The United States and Israel have launched their most intense joint operation of the Iran war so far, with Bâ2 Spirit stealth bombers pounding Iranâs underground weapons complexes in a relentless 12âhour air á´ssault, defence officials say.
The raid began just after midnight, when the first wave of Bâ2sâsupported by US Bâ52s and Israeli Fâ35sâslipped into Iranian airspace from multiple directions. Using satellite intel and bunkerâbusting munitions, they struck a chain of buried âarsenal citiesâ believed to store ballistic missiles, Shahedâstyle drones and precisionâguided rockets for the IRGC.

Infrared footage shows huge bursts punching through mountain ridges and desert plateaus, followed by má´ssive secondary explosions as fuel depots and warhead bunkers ignited deep below ground. Analysts reviewing early satellite imagery point to collapsed tunnel mouths, scorched access roads and entire hillside complexes turned into smoking craters.
Tehranâs air defences fired barrages of surfaceâtoâair missiles at ghost radar returns and decoy drones, but officials in Washington and Jerusalem say not a single Bâ2 was hit. Iranian state TV admits âserious damageâ at multiple âmilitary storage sitesâ but vows that missiles and drones âwill continue to fly until the last aggressor leaves the region.â

For ordinary Iranians, the onslaught was felt as distant thunder that didnât stopâwindows rattling in Tehran and Isfahan, power flickering in provincial towns, and social media filling with images of black plumes on the horizon.
As dawn breaks on a landscape scarred by one of the largest bomber operations since Iraq 2003, a stark question now hangs over every war room: did this 12âhour strike crush Iranâs underground arsenalâor simply push the conflict to a point where both sides feel they have nothing left to hold back?