At 9:00 a.m. in the north Arabian Sea, four Iranian warships surged in from all points of the compᴀss, тιԍнтening a box around the US aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln in the most brazen surface challenge of the war so far, defence officials say.
Two IRGC missile boats slashed across the carrier’s bow at high speed while a frigate and a fast‑attack corvette closed on her flanks, radars lit and weapons crews at the rails. Bridge audio picked up repeated Farsi warnings for the Lincoln to “alter course or be fired upon” as the distance between the ships shrank to a few perilous kilometres.

What happened next was brutal. With the carrier’s safety ring breached, escorting destroyers executed a pre‑planned counter‑swarm drill: one Arleigh Burke‑class ship fired warning flares and 5‑inch shells across the bow of the lead Iranian frigate, while another launched helicopter gunships and armed drones that locked on to the missile boats’ fire‑control radars.
When an Iranian launcher flashed to life, the engagement rules shifted in an instant. US helicopters and ship‑launched missiles hammered the two missile boats, ripping open their hulls and leaving them burning and ᴅᴇᴀᴅ in the water. The corvette was crippled by a precision strike to its engine room; only the frigate managed to limp away, trailed by US drones and the wreckage of its escorts.

Tehran calls the clash “American piracy.” Washington counters that the Lincoln “never changed course” — and that any future move to box in a US carrier will end the same way: fast, violent and overwhelmingly one‑sided.