloads onto Iranian soil, successfully penetrating deep into the regime’s protective rings, neutralizing critical infrastructure, and severely humiliating the central leadership. However, Iran’s immediate, aggressive, and highly calculated retaliation via Operation True Promise 4, specifically its horizontal escalation targeting sovereign US host nations in the Gulf, demonstrates that the US strategy of deterrence by punishment has utterly failed, and that Tehran retains significant, highly lethal offensive capabilities.

Analysts assess the following critical vectors will define the immediate future of the conflict:

  1. Nuclear Acceleration and Breakout: The physical destruction of above-ground nuclear facilities will not erase the deep technical knowledge Iran has acquired over decades of research. The IAEA assesses that Iran already possesses enough highly enriched uranium (60 percent purity) to produce multiple nuclear weapons within weeks if the political decision is made.38 Driven into an existential corner by decapitation strikes, and realizing conventional deterrence has failed, the regime may decide that its only absolute guarantee of survival is an immediate, covert sprint to a fully assembled nuclear warhead, fundamentally altering global security.
  2. Fracturing the Gulf Alliance: The true strategic test of this war will be the political resilience of the Gulf Arab states. As Iranian ballistic missiles rain down on US bases in the UAE, Qatar, and Bahrain, these wealthy, stability-focused monarchies face intolerable domestic and security pressures.5 If Iran can inflict sufficient economic and infrastructural pain, or cause further civilian casualties, it may successfully force these states to demand the withdrawal of US forces to save themselves, achieving a massive, long-term strategic victory for Tehran even amidst short-term tactical military defeat.
  3. Regime Survival and Internal Conflict: The coming weeks are absolutely critical for the survival of the Islamic Republic. The regime must simultaneously fight a high-intensity external war against the world’s preeminent superpower while desperately attempting to suppress a furious, economically devastated, and increasingly radicalized domestic population. The confluence of these immense external and internal pressures has created the most severe existential threat the theocracy has faced since its violent inception in 1979.

The transition from coercive diplomacy to major combat operations has unleashed a cascade of variables that neither Washington, Tel Aviv, nor Tehran can fully control. The situation remains highly fluid, with the potential for rapid, unpredictable escalation across all domains of warfare – land, sea, air, and cyber – threatening to drag the global economy and international security into a prolonged state of crisis.


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